Phys. Rev. B 70, 205423 (2004) [5 pages]Flow-induced voltage and current generation in carbon nanotubesReceived 10 August 2004; published 22 November 2004 New experimental results, and a plausible theoretical understanding thereof, are presented for the flow-induced currents and voltages observed in single-walled carbon nanotube samples. In our experiments, the electrical response was found to be sublinear—nearly logarithmic—in the flow speed over a wide range, and its direction could be controlled by an electrochemical biasing of the nanotubes. These experimental findings are inconsistent with the conventional idea of a streaming potential as the efficient cause. Here we present Langevin-equation based treatment of the nanotube charge carriers, assumed to be moving in the fluctuating field of ions in the flowing liquid. The resulting “Doppler-shifted” force-force correlation, as seen by the charge carriers drifting in the nanotube, is shown to give a sublinear response, broadly in agreement with experiments. © 2004 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.70.205423
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.70.205423
PACS:
61.48.+c, 05.10.Gg, 47.85.−g, 84.60.−h
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