Infinitesimal in Size, Infinite in Potential

Two Lehigh physicists have made significant artistic and scholarly contributions to a special issue on nanocarbon materials that was published recently by an international magazine.

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Two Lehigh University physicists have made significant artistic and scholarly contributions to a special issue on nanocarbon materials that was published recently by an international magazine.

Slava V. Rotkin and Tetyana Ignatova produced the cover illustration for the fall 2013 issue of Interface, the journal of the Electrochemical Society (ECS), and contributed a review article about the history, unique versatility and potential of nanocarbons.

In bold shades of blue, green and red, the cover image shows a nanotube interface in nanocarbon solar cells, a forest of nanotubes on a quartz substrate where heat conductance takes place, and T- and H-junctions formed by single-walled nanotubes functioning as electron splitters.

Rotkin, an associate professor of physics, and Ignatova, a Ph.D. candidate, generated 3-D graphics for the image. Monica Shell ’14, a design major, completed the design and coloring of the image under the supervision of Johanna Brams, a senior instructional technologist with library and technology services.

The issue of Interface is titled “New Frontiers in Nanocarbons.” The invited article by Rotkin and Ignatova, one of four in the issue, is titled “Discovering Properties of Nanocarbon Materials as a Pivot for Device Applications.”

Nanotechnology scientists, the two Lehigh physicists said, have achieved an unprecedented level of research productivity in the last two decades thanks to the unique properties of nanocarbon materials.

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