Half a croissant, on a plate, with a sign in front of it saying '50c'
h a l f b a k e r y
I think this would be a great thing to not do.

idea: add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random

meta: news, help, about, links, report a problem

account: browse anonymously, or get an account and write.

user:
pass:
register,


                         

Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register. Please log in or create an account.

Nanotubes for Electrical Wiring

Nanotubes may now be ready for this purpose
  (+3)
(+3)
  [vote for,
against]

I just saw an article indicating researchers have found a way to manufacture carbon nanotube bundles in lengths of hundreds of meters (see link). This Idea intends to expand upon a point mentioned in the article, about how power transmission lines could be made using nanotube bundles. However, more work is needed before nanotube bundles can be made both long enough and thick enough to carry the kind of electrical load typically sent through long-distance power-transmission lines.

On the other hand, if they can be made wide enough to carry something like 20 amperes of current, then these bundles could RIGHT NOW be a suitable replacement for the copper wiring in households and other buildings ("hundreds of meters" is plenty long enough!).

All that nanotube wiring needs is a suitable layer of insulation, and appropriate means of connecting the ends to common wiring devices like light switches, circuit breakers, electrical outlets, etc. It's already plenty flexible, being similar in composition to sewing threads. So, it could even be used in other wires like extension cords and power cords for lamps, microwave ovens, vacuum cleaners, refrigerators, etc.

Just in time, too! Carbon is a common element and all the world's copper mines are running out (link). Which is another reason to post this Idea --using nanotube wire to replace power transmission lines means using them to replace aluminum. We are not running out of aluminum anywhere near as quickly as we are running out of copper!

Vernon, Nov 12 2009

Long Nanotubes http://www.technolo...w.com/energy/23921/
As mentioned in the main text [Vernon, Nov 12 2009, last modified Nov 24 2009]

Running out! http://www.good.is/...als-for-everything/
As mentioned in the main text [Vernon, Nov 12 2009]

New news article http://news.rice.ed...king-performance-2/
Now easier to make than before.... [Vernon, Jan 15 2013]

[link]






       While I like the idea of using low-resitance carbon tubes to replace copper wire, once you start using nanotubes in the 100's of meters, you're not using nano-anythings since nano refers to billionths of something.   

       el dueno
el dueno, Nov 12 2009
  

       Well, these long fibers are made of billions/trillions of nanosized tubes, the way a thick woolen thread is made from many individual hairs from a sheep's sheared "coat". I suppose it is a matter of perspective. After all, we say a wire is "copper" without bothering to mention the size of the atoms making it up, so calling a wire a "nanotube wire" does not necessarily have to mean the wire has the width of a single nanotube.
Vernon, Nov 12 2009
  

       I must admit I was amazed by the first line of the article:   

       "A new method for assembling carbon nanotubes has been used to create fibers hundreds of meters long."   

       This is several orders of magnitude longer than the previous record (which was about 4cm).   

       The advantage of carbon nanotubes over copper is the maximum current density rather than conductivity. This makes it a good material for high voltage electricity lines but seems a bit of overkill for extension cords. Of course, if nanotubes become cheaper than copper, it'll become a no-brainer to use them everywhere where copper is currently being used.   

       Also, electricity transmission seems of a bit of a boring application of such long nanotubes. Applications such as space elevators seems much more interesting to me.
xaviergisz, Nov 12 2009
  

       I suppose one consideration would be flexibility... To whit, how flexible is an individual nanotube? Similar to how individual glass fibres can be flexible because of their very small diameter (ie fibre diamerer:bend diameter ratio).   

       You'd have to be careful how you bundled the nanotubes together to ensure the bundling method doesn't resist transverse stresses (bundle loosely so the fibres can slip past each other and thus bend as a group). Binding with an epoxy or using some kind of cross-chain polymerisation would produce an incredibly rigid rod, not a wire.   

       One thing I've just thought of - I've seen people (read: idiots) tie things up with extension cords, and often when spanning an electrical cord over a long distance you have to tie it to a support cable. With the carbon nanotube wires having a tensile strength in the gigapascal range, it might lead to all sorts of interesting applications.
Custardguts, Nov 12 2009
  

       //an incredibly rigid rod//   

       Yes yes, snicker away children.
Custardguts, Nov 12 2009
  

       Carbon nanotubes (and nano refers to diameter, not length, just like a 2" pipe can be yards long) conduct very well along their length, not across.   

       The article refers to nanotube yarn, not single fibers. That means a material made up of hundreds of thousands of shorter fibers that do not join end to end. As a result these will be poor conductors at best.   

       The article mentions metallic nanotubes for transmission lines, which are good uniform conductors, but they are structurally very different from carbon tubes, and don't have the impressive structural properties. (still stronger, pound for pound, than simple metal though)
MechE, Nov 12 2009
  

       You're right MechE, I didn't read the article very carefully, it is nanotube yarn not a single nanotube.
xaviergisz, Nov 12 2009
  

       As long as a single dimension of the morphology is in the nanoscale range, then it's nano. Of course, all things have some sort of nanostructure, but it's the controlled structures with which we are concerned. I'm sure the current cost is far too high for revamping an already adequate infrastructure. Maybe in twenty years.
daseva, Nov 12 2009
  

       All the tech in the world to make something I can make in my chimney for free. Metaphoricaly of course as i don't have a chimney.
Brian the Painter, Jan 16 2013
  
      
[annotate]
  


 

back: main index

business  computer  culture  fashion  food  halfbakery  home  other  product  public  science  sport  vehicle