Claims
- 1. A nanotube junction comprising at least one five-membered carbon ring and at least one seven-membered carbon ring in an essentially six-membered carbon ring lattice.
- 2. A carbon nanotube junction comprising at least one pentagon-heptagon pair.
- 3. The carbon nanotube junction of claim 2 wherein the pentagon-heptagon pairs are adjacent pentagon-heptagon pairs.
- 4. The carbon nanotube junction of claim 2 wherein the pentagon-heptagon pairs are extended pentagon-heptagon pairs.
- 5. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube comprising,
a) a first electrically conducting section of nanotube; b) a second semiconducting section of nanotube joined to the first section.
- 6. The nanotube of claim 5 further comprising a junction having at least one pentagon-heptagon pair, adjoined on one side to the electrically conducting section and on the other side to the semiconductor section.
- 7. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein the semiconducting section comprises carbon pentagon-heptagon pairs distributed approximately uniformly throughout its length.
- 8. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein the electrically conducting section comprises carbon pentagon-heptagon pairs distributed approximately uniformly throughout its length.
- 9. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein the semiconducting section and the electrically-conducting section comprise carbon pentagon-heptagon pairs distributed approximately uniformly throughout their lengths, the conducting section having a higher concentration of pentagon-heptagon pairs than the semiconducting section.
- 10. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein the semiconducting section comprises electron-donating dopant atoms.
- 11. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein the electrically-conducting section comprises electron-donating dopant atoms.
- 12. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein both the semiconducting section and the electrically-conducting section comprise electron-donating dopant atoms.
- 13. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein the semiconducting section comprises electron-accepting dopant atoms.
- 14. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein the electrically-conducting section comprises electron-accepting dopant atoms.
- 15. The nanotube of claim 5 wherein both the semiconducting section and the electrically-conducting section comprise electron-accepting dopant atoms.
- 16. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube comprising,
a) a first semiconducting section; b) a second semiconducting section joined to the first section; wherein the band-gap of the first section differs from the band-gap of the second section by more than the thermal energy of a free electron.
- 17. The nanotube of claim 16 further comprising a junction having at least one pentagon-heptagon pair, adjoined on one side to the semiconductor nanotube having a smaller band-gap and on the other side to the semiconductor nanotube having a larger band-gap.
- 18. The nanotube of claim 16 wherein one of the semiconducting sections comprises carbon pentagon-heptagon pairs distributed approximately uniformly throughout its length.
- 19. The nanotube of claim 16 wherein both of the semiconducting sections comprise carbon pentagon-heptagon pairs distributed approximately uniformly throughout their lengths, one of the sections having a higher concentration of pentagon-heptagon pairs than the other section.
- 20. The nanotube of claim 16 wherein one of the semiconducting sections comprises electron-donating dopant atoms.
- 21. The nanotube of claim 16 wherein both of the semiconducting sections comprise electron-donating dopant atoms.
- 22. The nanotube of claim 16 wherein one of the semiconducting sections comprises electron-accepting dopant atoms.
- 23. The nanotube of claim 16 wherein both of the semiconducting sections comprise electron-accepting dopant atoms.
- 24. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube comprising,
a) a first electrically-conducting section; b) a second electrically-conducting section joined to the first section; in which the highest energy electronic states in each section have different angular symmetries.
- 25. The nanotube of claim 24 further comprising a junction having at least one pentagon-heptagon pair, adjoined on one side to one of the electrically-conducting sections and on the other side to the other of the electrically-conducting sections.
- 26. The nanotube of claim 24 wherein one of the electrically-conducting sections comprises carbon pentagon-heptagon pairs distributed approximately uniformly throughout its length.
- 27. The nanotube of claim 24 wherein both of the electrically-conducting sections comprise carbon pentagon-heptagon pairs distributed approximately uniformly throughout their lengths.
- 28. The nanotube of claim 24 wherein one of the electrically-conducting sections comprises electron-donating dopant atoms.
- 29. The nanotube of claim 24 wherein both of the electrically-conducting sections comprise electron-donating dopant atoms.
- 30. The nanotube of claim 24 wherein one of the electrically-conducting sections comprises electron-accepting dopant atoms.
- 31. The nanotube of claim 24 wherein both of the electrically-conducting sections comprise electron-accepting dopant atoms.
- 32. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube comprising, a)
a first semiconducting section having a nanotube index of (8,0); b) a second semiconducting section having a nanotube index of (5,3) joined to the first section; c) a junction comprising three pentagon-heptagon pairs and two six-membered carbon rings.
- 33. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube comprising,
a) a first electrically conducting section of nanotube having a nanotube index of (7,1); b) a second semiconducting section of nanotube having a nanotube index of (8,0), joined to the first section; and c) a junction one pentagon-heptagon pair.
- 34. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube comprising,
a) a first electrically-conducting section; b) a second electrically-conducting section joined to the first section; and c) a junction comprising three pentagon-heptagon pairs and three six-membered carbon rings.
- 35. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube having a p-n junction comprising,
a) a nanotube section having a nanotube index characteristic of n-type semiconductors; b) a nanotube section having a nanotube index characteristic of p-type semiconductors; and c) a junction comprising at least one pentagon-heptagon pair, adjoined on one side to the n-type section and on the other side to the p-type section.
- 36. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube having gated conduction properties comprising,
a) a first nanotube section having electrical properties characteristic of metals; b) a second nanotube section having electrical properties characteristic of semiconductors, joined to the first section; c) a third nanotube section having electrical properties characteristic of metals, joined to the second section; and d) a conducting region in the second section through which a voltage can be applied to the second section.
- 37. A continuous essentially carbon nanotube having properties of a quantum well comprising,
a) a first nanotube section having electrical properties characteristic of metals; b) a second nanotube section having electrical properties characteristic of semiconductors, joined to the first section; and c) a third nanotube section having electrical properties characteristic of metals, joined to the second section.
- 38. A continuous nanotube comprising,
a) an essentially carbon nanotube section, and b) a carbon nanotube section in which atomic substitutions are made, chosen from the group comprising boron and nitrogen.
- 39. The nanotube of claim 38 wherein p-type or n-type dopants are added.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This invention is disclosed in provisional application serial No. 60/011065 and this application claims benefit of the provisional filing date, Feb. 2, 1996.
Government Interests
[0002] This invention was made with U.S. Government support under Contract No. DE-AC03-76SF00098 between the U.S. Department of Energy and the University of California for the operation of Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. The U.S. Government may have certain rights in this invention.
Provisional Applications (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60011065 |
Feb 1996 |
US |
Divisions (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
08792461 |
Jan 1997 |
US |
Child |
10393818 |
Mar 2003 |
US |