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NCN at Northwestern: Student Leadership Council Seminars

Selected Properties of Carbon Nanostructures: from Exotic Fullerenes to Nanotubes

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Contributor(s) Manfred M. Kappes
Universität Karlsruhe (TH)
Abstract

The talk presents results from ongoing projects in the field of carbon
nanostructures: (i) Mass selected ion beam soft-landing has been used
to generate exotic fullerene materials comprising covalent linked,
non-IPR cages. Apart from microscopic structure, we have studied
thermal and electronic properties as well as reactivity towards
(atomic) hydrogen. (ii) Confocal fluorescence microscopy was applied
to the near-infrared emission properties of individual semiconducting
single-walled carbon nanotubes subject to external perturbations such
as unaxial strain, torsion as well as interaction with surfaces,
sourrounding dielectrics and other nanotubes.

Biography Manfred Kappes
Full Professor. Physical Chemistry of Microscopic
Systems. Born 1957; B.Sc. 1977, Concordia University,
Montreal, Canada; Ph.D. 1981, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, Cambridge, USA; Postdoctoral Fellow
1981-87, Universiät Bern, Switzerland; Habilitation
1987, Bern; Assistant and Associate Professor 1987-
1991, Northwestern University, Evanston, USA.
Sponsored by International Institute of Nanotechnology (IIN) and the NSF-sponsored NU-Nanoscale Science & Engineering Center
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If you reference this work in a publication, please cite as follows:

  • Kappes, Manfred M. (2008), "Selected Properties of Carbon Nanostructures: from Exotic Fullerenes to Nanotubes," http://www.nanohub.org/resources/4206/.

    BibTex | EndNote

Date posted 31 Mar, 2008
Time 04:00 PM, February 18, 2008
Location Pancoe ENH - Abbott Auditorium, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL
Type Online Presentations
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  • 7.2 Ranking Series Part of: NCN at Northwestern: Student Leadership Council Seminars

    NCN at Northwestern: Student Leadership Council Seminars

    Type Series
    Contributor(s) NCN SLC@Northwestern
    Date 05 Nov, 2006
    Avg. Rating 5.0 out of 5 stars  (1)
    Rate this

    This series is organized by NCN students at Northwestern University. Speakers are invited by the Student Leadership Council to visit Northwestern to interact with students and faculty, and to present a research seminar on their research in Computational Nanotechnology. Significant interaction …

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