Title: Perfecting the Carbon Nanotube Forest
1Perfecting the Carbon Nanotube Forest
- James Harper
- Robert Mifflin
Advisors Prof. Prab Bandaru Prof. SungHo
Jin Prof. Frank Talke
June 7th, 2007 Jacobs School of
Engineering University of California San Diego
2Outline
- Introduction
- Selecting the Area of Nanotechnology to Enhance
- Why is this area important?
- Does it pass the Moral / Ethics Test?
- Background
- Growth and Chirality
- Separation Techniques
- Analyses of Separation Techniques
- Dielectrophoresis
- Flow Fractionalization Analysis and Improvement
- Pulsed dielectrophoresis
- Creating Pure Lines of Carbon Nanotubes
- Selection and Release
- The Perfect Carbon Nanotube Forest
- Conclusion
3Area of Nanotechnology to Enhance
- Generating Pure Sets of CNTs on Demand
- Why is this area important?
1
4Area of Nanotechnology to Enhance
- Carbon nanotubes can be used to enhance materials
and create new sensors that impact everyday life - Electrical arena
- Wires, Batteries and
Capacitors, Flex displays
3
2
4
5Area of Nanotechnology to Enhance
- Carbon nanotubes can be used to enhance materials
and create new sensors that impact everyday life - Electrical arena
- Conductive plastics, adhesives
- Structural Arena
- Adhesives, Flexible circuits,
Composites
5
6
7
6Area of Nanotechnology to Enhance
- Carbon nanotubes can be used to enhance materials
and create new sensors that impact everyday life - Electrical arena
- Conductive plastics, adhesives
- Structural Arena
- Adhesives, textiles, composites
- Bio-molecule sensing
8
9
10
7Area of Nanotechnology to Enhance
- Does it pass the Moral / Ethics Test?
11
8Background
- Growth and Chirality of Carbon Nanotubes
- Formed from several processes, resulting in a
sheet of graphene in the form of a hollow
continuous tube. - Differences between SWCNT, MWCNT,M-SWCNT, S-SWCNT
SWCNT Single Wall CNT MWCNT Multi-Wall
CNT M-SWCNT Metallic SWCNT S-SWCNT
Semiconductor SWCNT
12
9Background
- Unbundling Carbon Nanotubes
- Use sonication and ultra-centrifugation to
separate hydrophobic clumps of CNTs - Buffer with a surfactant sodium dodecyl sulphate
(SDS)
13
10Background
- Unbundling Carbon Nanotubes
- Use sonication and ultra-centrifugation to
separate hydrophobic clumps of CNTs - Buffer with a surfactant sodium dodecyl sulphate
(SDS) - Purification / Sorting Techniques
- Ultra-centrifugation
- Optical sorting
- Fluid flow fractionalization
- Dielectrophoresis
11Background
- Purification / Sorting Techniques
- Ultra-centrifugation
15
14
12Background
- Purification / Sorting Techniques
- Optical sorting
16
13Background
- Purification / Sorting Techniques
- Optical sorting
28
14Background
- Purification / Sorting Techniques
- Fluid flow fractionalization
29
15Background
- Purification / Sorting Techniques
- Dielectrophoresis
30
16Background
- Unbundling Carbon Nanotubes
- Use sonication to separate clumps and
ultra-centrifugation - Purification / Sorting Techniques
- Ultra-centrifugation
- Optical sorting
- Fluid flow fractionalization
- Dielectrophoresis
- Problem?
- Each technique allows for partial separation of
the desired carbon nanotubes from the bulk
solution However
17Background
- There is an overlap of sorting parameters!
- Use of one technique independently will not
discriminate nanotubes with overlapping parameters
17
18Background
- There is an overlap of sorting parameters!
- And the number of parameters that can vary is
large!
19
18
20
19Background
- Partial Solution?
- Multiple techniques must be used for to obtain a
rough sort of the material. - Ultra-centrifugation
- Optical sorting
- Fluid flow
fractionalization -
Dielectrophoresis - And the resulting subset will still have a
mixture of different nanotubes - albeit a set
with many overlapping attributes.
20Solution
- Realize that absolute purity of nanotubes through
top down or bottom up fabrication may not be
achievable. - Recast the problem what other system/industry
has high variability yet desires near exact to
exact duplicates be used?
21Solution
- Look to the Bio Labs
- Generating a clone murine line for laboratory
study.
Maps to --- CNT rough sort desired
CNTs --- CNT individual capture --- Check the
Chirality using Raman scattering
and conduction properties --- Release the
individual CNT --- Clone the CNT
Bio Process Select an species Isolate the
individual Sequence the DNA Release the
individual(into a controlled environment) Clone
the individual
21
22Solution
- Can all of these steps be done?
- If so, perfect sorting may not be required.
23Outline
- Introduction
- Selecting the Area of Nanotechnology to Enhance
- Why is this area important?
- Does it pass the Moral / Ethics Test?
