posted on 2004-01-13, 00:00authored byVirginia A. Davis, Lars M. Ericson, A. Nicholas G. Parra-Vasquez, Hua Fan, Yuhuang Wang, Valentin Prieto, Jason A. Longoria, Sivarajan Ramesh, Rajesh K. Saini, Carter Kittrell, W. E. Billups, W. Wade Adams, Robert H. Hauge, Richard E. Smalley, Matteo Pasquali
Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) can be dispersed at high concentration in
superacids; the protonation of SWNTs sidewalls eliminates wall−wall van der Waals interactions and
promotes the dispersion process. At very low concentration, SWNTs in superacids dissolve as individual
tubes which behave as Brownian rods. At higher concentration, SWNTs form a highly unusual nematic
phase consisting of spaghetti-like self-assembled supermolecular strands of mobile, solvated tubes in
equilibrium with a dilute isotropic phase. At even higher concentration, the spaghetti strands self-assemble
into a polydomain nematic liquid crystal. Upon the introduction of small amounts of water, the liquid
crystal phase separates into needle-shaped strands (∼20 μm long) of highly aligned SWNTs, termed
alewives. Under anhydrous condition, the liquid crystalline phase can be processed into highly aligned
fibers of pure SWNT without the aid of any surfactants or polymers.