Imaging active topological defects in carbon nanotubes
Top Cited Papers
- 13 May 2007
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Nanotechnology
- Vol. 2 (6), 358-360
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nnano.2007.141
Abstract
A single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) is a wrapped single graphene layer, and its plastic deformation should require active topological defects--non-hexagonal carbon rings that can migrate along the nanotube wall. Although in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) has been used to examine the deformation of SWNTs, these studies deal only with diameter changes and no atomistic mechanism has been elucidated experimentally. Theory predicts that some topological defects can form through the Stone-Wales transformation in SWNTs under tension at 2,000 K, and could act as a dislocation core. We demonstrate here, by means of high-resolution (HR)-TEM with atomic sensitivity, the first direct imaging of pentagon-heptagon pair defects found in an SWNT that was heated at 2,273 K. Moreover, our in situ HR-TEM observation reveals an accumulation of topological defects near the kink of a deformed nanotube. This result suggests that dislocation motions or active topological defects are indeed responsible for the plastic deformation of SWNTs.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Symmetry-, time-, and temperature-dependent strength of carbon nanotubesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Superplastic carbon nanotubesNature, 2006
- Direct evidence for atomic defects in graphene layersNature, 2004
- Zipper Mechanism of Nanotube Fusion: Theory and ExperimentPhysical Review Letters, 2004
- Diameter Enlargement of HiPco Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes by Heat TreatmentNano Letters, 2001
- Coalescence of Single-Walled Carbon NanotubesScience, 2000
- Growth and defect formation of single-wall carbon nanotubesPhysical Review B, 2000
- Mechanism of strain release in carbon nanotubesPhysical Review B, 1998
- Accurate and simple analytic representation of the electron-gas correlation energyPhysical Review B, 1992
- Theoretical studies of icosahedral C60 and some related speciesChemical Physics Letters, 1986