Great Expectations for Tiny Tubes

Published: 3 May 2001 y., Thursday
It looks just like soot. But unlike the mess caked on your barbecue grill, this substance consists of billions of tiny tubes of pure carbon resembling rolled-up chicken wire. And these striking structures, called nanotubes, are poised to have an impact on fields as diverse as computing, materials engineering, and medical devices. Discovered in 1991 when Sumio Iijima, a physicist at Japan's NEC Corp., zapped carbon with laser beams, nanotubes set off an international race among researchers. So far, laboratories have revealed a steadily lengthening list of their remarkable properties. Nanotubes are a descendant of buckyballs, which became a scientific sensation in 1985. Until then, the only known forms of pure carbon were the rigid crystal structure of diamond and slippery sheets of graphite. The arrangement of 60 carbon atoms into round balls -- dubbed buckyballs, or fullerenes, because they resembled the dome structures designed by architect R. Buckminster Fuller -- seemed to presage a new carbon chemistry. Nanotubes haven't transformed any industries yet, either. But while practical applications still are years away, a steady stream of recent discoveries point to real commercial potential. The most promise lies in computing and electronics.
Šaltinis: businessweek.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

The ongoing research project

The latest results of Internet Survey of MedicineTM. more »

The debut of MedGenMed

Online Medical Journal to Publish in Real Time. more »

"Double-edged sword" situation

Study: Problems mount over medical help offered online. more »

Hooked on cybersex

Study: Internet Becoming a Force in Sexuality. more »

The online competition

Net drugstores face "sword fight". more »

Surgery over next-generation Internet connection

Organizers planned to unveil their $500 million Abilene Network. more »

Chips Off Many an Old Block

Paris Implants Diagnostic Chips Into Its 90,000 Trees . more »