The first electrical-transport measurements of monatomic carbon chains are reported in this study. The chains were obtained by unraveling carbon atoms from graphene ribbons while an electrical current flowed through the ribbon and, successively, through the chain. The formation of the chains was accompanied by a characteristic drop in the electrical conductivity. The conductivity of the chains was much lower than previously predicted for ideal chains. First-principles calculations using both density functional and many-body perturbation theory show that strain in the chains has an increasing effect on the conductivity as the length of the chains increases. Indeed, carbon chains are always under varying nonzero strain that transforms their atomic structure from the cumulene to the polyyne configuration, thus inducing a tunable band gap. The modified electronic structure and the characteristics of the contact to the graphitic periphery explain the low conductivity of the locally constrained carbon chain.
A general method is described for the deposition of metal nanoparticles selectively either inside or outside of carbon nanotubes (CNTs). The method is based on the difference in the interface energies of organic and aqueous solutions with the CNT surface. Because of their lipophilic character, the organic solvent better wets the surface of the nanotubes compared to water and penetrates into the inner volume. The precise control of the volume of each phase allows filling the CNT with the organic phase and covering its outer surface with the aqueous one. Hence, metal nanoparticles can be put with high selectivity either inside or outside the CNT, just by choosing in which solvent the metal precursor is dissolved. SEM, TEM, and 3D-TEM investigations show that a selectivity in localization close to 75% can be reached by this technique. The nanoparticles are homogeneously dispersed and present a narrow size distribution, centered on 5 nm. In this way, one can decorate either the inner or the outer surface of open CNTs, without the need of discriminating the diameter of the opening and without any further step of functionalization than a treatment with nitric acid.
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