Strong Fiber from Uniaxial Fullerene Supramolecules Aligned with Carbon Nanotubes
John Bulmer, Michelle Dur\'an-Chaves, Daniel M. Long, Jeremiah Lipp,, Steven Williams, Mitchell Trafford, Anthony Pelton, Jared Shank, Benji, Maruyama, Larry Drummy, Matteo Pasquali, Hilmar Koerner, Timothy Haugan

TL;DR
This paper reports the creation of uniaxially aligned fullerene supramolecular fibers integrated with carbon nanotubes, offering a new platform for studying and improving fullerene-based wire transport and CNT wire development.
Contribution
It introduces a simple method to produce aligned fullerene supramolecular fibers within CNT bundles, advancing fullerene wire fabrication and integration with CNTs.
Findings
Successfully created uniaxial fullerene supramolecular fibers with CNTs.
Aligned supramolecular chains exhibit potential for enhanced electrical transport.
The method enables self-assembly of fullerene structures within CNT fibers.
Abstract
Carbon nanotube (CNT) wires approach copper's specific conductivity and surpass carbon fiber's strength, with further improvement anticipated with greater aspect ratios and incorporation of dopants with long-range structural order. Fullerenes assemble into multitudes of process-dependent supramolecular crystals and, while initially insulating, they become marginally conductive (up to 0.05 MSm) and superconductive (K with K and 28K with Rb) after doping. These were small (100's m long), soft (hardness comparable to indium), and typically unaligned, which hindered development of fullerene based wires. Individual fullerenes were previously incorporated into CNT fibers, although randomly without self-assembly into supramolecules. Here, a simple variation in established CNT acid extrusion creates a fiber composed of uniaxial chains of aligned fullerene…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCarbon Nanotubes in Composites · Fullerene Chemistry and Applications · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures
