Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Boron Nitride nanotubes

I wrote about CNTs in my last post; figured it was inevitable since they get so much press.  I've been binging on Skeptics Guide to the Universe recently.  They're a weekly podcast that covers pseudoscience and various shenanigans in the world of nonsense.  Each podcast concludes with a segment known as "Science, or, Fiction", in which the SGU members guess which of the three science news stories is fiction (I should use this when I'm the tabletopics master in a Toastmasters meeting).  One podcast from earlier this year had a S or F story about boron nitride nanotubes, which I've never heard before.  I correctly guessed this is science, since I haven't yet heard a materials science article of their selection that turned out to be fiction. 


So, what the heck are boron nitride nanotubes? Well, to start, boron nitride (BN) is a binary chemical compound consisting of equal proportions of boron and nitrogen. It's the white material used in clown makeup and face powder.   It's isoelectronic (shares the number of electrons) with carbon, and can morph into similar physical structures: graphene-like, and diamond-like.  The latter  is the only material nearly as hard as diamond.  It remains a solid at temperatures up to 1000ºC for air, and up to 1800ºC in an inert gas atmosphere.  That's twice as high for carbon nanotubes. 

If you look for carbon on the periodic table, you may see boron is on its left, and nitrogen is on its right.  Carbon has four electrons in its valence shell, which means another four is needed to satisfy the octet rule.  Thus, boron has three valence electrons, and nitrogen has five.  Combining these two atoms satisfies the octet rule.  By extension, BN can form a graphene (1 atomic layer of graphite) lattice.  But what makes BN different from its carbon analogues is its wide band gap of approx. 5.5 eV, making a wide-gap semiconductor (effectively an insulator). 

The high bandgap for BN nanotubes (BNNT) is a factor behind their high thermal and chemical stability.  They also have excellent mechanical properties and high thermal conductivity, much like carbon nanotubes. 

Structural models of a BN monoatomic sheet and a single-shelled BN nanotube. Alternating B and N atoms are shown in blue and red.



Boron nitrides are now being used in a rather ancient technique, the spinning of textiles into yarns.  They've already done this with CNTs as demonstrated in this video here:





Until recently, high-qualtiy BNNTs could be synthesized only up to a micron ( 1 µm) long. Longer nanotubes were riddled with crystalline defects. A team of materials scientists from four institutions
(The paper is found here) spun a ~1 mm thick yarn that looks like cotton:
This yarn is 3 cm long.  "They're big and fluffy, textile-like" said Kevin Jordan, a staff electrical engineer at Jefferson Lab.  "This means you use commercial textile manufacturing and handling techniques to blend them into things like body armor and solar cells and other applications."

How'd they spin this stuff?  By using a laser aimed at a cake of boron inside a chamber filled with nitrogen gas.  This forms a plume of boron gas that shoots upward.  They then insert a cooled metal wire into the gas, causing the gas to condense into liquid droplets.  The droplets combine with nitrogen to self-assemble into BNNTs.  It's a violent reaction that yields the long nanotubes in milliseconds. 

Mass-production of cheap BNNTs may lead to lighter, faster car frames, affordable space vehicles,  and ultralightweight armor; all promised by CNTs, but with the implication that BNNTs are simply easier to make en masse.  What separates CNTs from BNNTs in terms of utility comes down to electrical properties.  The geometry of CNTs drastically changes their conductivity. whereas BNNTs experience very little conductivity alternations with respect to geometry.  In addition, thanks to their chemical inertness, BNNTs promise "pinpoint precision to attack cancer cells by sticking to tumors, absorbing neutrons from a targeted beam, and generating local alpha radiation to kill cancer cells." (See ScienceNOW )