- Background
- Growth and Chirality
- Separation Techniques
- Analyses of Separation Techniques
- Dielectrophoresis
- Flow Fractionalization Analysis and Improvement
- Pulsed dielectrophoresis
- Creating Pure Lines of Carbon Nanotubes
- Selection and Release
- The Perfect Carbon Nanotube Forest
- Conclusion
24Dielectrophoresis
- Uncharged particle non-uniform electric field
force - Caused by uneven charge distribution
- Depends strongly on
- Mediums and particles' electrical properties
- Particles' morphology
- Frequency of the electric field
- More polarizable particles move toward stronger
electric field - For CNTs,
- where ,
and
25Dielectrophoresis
-
-
-
-
26Dielectrophoresis
22
23
27Flow Fractionalization Analysis and
Improvement
- CNTs with dissimilar conductivitiesand
morphologies develop differentterminal
velocities within a fluid flow,as described by - Separation is most efficient when vT
- of different sizes of CNTs is most
- dissimilar.
- Adjust friction factor f by changing orientation
24
28Flow Fractionalization Analysis and
Improvement
- Three possible orientations
- Parallel
- Because ,
- vT a
f -1 when u is constant.
25
29Flow Fractionalization Analysis and
Improvement
30Flow Fractionalization Analysis and
Improvement
Orientation Inverse of Friction Factor (s/kg) Inverse of Friction Factor (s/kg) Difference (s/kg)
Orientation 100 nm length 2 µm length Difference (s/kg)
Perpendicular 4.5 105 51.3 105 46.8 105
Random 6.4 105 76.8 105 70.4 105
Parallel 8.9 105 103.0 105 94.1 105
- Maximum difference attained with parallel
orientation - 34 larger difference than random orientation
- Significant?
- May be difficult to implement in practice
- Possibly use dielectrophoretic force itself to
orient nanotubes parallel to flow
31Pulsed Dielectrophoresis
- Difference between Dielectrophoresis (DEP) and
Pulsed Dielectrophoresis (PDEP) - DEP is typically set up for an asymmetrical field
with constant frequency. We would like to look
at varying the duty cycle to try to separate CNT
that have very closely overlapping properties. - Example - Lets look at some cells
Distributed populations of spherical shell models
of mammalian cells. (Top Left) 10 variation
across all three DEP parameters, radius,
permittivity, and conductivity. (Top Right)
Constant conductivity with varying permittivity
and radius. (Lower Left) Constant radius. (Lower
Right) Constant permittivity.
32Pulsed Dielectrophoresis
- Difference between Dielectrophoresis (DEP) and
Pulsed Dielectrophoresis (PDEP)
Distributed populations of spherical shell models
of mammalian cells. (Top Left) 10 variation
across all three DEP parameters, radius,
permittivity, and conductivity. (Top Right)
Constant conductivity with varying permittivity
and radius. (Lower Left) Constant radius. (Lower
Right) Constant permittivity.
33Pulsed Dielectrophoresis
- The equations
- Complex Permittivity
- Permittivity of CNT
- Metallic 2000
- Media 18.6
- Modified Clausius Mossotti
- E field between electrodes volts
per meter -
- And the friction factor
34Actual Simulation Failed! Agh!
35Capture of subset of CNTs
- Capture occurs due to Dielectrophoresis
attracting the CNT dipoles. - CNT lands on the probes and
- causes the field to be modified
- Thus self assembly/placement
- Modify the probe surface with LBL deposited
materialfor sticktion and later lift off
26
36Analysis of subset of CNTs
- Use Raman scattering and conduction parameters to
analyze the CNTs - Electronic and mechanicallystringency wash
cartridge.
37Release the desired CNTs
- Decorate CNTs with bio-particles to ease later
handling. - CNTs are then released as
- needed from the storage
- cartridge.
- Moved to cloning cell off chip
27
38Release the desired CNTs
- Sonicated into seeds
- Embedded into an LBL deposited layer
- Used to grow Final CNTs
39Conclusions
- Sorting of CNTs difficult, yet improvable
- Flow fractionalization
- Pulsed dielectrophoresis
- Best solution avoid problem of perfect sorting
with capture and release of CNTs - The perfect carbon nanotube forest
40References
- Pictures
- 1,2 The Application of Vertically Aligned
Carbon Nanotube Arrays in Electronics and
Biosensors by Dr. Jun Li, NASA Ames Research
Center, MS 229-1, Moffett Field, CA 94035 - 7 Carbon nanotubes enter Tour de France.
CNet.com. - 8-9 Carbon Nanotube Based Biosensors.
Massood Z. Atashbar1, Bruce Bejcek2, Srikanth
Singamaneni1, and Sandro Santucci. Electrical and
Computer Engineering Department, Western Michigan
University, Kalamazoo, MI-49008, USA - 10 Drug Delivery and Biomolecular Transport.
Nanotubes Monthly. - 17-20 Simple model for dielectrophoretic
alignment of gallium nitride nanowires. Abhishek
Motayeda et al. Material Science and Engineering
Laboratory, National Institute of Standards and
Technology, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20899 and
Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering, University of Maryland, College
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microelectrodes a numerical study. Maria Dimaki
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Nanotechnology, Building 345 East, Technical
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Industrial Sensor Systems, ISAS, Vienna
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A-1040, Vienna, Austria, nieuwenhuis_at_tuwien.ac.at,
Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Biomedical
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- Dielectrophoresis of carbon nanotubes using
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and Peter Bøggild. MICDepartment of Micro and
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More references available for this document upon
request.
41Are there any questions?