A continuous process for the preparation of structurally well-defined uniform alumina (Al 2 O 3 ) nanotubes was developed. The present nanofabrication approach is based on pulse anodization of aluminum by using sulfuric acid and provides unique opportunity for a facile tailoring of the length of nanotubes by controlling the pulse duration.Nanotubes have many desirable characteristics based on their shape, potential quantum-size effects and a large effective surface area and thus have attracted considerable research interest. 1,2 Particular attention has been paid to the preparation of metal oxide nanotubes because of their potential applications in advanced electronics and for high performance catalysts. To date, various synthetic methods have been developed for oxide nanotubes of aluminum, iron, vanadium, titanium, silicon, zirconium, etc. 1-3 Among them, alumina nanotubes have a special importance for nanoelectronics and catalysis because of the material's excellent physicochemical properties, including high dielectric constant, very low permeability, high thermal conductivity, and chemical inertness. [4][5][6] Previously, alumina nanotubes have been prepared by wet-chemical etching of a porous alumina membrane, 7 by anodization of Al/Si, 8 or by utilizing one-dimensional organic or inorganic nanowires as sacrificial templates in hydrothermal synthesis, 9,10 a sol-gel technique, 11 chemical vapor deposition (CVD), 12 or atomic layer deposition (ALD). 13,14 However, apart from processing time, these methods have inherent disadvantages in fabricating alumina nanotubes with uniform diameter and in tailoring the length of nanotubes simultaneously. In this letter, we report a novel continuous method for the preparation of structurally welldefined alumina nanotubes with controllable length. The approach is based on pulse anodization of aluminum, combining both mild (MA) and hard anodization (HA) conditions, where the pulse duration defines the length of alumina nanotubes. Previously MA has popularly been employed in nanotechnology research, because it enables the preparation of self-ordered anodic aluminum oxide (AAO) in spite of its limited processing windows (i.e., the so-called self-ordering regimes) for ordered arrays of alumina nanopores. On the other hand, HA that is performed at relatively low temperatures and high current density (typically, j > 50 mA cm -2 ) by using H 2 SO 4 has routinely been utilized for various industrial applications by taking advantage of the high-speed growth (50 -100 µm h -1 ) of anodic films with high technical quality. However, pores of the resulting anodic films are less ordered than those produced by MA processes, and thus HA processes have been out of focus in academic research. On the other hand, pulse anodization has been employed in the aluminum industry since the early 1960s in an attempt to avoid burning problems (i.e., local thickening of oxide film with black spots due to catastrophic flow of electrical current at the barrier layer) associated with HA of aluminum...