Materials Science and Engineering Students Win Best Poster at Professional MeetingsBy Pete Brown - September 12, 2008Binh Duong, a new PhD student in Professor Supapan Seraphin’s research group in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE), received best poster award in the advanced instrumentation category at Microscopy and Microanalysis 2008.
“Due to their novel properties,” said Duong, “carbon nanotubes have very good potential applications, such as air pollution filters, electrical circuits and energy storage.” Margo Ellis, another PhD student from MSE, received best poster award for physical science at the annual meeting of the Arizona Imaging and Microanalysis Society held in Flagstaff, Ariz., in April 2008. The poster -- A SEM-Structural Chemical Analyzer Study of Multi-walled Carbon Nanotubes Grown by Chemical Vapor Deposition -- presented research done in collaboration with Motorola Labs in Tempe, Ariz. Ellis has been a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow since 2007, when the NSF awarded her a grant to support her PhD study for three years. Raman spectroscopy is named after the Indian scientist, Sir Chandrashekhara Venkata Raman, who in 1928 discovered the inelastic light scattering on which this type of spectroscopy is based. He won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics for this discovery.
Carbon nanotubes are cylindrical carbon molecules of a length that may exceed one million times their diameter, which is typically a few nanometers, or about 1/50,000th of the width of a human hair. Carbon nanotubes have the greatest tensile strength of all known materials. One type of nanotube has been determined to have a tensile strength equivalent to suspending more than 60 tons from a cable with a cross-sectional area of one square millimeter.
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