APS Logo

Electronic transport in ultrahigh-conductivity aligned carbon nanotube assemblies

ORAL

Abstract

Macroscopic assemblies of aligned carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with ultrahigh conductivity (> 10 MS/m) have recently emerged. They are promising for replacing copper- or aluminum-based electrical cables, but further conductivity improvement requires a microscopic understanding of electronic transport processes in CNT assemblies. In particular, it is of great importance to elucidate the roles of disorder, doping, and electron-electron interactions in determining the conductivity. Here, we describe our temperature- and magnetic field-dependent conductivity measurements on aligned CNT fibers and bundles produced by the solution spinning method. We observed a metallic behavior in a wide temperature range (30–300 K), i.e., conductivity monotonically increasing with decreasing temperature. At low temperatures (< 50 K), strongly temperature-dependent negative magnetoresistance appeared, a hallmark of weak localization, suggesting quantum coherent transport. We determined the dimensionality and coherence lengths of carriers via analysis of the weak localization behavior. In addition to macroscopic CNT fibers with diameters of ∼10 μm, we also conducted conductivity measurements on individual crystalline CNT bundles (with diameters ∼ 50 nm and lengths ∼ 30 μm) that constitute the fibers.

Presenters

  • Natsumi Komatsu

    Rice University

Authors

  • Natsumi Komatsu

    Rice University

  • Nicolas Marquez Peraca

    Rice Univ, Rice University

  • Xinwei Li

    California Institute of Technology, Caltech

  • Oliver S Dewey

    Rice University

  • Lauren W Taylor

    Princeton University

  • Ali Mojibpour

    Rice Univ

  • Geoff Wehmeyer

    Rice University

  • Matteo Pasquali

    Rice Univ

  • Matthew Foster

    Rice Univ, Rice University

  • Junichiro Kono

    Rice Univ, Rice University