We have found a way to convert ropes of straight nanotubes into nanotube rings. The rings are composed of many layers of single-walled nanotubes, and have a radius of typically 0.7 micron.
Coiling has been observed in proteins and other biomolecules, where hydrogen bonding is thought to provide the main force for coiling. Carbon nanotubes however present a novel behavior where coiling involves
only van der Waals forces. The rings, which we can position on metal electrodes, allow us to study novel electric transport phenomena. Shown below is an AFM micrograph of a one micron-diameter ring (the
purple circle) placed over gold electrodes (the light blue objects). |