News Release

Superplastic behavior revealed in carbon nanotubes

Business Announcement

DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory



A single-walled carbon nanotube of 75 nanometers can stretch to 84 nanometers before it breaks.
Click here for a high resolution photograph.

Carbon nanotubes used in the electronics such as cell phones might have a longer life thanks to a strengthening technique pioneered by researchers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Boston College and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

By heating a single-walled carbon nanotube to more than 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit, the nanotube became nearly 280 percent stronger than it was in its original form and its diameter shrunk by 15 times. The discovery has implications in strengthening ceramic and other nanocomposites at high temperatures and is useful in tuning electronics.

"The super-strain we discovered can be used to tune the electronic properties of carbon nanotubes for their applications in microelectronics," said Yinmin (Morris) Wang, of LLNL's Materials Science and Technology Division and a co-author of the paper that appears in the Jan. 19 edition of the journal Nature. Wang also is an important member of the recently established Nanoscale Synthesis and Characterization Laboratory in the Lab's Chemistry and Materials Science Directorate.

Carbon nanotubes are 10,000 times smaller than a human hair and are used in a variety of machines including computers, cell phones and personal handheld devices.

A typical carbon nanotube can be stretched to 15 percent longer than its original length before it fails. But in the high-temperature experiments, the heated nanotube was able to stretch to more than 280 percent of its original length before it broke. The researchers took a 24-nanometer piece of nanotube and stretched it to 91 nanometers before it failed while the diameter was reduced by 15 times from 12 to 0.8 nanometers.

"This kind of intense stretching and reduction in diameter in a carbon nanotube is unprecedented," Wang said. "This super-elongation is due to a full plastic deformation that occurs at high temperatures." Under such high temperatures, the nanotube appears to be completely pliable, resulting in a superplastic deformation that would otherwise be impossible at low temperatures.

"Our surprising discovery of superplasticity in nanotubes should encourage the investigation of their mechanical and electronic behavior at high temperatures," Wang said. "The tubes may find uses as reinforcement agents in ceramics or other nanocomposites for high-temperature applications."

In addition to Wang, the co-authors of the paper include J.Y. Huang and S. Chen of Boston College and M.S. Dresselhaus of MIT.

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Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is a national security laboratory, with a mission to ensure national security and apply science and technology to the important issues of our time. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration.

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