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A carbon nanofibre scanning probe assembled using an electrothermal microgripper
63
Citations
23
References
2007
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringFunctional DevicesCarbon-based MaterialNanoengineeringSitu Electron MicroscopeNanometrologyNanosensorCarbon NanotubesNanomechanicsMaterials ScienceNanoroboticsNanotechnologyCarbon NanofibrePorous CarbonNanomaterialsMicrofabricationScanning Probe MicroscopyNano Electro Mechanical SystemGrapheneElectron Microscope
Functional devices can be directly assembled using microgrippers with an in situ electron microscope. Two simple and compact silicon microgripper designs are investigated here. These are operated by electrothermal actuation, and are used to transfer a catalytically grown multi-walled carbon nanofibre from a fixed position on a substrate to the tip of an atomic force microscope cantilever, inside a scanning electron microscope. Scanning of high aspect ratio trenches using the nanofibre supertip shows a significantly better performance than that with standard pyramidal silicon tips. Based on manipulation experiments as well as a simple analysis, we show that shear pulling (lateral movement of the gripper) is far more effective than tensile pulling (vertical movement of gripper) for the mechanical removal of carbon nanotubes from a substrate.
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