Why do nanotubes grow chiral?
Abstract
Carbon nanotubes (CNT) hold enormous technological promise. It can only be harnessed if one controls in a practical way the CNT chirality, the feature of the tubular carbon topology that governs all the CNT properties---electronic, optical, mechanical. Experiments in catalytic growth over the last decade have repeatedly revealed a puzzling strong preference towards minimally-chiral (near-armchair) CNT, challenging any existing hypotheses and turning chirality control ever more tantalizing yet leaving its understanding elusive. Here we combine the CNT/catalyst interface thermodynamics with the kinetic growth theory to show that the unusual near-armchair peaks emerge from the two antagonistic trends: energetic preference towards achiral CNT/catalyst interfaces vs. faster growth of chiral CNT. This narrow distribution is profoundly related with the peaked behavior of a simple function, x*exp(-x).
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1405.7661,
title = {Why do nanotubes grow chiral?},
author = {Vasilii I. Artyukhov and Evgeni S. Penev and Boris I. Yakobson},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1405.7661},
year = {2014}
}