Knotted Carbon Nanotubes
Submarine writes: "Researchers from the CRPP
(
University Bordeaux 1 (France) /
CNRS) have produced knotted nanotubes. See
a
short description of their work, complete
with images."
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You misread, the diameter is on the order of a nanometer not micrometer.
From the article itself: [...] aggregates the nanotubes into narrow strips. These strips, a few microns thick and a few millimeters wide, are made up of entangled nanotubes with a preferred orientation due to the direction of extrusion, as shown under the optical microscope (Figure 1) and the electron microscope. These strips contract when dried in air and the water they contain is evacuated by capillary action, forming dense fibers (Figure 2). This means that the knotted fibers shown as optical shots are actually kind of bundles of nanotubes. The salient point of those knots is that normal carbon fibers cannot be twisted nor knotted, while these can, to some extent.
I dunno. I thought nanotubes would be... smaller.
The knotted tubes are 10 microns in diameter, and are shown using an optical microscope.
Given that intel is mass producing microchips with features 1/75th this size, I had thought the state of the art would be smaller than that.
I'm obviously missing somehting.
More links:
NASA Nanotechnology Team
Nanotechnology with Carbon Nanotubes
Also do a search on /. for nanotube.
The geese do not wish to leave their reflection behind;
The water has no mind to retain their image.
How could this be used for computers?
I want to see how she unties them.
*whup* "Get along, little electrons. Heeyah!"