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1 wt% Short Length Single-walled Carbon Nanotubes Dispersion

Short Length Single-walled Carbon Nanotubes Dispersion – Single-walled nanotubes are excellent conductors & the most likely candidate for miniaturizing electronics beyond the microelectromechanical scale currently used in electronics. The most basic building block of these systems is the electric wire.

1 wt% Short Length Single-walled Carbon Nanotubes Dispersion
Product No NRE-36001
CAS No. NA
Purity > 95 wt%
Average Diameter 1.1 nm
Average Length 1-3 um
Special Surface Area(SSA) > 380 m2/g
Tap Density  0.14g/cm3
True Density 2.1 g/cm3
Electric Conductivity > 100 S/cm

Short Length Single-walled Carbon Nanotubes Dispersion

Single-walled Carbon Nanotubes (SWNTs, SWCNTs) Application
Potential applications of carbon nanotubes are (1) additives in polymers; (2) catalysts; (3) electron field emitters for cathode-ray lighting elements; (4) flat panel display; (5) gas-discharge tubes in telecom networks; (6) electromagnetic-wave absorption and shielding; (7) energy conversion; (8) lithium-battery anodes; (9) hydrogen storage; (10) nanotube composites (by filling or coating); (11) nanoprobes for STM, AFM, and EFM tips; (12) nanolithography; (13) nanoelectrodes; (14) drug delivery; (15) sensors; (16) reinforcements in composites; (17) supercapacitor.

Most single-walled nanotubes (SWCNTs) have a diameter of close to 1 nanometer, with a tube length that can be many millions of times longer. The structure of an SWCNTs can be conceptualized by wrapping a one-atom-thick layer of graphite called graphene into a seamless cylinder. SWNTs exhibit a richness in electronic behavior that may be exploited for molecular device applications. For example, metallic nanotubes may be used in resonant tunneling devices and also function as interconnects between device elements. Semiconducting nanotubes have already shown their utility in nanometer-sized field-effect transistors.

Single-walled nanotubes are excellent conductors & the most likely candidate for miniaturizing electronics beyond the microelectromechanical scale currently used in electronics. The most basic building block of these systems is the electric wire.

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