Like natural muscles, providing an electrical charge causes the individual fibres to expand and the whole structure to move.
However, any application of this work in replacing biological muscles is "nearer the dream factory than reality". The real benefit of the breakthrough may come in generating energy from ocean waves.
Small but powerful
Nanotubes are cylindrical molecules made of carbon atoms and are only a millionth of a millimetre in diameter. Their strength, flexibility and electrical properties have fascinated scientists.
The new research, published in Science, shows for the first time that the tiny tubes expand and contract their length by about 1% when an electrical charge is applied and then removed.
The team demonstrated this by creating a double sheet of nanotube "paper". A mat of nanotubes was stuck to each side of a piece of double-sided sticky tape and placed in a fluid that conducts electricity.
When a current was applied to one side of the "paper", it curled up showing that the tubes had expanded.
Bending back
Reversing the process would allow the nanotubes to be used as energy generators. Bending the tubes back and forth would create an electric current.
Dr Siegmar Roth, a member of the team at the Max Planck Institute, Stuttgart, Germany, told BBC News Online: "This would be good for ocean waves because they give and release a mechanical load as the waves go up and down."
Dr Roth says the nanotubes would be an exceptional material for this application, but adds: "It is not just the material, but the whole system which is crucial. Whether it could compete against other ways of generating energy is an open question.
"But the situation could be different in year," Dr Roth says. "Now we know the nanotubes move when we apply a charge, we can start to look at how they behave as energy generators."
Nanomachines
Using single nanotubes as electrically driven robot-arms, called actuators, in tiny machines is an even longer-term goal.
"I think it will take about 20 years for these to exist," says Dr Roth. "You not only have to have an actuator, but also other elements which control this. So a lot of development has to be put in."
Other materials which can be used as actuators already exist, such as conducting polymers, but nanotube actuators could work harder, faster and longer than these.
Fuel cells
Not all nanotube applications are decades away. Significant research funds have been invested in finding out whether the tubes could store hydrogen for use in car fuel cells.
The results of feasibility studies are expected within a year and a product could be built by 2004.
Ultra-thin display screens are another application which is close to market if research shows it to be economic.
Here, each tube delivers photons of light, resulting in an extremely thin and high-resolution display. Samsung in Korea are producing these field-emission devices on a laboratory scale at the moment.
World's smallest scales weigh in
(05 Mar 99 | Sci/Tech)
France win the nano-World Cup
(03 Feb 99 | Sci/Tech)
World's smallest pen
(28 Jan 99 | Sci/Tech)
New twist for nanotechnology
(13 Jan 99 | Sci/Tech)
Max Planck Institute for Solid State Physics
AlliedSignal
Science magazine
Nanotechnology background
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
World's smallest transistor
Scientists join forces to study Arctic ozone
Mathematicians crack big puzzle
The growing threat of internet fraud
(From Business)
Who watches the pilots?
Cold 'cure' comes one step closer
(From Health)