Tiny Tunable Nanotubes
Too small to see with the naked eye, tiny cylinders of carbon atoms called nanotubes could one day be tuned for use in devices ranging from night vision goggles to more efficient solar cells, thanks to methods developed by researchers at Duke University. 

Tiny Tunable Nanotubes

But producing nanotubes with specific properties is a challenge.

Depending on how they’re rolled up, some nanotubes are considered metallic – meaning electrons can flow through them at any energy. The problem is they can’t be switched off. This limits their use in digital electronics, which use electrical signals that are either on or off to store binary states; just like silicon semiconductor transistors switch between 0 and 1 bits to carry out computations.

Duke chemistry professor Michael Therien and his team say they’ve found a way around this.

The approach takes a metallic nanotube, which always lets current through, and transforms it into a semiconducting form that can be switched on and off.

By wrapping a carbon nanotube with a ribbon-like polymer, Duke researchers were able to create nanotubes that conduct electricity when struck with low-energy light that our eyes cannot see. In the future, the approach could make it possible to optimize semiconductors for applications ranging from night vision to new forms of computing. Credit: Francesco Mastrocinque

The secret lies in special polymers -- substances whose molecules are hooked together in long chains -- that wind around the nanotube in an orderly spiral, “like wrapping a ribbon around a pencil,” said first author Francesco Mastrocinque, who earned his chemistry Ph.D. in Therien’s lab at Duke.

The effect is reversible, they found. Wrapping the nanotube in a polymer changes its electronic properties from a conductor to a semiconductor. But if the nanotube is unwrapped, it goes back to its original metallic state.

The researchers also showed that by changing the type of polymer that encircles a nanotube, they could engineer new types of semiconducting nanotubes. They can conduct electricity, but only when the right amount of external energy is applied.

“This method provides a subtle new tool,” Therien said. “It allows you to make a semiconductor by design.”

Practical applications of the method are likely far off. “We're a long way from making devices,” Therien said.

Mastrocinque and his co-authors say the work is important because it’s a way to design semiconductors that can conduct electricity when struck by light of certain low-energy wavelengths that are common but invisible to human eyes.

In the future for instance, the Duke team’s work might help others engineer nanotubes that detect heat released as infrared radiation, to reveal people or vehicles hidden in the shadows. When infrared light -- such as that emitted by warm-blooded animals -- strikes one of these nanotube-polymer hybrids, it would generate an electric signal.

Or take solar cells: this technique could be used to make nanotube semiconductors that convert a broader range of wavelengths into electricity, to harness more of the Sun’s energy.

Because of the spiral wrapper on the nanotube surface, these structures could also be ideal materials for new forms of computing and data storage that use the spins of electrons, in addition to their charge, to process and carry information.

The researchers describe their results March 11 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

This research was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-18-1-0222), the National Institutes of Health (1R01HL146849), the United States National Science Foundation (CHE-2140249, DGE-2040435) and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

CITATION: "Band Gap Opening of Metallic Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes via Noncovalent Symmetry Breaking," Francesco Mastrocinque, George Bullard, James A. Alatis, Joseph A. Albro, Animesh Nayak, Nicholas X. Williams, Amar Kumbhar, Hope Meikle, Zachary X. W. Widel, Yusong Bai, Alexis K. Harvey, Joanna M. Atkin, David H. Waldeck, Aaron D. Franklin and Michael J. Therien. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, March 11, 2024. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2317078121