黑料网

News

A new method developed for measuring carbon nanotubes

With this method can be measured e.g. the number of single walled carbon nanotubes and their concentration in a carbon nanotube layer.

Researchers working at the Aalto University and at the Royal Institute of Technology KTH in Stockholm have developed a new method for measuring the number of single walled carbon nanotubes and their concentration in a carbon nanotube layer.

The novel method is based on measurement of the Raman spectrum together with precise measurement of mass and optical absorbance. The dependence of the number of the CNTs on the phonon scattering intensity is observed. This method opens an opportunity for the quantitative mapping of sp2 bonded carbon atom distribution (i.e. those atoms that form the carbon nanotubes with bonds to three other carbon atoms) in the CNT layers with a resolution limited by the focused laser spot size.

Dependence of optical absorbance A at 550 nm on the surface density of SWCNTs with iron particles.

Raman spectra for SWCNT samples with different optical transparencies (%).

The carbon nanotube (CNT) has a structure of a rolled single layer of graphene, where each carbon atom is bonded with three other carbon atoms. Basically the nanotube can be considered as one large molecule. The length of a CNT varies from one to one hundred micrometers while its diameter is of the order of one nanometer

CNT based materials are intensively studied due to a number of novel and unique properties that make them potentially useful in a wide range of applications. Extremely thin CNT layers offer outstanding properties like excellent flexibility, optical transparency, high electrical conductivity, extremely small weight, and low processing costs. Optical and electrical properties of a CNT layer can be varied with changing, e.g., the diameter and length of nanotubes or the amount of carbon nanotubes in the layer.

'CNT layers can be used for fabrication of transparent electrodes, fuel and solar cells, supercapacitors, etc. Therefore, a measurement technique for the number of carbon nanotubes in the CNT layer is very useful', says Irina Nefedova, one of the researchers in this project, who defended her thesis of electrical and optical properties of carbon nanotubes in March 2017 at Aalto University.

The article 鈥淪ingle walled carbon nanotube quantification method employing the Raman signal intensity鈥 describing this research has been accepted for publication in CARBON, and is now available at .

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Diagram showing cooling and heating effects of metasurfaces, with examples of white and grey metasurfaces in winter and cloudy settings.
Research & Art Published:

Researchers invent nano-clouds that can change colour, temperature and outwit heat sensors

Bio-Inspired Metasurfaces Enable Daytime Cooling, Heating, and Thermal Camouflage in a Single Solution
AI-on-Demand
Research & Art Published:

AI-on-Demand platform expands to accelerate European AI innovation across research and industry

Aalto University鈥檚 Center for Knowledge and Innovation Research (CKIR) is proud to contribute
Person wearing a patterned knit sweater and grey turtleneck in a science laboratory with metal equipment in the background.
Awards and Recognition, Research & Art Published:

Postdoctoral researcher Bayan Karimi wins 2025 Young Scientist Prize

The prize is the 2025 IUPAP Young Scientist Prize for the Commission on Low Temperature Physics (C5).
Environmental Engineering new flow channel in Otaniemi, with students and teaching staff
Research & Art Published:

Significant funding from Maa- ja vesitekniikan tuki for Olli Varis's research group

The InnoWAT project strengthens education in the water sector