Carbon nanotubes twice as strong as once believed
By ANIThursday, September 16, 2010
WASHINGTON - Scientists have reported that carbon nanotubes - those tiny particles poised to revolutionize electronics, medicine, and other areas - are much bigger in the strength department than anyone ever thought.
New studies on the strength of these submicroscopic cylinders of carbon indicate that on an ounce-for-ounce basis they are at least 117 times stronger than steel and 30 times stronger than Kevlar, the material used in bulletproof vests and other products.
Stephen Cronin and colleagues point out that nanotubes - barely 1/50,000th the width of a human hair - have been renowned for exceptional strength, high electrical conductivity, and other properties.
To resolve uncertainties about the actual strength of nanotubes, the scientists applied immense tension to individual carbon nanotubes of different lengths and widths.
They found that nanotubes could be stretched up to 14 percent of their normal length without breaking, or more than twice that of previous reports by others.
The finding establishes “a new lower limit for the ultimate strength of carbon nanotubes,” the article noted.
The finding appears in appear in the monthly journal ACS Nano. (ANI)