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Dive into the research topics where Lars Martin Ericson is active.

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Featured researches published by Lars Martin Ericson.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2001

Reversible water-solubilization of single-walled carbon nanotubes by polymer wrapping

Michael J. O'Connell; Peter Boul; Lars Martin Ericson; Chad B. Huffman; YuHuang Wang; Erik Haroz; Cynthia Kuper; Jim Tour; Kevin D. Ausman; Richard E. Smalley

Abstract Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) have been solubilized in water by non-covalently associating them with linear polymers, most successfully with polyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP) and polystyrene sulfonate (PSS). This association is characterized by tight, uniform association of the polymers with the sides of the nanotubes. A general thermodynamic drive for this wrapping is discussed, wherein the polymer disrupts both the hydrophobic interface with water and the smooth tube–tube interactions in aggregates. The nanotubes can be unwrapped by changing the solvent system. This solubilization process opens the door to solution chemistry on pristine nanotubes, as well as their introduction into biologically relevant systems.


Applied Physics Letters | 1999

Elastic strain of freely suspended single-wall carbon nanotube ropes

Deron A. Walters; Lars Martin Ericson; Michael John Casavant; Jie Liu; Daniel T. Colbert; Kenneth A. Smith; Richard E. Smalley

We have induced large elastic strains in ropes of single-wall carbon nanotubes, using an atomic force microscope in lateral force mode. Freely suspended ropes were observed to deform as elastic strings with tension proportional to elongation. Ropes were elastically deformed over >10 cycles without showing signs of plastic deformation. The maximum strain observed, 5.8±0.9%, gives a lower bound of 45±7 GPa for the tensile strength (specifically, yield stress) of single-wall nanotube ropes.


Chemical Physics Letters | 1999

Reversible sidewall functionalization of buckytubes

Peter J. Boul; Jie Liu; Edward T. Mickelson; Chad B. Huffman; Lars Martin Ericson; Ivana W. Chiang; Kenneth A. Smith; Daniel T. Colbert; Robert H. Hauge; John L. Margrave; Richard E. Smalley

Abstract Single-wall fullerene nanotubes have been made soluble in various organic solvents, including chloroform, methylene chloride, and tetrahydrofuran by covalently attaching alkanes to their sidewalls. Sidewall-alkylated nanotubes are obtained by reacting sidewall-fluorinated nanotubes with alkyl magnesium bromides in a Grignard synthesis or by reaction with alkyllithium precursors. Covalent attachment to the sidewalls was confirmed by UV–visible spectroscopy, which is also used to show that the alkane sidewall groups can be removed by oxidizing them in air to recover pristine nanotubes.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2001

In-plane-aligned membranes of carbon nanotubes

Deron A. Walters; Michael John Casavant; X.C. Qin; Chad B. Huffman; Peter J. Boul; Lars Martin Ericson; Erik Haroz; Michael J. O'Connell; Kenneth A. Smith; Daniel T. Colbert; Richard E. Smalley

We have produced the first macroscopic objects comprised of highly aligned single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs). These objects are thin membranes prepared by producing a suspension of SWNT segments, introducing the suspension to a strong magnetic field to align the segments, and filtering the suspension in the magnetic field to produce an aligned membrane of SWNT. These membranes exhibited natural cleavage planes parallel to the magnetic field. This preparation of macroscopic samples of aligned single-wall nanotubes permits exploitation of their highly anisotropic properties, and will enable measurement of the electronic, thermal, magnetic, mechanical, and optical properties of bulk nanotube materials.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2004

Single wall carbon nanotube fibers extruded from super-acid suspensions: Preferred orientation, electrical, and thermal transport

Wei Zhou; Juraj Vavro; Csaba Guthy; Karen I. Winey; John E. Fischer; Lars Martin Ericson; Sivarajan Ramesh; Rajesh K. Saini; Virginia A. Davis; Carter Kittrell; Matteo Pasquali; Robert H. Hauge; Richard E. Smalley

