http://physicsweb.org/article/news/8/3/4

Carbon nanotubes go magnetic
Belle Dume
PhysicsWeb
8 March 2004 

Physicists have shown that carbon nanotubes can become magnetized 
when they are placed in contact with a magnetic material. Michael 
Coey of Trinity College in Dublin and colleagues believe the 
mechanism relies on the transfer of spin - carried by electrons - 
from the magnetic substrate to the nanotube (O Céspedes et al. 
2004 J. Phys.: CM 16 L155).

It is widely believed that graphite and other forms of carbon can 
have ferromagnetic properties, but the effects are so weak that 
physicists are not sure if the magnetism is due to tiny amounts of 
iron-rich impurities, or if it is an intrinsic property of the
carbon. In 2002 Coey's group measured the magnetic properties of a 
meteorite sample and found that only two-thirds of the magnetization 
could be accounted for by magnetic minerals present in the sample. 
The rest, they argued, must come from the carbon. In particular, 
they proposed that ferromagnetic nanocrystals in the sample 
induced a magnetic moment in the carbon via proximity effects. 

Subsequent theoretical work by Mauro Ferreira and Stefano Sanvito 
showed that a measurable magnetic moment could be produced in carbon
nanostructures if they were placed close to a ferromagnetic surface. 
Now, the team has confirmed these predictions in experiments with
multi-walled carbon nanotubes that have been shown to be free from 
magnetic impurities. 

Coey says that the main challenge in his experiment was to measure 
the tiny magnetic moment of the nanotubes over the large background 
magnetic moment coming from the magnetic material. To overcome this, 
the team placed the nanotubes onto ferromagnetic substrates that had 
been uniformly magnetized in one direction. This ensured that no 
stray fields were produced by the substrate.  However, the nanotubes 
did produce a sizeable stray field when placed on the surface, and 
the Dublin team was able to measure this with a magnetic force
microscope. Moreover, nanotubes placed on non-magnetic substrates, 
such as silicon or gold, showed no magnetization. 

The group calculated the average room temperature magnetization in 
the nanotubes to be 0.1 Bohr magnetons per carbon atom. By 
comparison, the figure for iron is 2.2.  "This work opens new 
avenues for magneto-electronics," Coey told PhysicsWeb.

"For instance, one can foresee devices where the magnetic and 
electrical contacts are separated. The magnetic contact could be 
used to magnetically polarize the nanotubes - and to manipulate the 
spins - while the non-magnetic contacts are used as current/voltage 
electrodes."

______________________________________________
Meteorite-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to