Title: Iijima Unique material properties Nearly one-dimensional
1(No Transcript)
2Carbon nanotubes
3Overview
- Introduction
- Synthesis Purification
- Overview of applications
- Single nanotube measurements
- Energy storage
- Molecular electronics
- Conclusion and future outlook
4Introduction common facts
- Discovered in 1991 by Iijima
- Unique material properties
- Nearly one-dimensional structures
- Single- and multi-walled
5Definition
Single-wall carbon nanotubes are a new form of
carbon made by rolling up a single graphite sheet
to a narrow but long tube closed at both sides by
fullerene-like end caps.. However, their
attraction lies not only in the beauty of their
molecular structures through intentional
alteration of their physical and chemical
properties fullerenes exhibit an extremely wide
range of interesting and potentially useful
properties.
6History
- 1991 Discovery of multi-wall carbon nanotubes
- 1992 Conductivity of carbon nanotubes
- 1993 Structural rigidity of carbon nanotubes
- 1993 Synthesis of single-wall nanotubes
- 1995 Nanotubes as field emitters
- 1997 Hydrogen storage in nanotubes
- 1998 Synthesis of nanotube peapods
- 2000 Thermal conductivity of nanotubes
- 2001 Integration of carbon nanotubes for logic
circuits - 2001 Intrinsic superconductivity of carbon
nanotubes -
7Nanotube structure
- Roll a graphene sheet in a certain direction
- Armchair structure
- Zigzag structure
- Chiral structure
- Defects result in bends and transitions
8Special properties
- Difference in chemical reactivity for end caps
and side wall - High mechanical strength
- Special electrical properties
- Metallic
- Semi conducting
9Special properties
- Metallic conductivity (e.g. the salts A3C60
(Aalkali metals)) - Superconductivity with Tc's of up to 33K (e.g.
the salts A3C60 (Aalkali metals)) - Ferromagnetism (in (TDAE)C60 - without the
presence of d-electrons) - Non-linear optical activity
- Polymerization to form a variety of 1-, 2-, and
3D polymer structures
10Special properties
- Nanotubes can be either electrically conductive
or semiconductive, depending on their helicity. - These one-dimensional fibers exhibit electrical
conductivity as high as copper, thermal
conductivity as high as diamond, - Strength 100 times greater than steel at one
sixth the weight, and high strain to failure.
11Current Applications
- Carbon Nano-tubes are extending the ability to
fabricate devices such as - Molecular probes
- Pipes
- Wires
- Bearings
- Springs
- Gears
- Pumps
12Synthesis overview
- Commonly applied techniques
- Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)
- Arc-Discharge
- Laser ablation
- