Carbon nanofibers (Conductivity)
Introduction
A carbon nanotube is a tube formed by carbon atoms with a diameter of the order of nanometers (nanoscale). It is one of the allotropes of carbon.[1].
Single-walled or monolayer carbon nanotubes have diameters between 0.5 and 2.0 nanometers, about 100,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair. They can be visualized as two-dimensional sheets of graphene rolled up to form a hollow cylinder. Multi-walled or multilayer carbon nanotubes consist of concentric single-walled carbon nanotubes, nested inside each other. This name can be used to refer to double- and triple-walled carbon nanotubes.
Carbon nanotubes can exhibit remarkable properties, such as exceptional tensile strength and thermal conductivity,[2][3] due to their nanostructure and the strength of the bond between carbon atoms. Some carbon nanotube structures exhibit high electrical conductivity, while others are semiconducting. Additionally, they can be chemically modified.[4] These properties are of interest in many areas of technology, such as electronics, optics, composite materials (replacing or complementing carbon fibers), nanotechnology, and other applications in materials science.
In 1993, Iijima and Ichihashi at NEC and Bethune et al. at IBM independently discovered that the covaporization of carbon and transition metals such as iron and cobalt could specifically catalyze the formation of single-walled carbon nanotubes. This discovery led to research that considerably increased the efficiency of the catalytic production technique, as well as an explosion of studies to characterize and find applications for this form of carbon.
Nomenclature
There is no general consensus in the scientific literature for the naming of the different varieties of carbon nanotubes. In English-language publications, molecules are often designated by their acronyms: thus, carbon nanotubes are generally called CNTs (carbon nano-tubes); Single-walled nanotubes are called SWCNT (simple wall/simple walled carbon nano-tubes) or SWNT - omitting the C in carbon - and multi-walled ones are abbreviated as MWNT or MWCNT; In works in Spanish, you can find the acronym NTC ('carbon nanotubes'), NTCPM ('multi-walled carbon nanotubes') and NTCPS ('single-walled carbon nanotubes'). The International Organization for Standardization uses “single walls” or “multiple walls” in their papers.