Press release

 

How do you tune a nano-guitar?

Paris, December 20, 2002

 

Like a guitar string, a carbon nanotube(1) can resonate. In the same way that the pitch of a guitar string can be modified by modifying the tension of the string, a team of researchers has managed to adjust the resonance frequencies of nanotubes by applying a voltage. “It amounts to tuning a nano-guitar,” sums up Stephen Purcell from the Materials Physics Department (CNRS - Université Lyon 1), co-author of the work to be published this week in Physical Review Letters(2).

Imagine you have thousands of similar nanotubes”, suggests Stephen Purcell. “Inevitably, they do not all have the same length or the same diameter. Their resonance frequencies are therefore different. With our method, it is nevertheless possible to make them resonate together: it is necessary merely to apply the right voltage to each nanotube”.

The frequency adjustment is achieved by the electric force generated at the end of the nanotube. It is thus possible to cause the frequency to vary by a factor of 10. “The analogy with a nano-guitar is natural. The physics is the same as when a string instrument is tuned by modifying the tension on its strings”, explains the researcher.

The article which is being published in Physical Review Letters also describes a novel method of observing the excitation of the mechanical resonances of carbon nanotubes. That method should be very useful to other researchers in the same field. By merely adding a function generator to their apparatus, they will be able to study the mechanical properties of their nanotubes as a function of the treatments they apply, or of temperature. For Stephen Purcell, the possibility of acting over a wide range of frequencies by using electronics constitutes a powerful new tool in the field of nanotechnologies.

(1)With diameters of about one nanometer (10-9 meters), carbon nanotubes are ten times stiffer and six times lighter than steel.

(2)“Tuning of Nanotube Mechanical Resonances by Electric Field Pulling.”
Authors: S.T. Purcell, P. Vincent, C. Journet, Vu Thien Binh.
Web Site of Physical Review Letters: http://prl.aps.org/ ("Recent and Future Issues" section).
The article is scheduled to be published in that journal in the coming weeks.


Researcher contact:
S.T. Purcell
Tel: +33 4 72 44 80 48
e-mail: purcell@dpm.univ-lyon1.fr

Press contact:
Nathalie Tramunt
Tel: +33 1 44 96 46 06
e-mail: nathalie.tramunt@cnrs-dir.fr