{"id":1131,"date":"2022-05-27T20:14:50","date_gmt":"2022-05-27T20:14:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.protectchoice.org\/chemicals\/?p=1131"},"modified":"2022-07-13T20:18:36","modified_gmt":"2022-07-13T20:18:36","slug":"scientists-made-a-mobius-strip-out-of-a-tiny-carbon-nanobelt","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.protectchoice.org\/chemicals\/scientists-made-a-mobius-strip-out-of-a-tiny-carbon-nanobelt\/","title":{"rendered":"Scientists made a M\u00f6bius strip out of a tiny carbon nanobelt"},"content":{"rendered":"
From cylindrical nanotubes to the hollow spheres known as buckyballs, carbon is famous for forming tiny, complex nanostructures (SN: 8\/15\/19). Now, scientists have added a new geometry to the list: a twisted strip called a M\u00f6bius carbon nanobelt.<\/p>\n
M\u00f6bius strips are twisted bands that are famous in mathematics for their weird properties. A rubber band, for example, has an inside and an outside. But if you cut the rubber band crosswise, twist one end and glue it back together, you get a M\u00f6bius strip, which has only one face (SN: 7\/24\/07).<\/p>\n
In 2017, researchers created carbon nanobelts, thin loops of carbon that are like tiny slices of a carbon nanotube. That feat suggested it might be possible to create a nanobelt with a twist, a M\u00f6bius carbon nanobelt. To make the itsy-bitsy twisty carbon, some of the same researchers stitched together individual smaller molecules using a series of 14 chemical reactions, chemist Yasutomo Segawa of the Institute for Molecular Science in Okazaki, Japan, and colleagues report May 19 in Nature Synthesis.<\/p>\n
While carbon nanotubes can be used to make new types of computer chips and added to textiles to create fabric with unusual properties, scientists don\u2019t yet know of any practical applications for the twisty nanobelts (SN: 8\/28\/19; SN: 2\/8\/19). But, Segawa says, the work improves scientists\u2019 ability to make tiny carbon structures, especially complicated ones.<\/p>\n