‘Nanocable’ could be big boon for energy storage
http://news.rice.edu/2012/06/07/nanocable-could-be-big-boon-for-energy-storage/[font face=Serif][font size=5]Nanocable could be big boon for energy storage[/font]
Jade Boyd June 7, 2012
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[font size=5]Nanocable could be big boon for energy storage[/font]
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Rice Universitys coaxial nanocable outperforms previous microcapacitors[/font]
[font size=3]HOUSTON (June 7, 2012) Thanks to a little serendipity, researchers at Rice University have created a tiny coaxial cable that is about a thousand times smaller than a human hair and has higher capacitance than previously reported microcapacitors.
The nanocable, which is
described this week in Nature Communications, was produced with techniques pioneered in the nascent graphene research field and could be used to build
next-generation energy-storage systems. It could also find use in wiring up components of lab-on-a-chip processors, but its discovery is owed partly to chance.
We didnt expect to create this when we started, said study co-author
Jun Lou, associate professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at Rice. At the outset, we were just curious to see what would happen electrically and mechanically if we took small copper wires known as interconnects and covered them with a thin layer of carbon.
The tiny coaxial cable is remarkably similar in makeup to the ones that carry cable television signals into millions of homes and offices. The heart of the cable is a solid copper wire that is surrounded by a thin sheath of insulating copper oxide. A third layer, another conductor, surrounds that. In the case of TV cables, the third layer is copper again, but in the nanocable it is a thin layer of carbon measuring just a few atoms thick. The coax nanocable is about 100 nanometers, or 100 billionths of a meter, wide.
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