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Carbon Nanotube Detect
Colors of the Rainbow
04 May 2009
Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories have created the first
carbon nanotube device that can detect the entire visible spectrum of
light, a feat that could soon allow scientists to probe single molecule
transformations, study how those molecules respond to light, observe how
the molecules change shapes, and understand other fundamental
interactions between molecules and nanotubes.
Sandia
researcher Xinjian Zhou measures the electronic and optical properties
of carbon nanotube devices in a probe station. The monitor shows the
electrode layout on the device wafer; the nanotubes are positioned in
the small horizontal gaps.
Carbon nanotubes are long thin cylinders composed entirely of carbon
atoms. While their diameters are in the nanometer range (1-10), they can
be very long, up to centimeters in length.
The carbon-carbon bond is very strong, making carbon nanotubes very
robust and resistant to any kind of deformation. To construct a
nanoscale color detector, Sandia researchers took inspiration from the
human eye, and in a sense, improved on the model.
When light strikes the retina, it initiates a cascade of chemical and
electrical impulses that ultimately trigger nerve impulses. In the
nanoscale color detector, light strikes a chromophore and causes a
conformational change in the molecule, which in turn causes a threshold
shift on a transistor made from a single-walled carbon nanotube.
“In our eyes the neuron is in front of the retinal molecule, so the
light has to transmit through the neuron to hit the molecule,” says
Sandia researcher Xinjian Zhou. “We placed the nanotube transistor
behind the molecule—a more efficient design.”
Zhou and his Sandia colleagues François Léonard, Andy Vance, Karen
Krafcik, Tom Zifer, and Bryan Wong created the device. The team recently
published a paper, “Color Detection Using Chromophore-Nanotube Hybrid
Devices,” in the journal Nano Letters.
The idea of carbon nanotubes being light sensitive has been around for a
long time, but earlier efforts using an individual nanotube were only
able to detect light in narrow wavelength ranges at laser intensities.
The Sandia team found that their nanodetector was orders of magnitude
more sensitive, down to about 40 W/m2—about 3 percent of the density of
sunshine reaching the ground. “Because the dye is so close to the
nanotube, a little change turns into a big signal on the device,” says
Zhou.
This
diagram depicts a representation of chromophores attaching to a
transistor made from a single carbon nanotube.
The research is in
its second year of internal Sandia funding and is based on Léonard’s
collaboration with the University of Wisconsin to explain the
theoretical mechanism of carbon nanotube light detection. Léonard
literally wrote the book on carbon nanotubes—The Physics of Carbon
Nanotubes, published September 2008.
Léonard says the project draws upon Sandia’s expertise in both materials
physics and materials chemistry. He and Wong laid the groundwork with
their theoretical research, with Wong completing the first-principles
calculations that supported the hypothesis of how the chromophores were
arranged on the nanotubes and how the chromophore isomerizations
affected electronic properties of the devices.
To construct the device, Zhou and Krafcik first had to create a tiny
transistor made from a single carbon nanotube. They deposited carbon
nanotubes on a silicon wafer and then used photolithography to define
electrical patterns to make contacts.
The final piece came from Vance and Zifer, who synthesized molecules to
create three types of chromophores that respond to either the red,
green, or orange bands of the visible spectrum. Zhou immersed the wafer
in the dye solution and waited a few minutes while the chromophores
attached themselves to the nanotubes.
The team reached their goal of detecting visible light faster than they
expected—they thought the entire first year of the project would be
spent testing UV light. Now, they are looking to increase the efficiency
by creating a device with multiple nanotubes.
“Detection is now limited to about 3 percent of sunlight, which isn’t
bad compared with a commercially available digital camera,” says Zhou.
“I hope to add some antennas to increase light absorption.”
A device made with multiple carbon nanotubes would be easier to
construct and the resulting larger area would be more sensitive to
light. A larger size is also more practical for applications.
Now,
they are setting their sites on detecting infrared light. “We think this
principle can be applied to infrared light and there is a lot of
interest in infrared detection,” says Vance. “So we’re in the process of
looking for dyes that work in infrared.”
This research eventually could be used for a number of exciting
applications, such as an optical detector with nanometer scale
resolution, ultra-tiny digital cameras, solar cells with more light
absorption capability, or even genome sequencing. The near-term purpose,
however, is basic science.
“A large part of why we are doing this is not to invent a photo
detector, but to understand the processes involved in controlling carbon
nanotube devices,” says Léonard.
The next step in the project is to create a nanometer-scale photovoltaic
device. Such a device on a larger scale could be used as an unpowered
photo detector or for solar energy. “Instead of monitoring current
changes, we’d actually generate current,” says Vance. “We have an idea
of how to do it, but it will be a more challenging fabrication process.” |