Publication | Open Access
Control of carbon nanotube morphology by change of applied bias field during growth
41
Citations
12
References
2004
Year
EngineeringCritical Applied VoltageNanodevicesCarbon NanotechnologyCarbon Nanotube MorphologyNanoscale ChemistryNanoengineeringCarbon-based MaterialApplied VoltageNanometrologyNanoscale ScienceCarbon NanotubesNanomechanicsMaterials ScienceNanotechnologyNanomanufacturingNanostructuringNano ScaleNanophysicsApplied Bias FieldNanomaterialsApplied PhysicsNanofabricationNanotubesNanostructures
Carbon nanotube morphology has been engineered via simple control of applied voltage during dc plasma chemical vapor deposition growth. Below a critical applied voltage, a nanotube configuration of vertically aligned tubes with a constant diameter is obtained. Above the critical voltage, a nanocone-type configuration is obtained. The strongly field-dependent transition in morphology is attributed primarily to the plasma etching and decrease in the size of nanotube-nucleating catalyst particles. A two-step control of applied voltage allows a creation of dual-structured nanotube morphology consisting of a broad base nanocone (∼200nm dia.) with a small diameter nanotube (∼7nm) vertically emanating from the apex of the nanocone, which may be useful for atomic force microscopy.
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