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Advanced Materials Portfolio
 Nanomaterials
and Nanotechnology
What are Nanomaterials?
A result of precision engineering and the "science
of the impossibly small," nanomaterials are materials with
very small features on the order of 1-100 nm. For reference, 1
nm is ~4-5 orders of magnitude smaller than the diameter of a
human hair, or approximately equivalent to the length of 4 atoms
lined up in a row. The effects of atomic physics or quantum mechanics
are much more evident in the properties of nanomaterials than
bulk materials. One advantage of this is materials with very different
or enhanced properties compared with similar bulk materials. One
area of nanotechnology CRG is currently involved in is carbon
nanotube (CNT) and carbon nanofiber (CNF) composites and adhesives.
Carbon Nanotube or Nanofiber Composites and
Adhesives
CNT is a tubular form of carbon having a diameter
as small as 1 nm and length as long as several microns. (Larger
nanotubes with diameters in the range of 80-200 nm are referred
to as carbon nanofibers.) Due to its seamless structure, covalent
bonding, and extensive π
overlap, CNT provides physical properties that are unmatched by
other materials. These properties include the stiffness of diamond,
a Young’s modulus 1½ times that of carbon fiber,
anisotropic thermal conductivity ~50 times greater than that of
silver, electrical conductivity ~6 orders of magnitude higher
than copper, and a room-temperature mobility higher than that
of any known material.
 CRG's
Nanomaterial Expertise
Offering fundamental expertise in nanoprocessing,
CRG has developed processing techniques for CNT and CNF cleaning,
functionalizaton, and dispersion that allow many of these
properties to be incorporated in a broad range of polymer
systems, from epoxies to our own shape memory polymer (SMP)
resins. Possible applications of these materials include conducting
adhesives, shielding coatings, and lightweight, high-performance
structural materials.
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