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Date:8:45-10:00 AM,10th June Venue:LI XUN Building(468room) Topic:Collisional-Induced Resistivity of Carbon Nanotubes Speaker:Prof. Peter Eklund (The Pennsylvania State University,USA) Content:A single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) is often mentioned as one of
the strongest materials known. In tension along the tube axis, this
statement is correct. However, the tube is “soft” in the radial
direction, i.e., deformation or squash modes which give rise to an
oscillating elliptical cross section have freq’s in the range 20-1. Here, we present results of an in situ electrical transport study (thermoelectric power (S) and
resistivity (ρ) of bundled SWNTs exposed to a series of gases (He,
Ar, Ne, Kr, Xe, CH4, N2). Unusually strong and remarkably systematic changes in these
transport properties are observed as the nanotubes undergo
collisions with these atomic and molecular gases. At fixed pressure
and temperature, the changes in the transport parameters, i.e.,
∆S and ∆ρ, are observed experimentally to exhibit an ~
M1/3 behavior, where M is the mass of the colliding gas atom
(molecule).1 At fixed temperature, ∆S ∆ρ saturate in the range
0.3-0.5 atm., with the saturation pressureand depending on M. Results of molecular dynamics that simulate the
gas-nanotube collision show that the maximum deformation of the
tube wall and the radial kinetic energy transfer to the tube wall
also exhibit this M1/3 behavior. It appears that the transient deformation or “dent”
caused by the collisions may provide a new scattering mechanism for
itinerant electrons in the tube walls. These dents ring as the
fundamental “squash” mode of the tube wall. The pressure psat at which ∆S and ∆ρ can be shown to be consistent with
the gas pressure at whichsaturate co-existing dents first begin to overlap.
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