Fibers of single wall carbon nanotubes extruded from super-acid suspensions exhibit preferred orientation along their axes. We characterize the alignment by x-ray fiber diagrams and polarized Raman scattering, using a model which allows for a completely unaligned fraction. This fraction ranges from 0.17 to 0.05±0.02 for three fibers extruded under different conditions, with corresponding Gaussian full widths at half maximum (FWHM) from 64° to 44°±2°. FWHM, aligned fraction, electrical, and thermal transport all improve with decreasing extrusion orifice diameter. Resistivity, thermoelectric power, and resonant-enhanced Raman scattering indicate that the neat fibers are strongly p doped; the lowest observed ρ is 0.25 mΩ cm at 300 K. High temperature annealing increases ρ by more than 1 order of magnitude and restores the Raman resonance associated with low-energy van Hove transitions, without affecting the nanotube alignment.


ELECTRONIC PROPERTIES OF MOLECULAR NANOSTRUCTURES: XV International Winterschool/Euroconference | 2002

Roping and wrapping carbon nanotubes

Kevin D. Ausman; Michael J. O’Connell; Peter Boul; Lars Martin Ericson; Michael John Casavant; Deron A. Walters; Chad B. Huffman; Rajesh K. Saini; YuHuang Wang; Erik Haroz; Edward W. Billups; Richard E. Smalley

Single-walled carbon nanotubes can be dispersed into solvents by ultrasonication to the point that primarily individual tubes, cut to a few hundred nanometers in length, are present. However, when such dispersions are filtered to a thick mat, or paper, only tangles of uniform, seemingly endless ropes are observed. The factors contributing to this “roping” phenomenon, akin to aggregation or crystallization, will be discussed. We have developed methods for generating “super-ropes” more than twenty times the diameter of those formed by filtration, involving the extraction of nanotube material from an oleum dispersion. Nanotubes have been solubilized in water, largely individually, by non-covalently wrapping them with linear polymers. The general thermodynamic drive for this wrapping involves the polymer disrupting both the hydrophobic interface with water and the smooth tube-tube interaction in aggregates. The nanotubes can be recovered from their polymeric wrapping by changing their solvent system. This sol...


MRS Proceedings | 2002

Preferred Orientation in Fibers of Hipco Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes from Diffuse X-Ray Scattering

Wei Zhou; Karen I. Winey; John E. Fischer; Sivarajan Ramesh; Rajesh K. Saini; Lars Martin Ericson; Virginia A. Davis; Matteo Pasquali; Robert H. Hauge; Richard E. Smalley

Neat Fibers of HiPco single wall carbon nanotubes extruded from strong acid suspensions exhibit preferred orientation along fiber axes. We characterize the extrusion-induced alignment using x-ray fiber diagrams and polarized Raman scattering, using a model which allows for some fraction of the sample to remain completely unaligned. We show that both x-ray and Raman data are required for a complete texture analysis of SWNT fibers.


Polymer | 2003

Crystallization and orientation studies in polypropylene/single wall carbon nanotube composite

Arup R. Bhattacharyya; T.V. Sreekumar; Tao Liu; Satish Kumar; Lars Martin Ericson; Robert H. Hauge; Richard E. Smalley


Science | 2004

Macroscopic, Neat, Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Fibers

Lars Martin Ericson; Hua Fan; Haiqing Peng; Virginia A. Davis; Wei Zhou; Joseph A. Sulpizio; YuHuang Wang; Richard Booker; Juraj Vavro; Csaba Guthy; A. Nicholas G. Parra-Vasquez; Myung Jong Kim; Sivarajan Ramesh; Rajesh K. Saini; Carter Kittrell; Gerry Lavin; Howard K. Schmidt; W. Wade Adams; W. E. Billups; Matteo Pasquali; Wen-Fang Hwang; Robert H. Hauge; John E. Fischer; Richard E. Smalley


Macromolecules | 2004

Phase Behavior and Rheology of SWNTs in Superacids

Virginia A. Davis; Lars Martin Ericson; A. Nicholas; G. Parra-Vasquez; Hua Fan; YuHuang Wang; Valentin Prieto; Jason A. Longoria; Sivarajan Ramesh; Rajesh K. Saini; Carter Kittrell; W. E. Billups; W. Wade Adams; Robert H. Hauge; Richard E. Smalley; Matteo Pasquali

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Robert H. Hauge

Georgia Institute of Technology

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