We present a detailed study of the geometry, structure and energetics of
carbon nanotube caps. We show that the structure of a cap uniquely determines
the chirality of the nanotube that can be attached to it. The structure of the
cap is specified in a geometrical way by defining the position of six pentagons
on a hexagonal lattice. Moving one (or more) pentagons systematically creates
caps for other nanotube chiralities. For the example of the (10,0) tube we
study the formation energy of different nanotube caps using ab-initio
calculations. The caps with isolated pentagons have an average formation energy
0.29+/-0.01eV/atom. A pair of adjacent pentagons requires a much larger
formation energy of 1.5eV. We show that the formation energy of adjacent
pentagon pairs explains the diameter distribution in small-diameter nanotube
samples grown by chemical vapor deposition.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures (gray scale only due to space); submitted to Phys.
Rev.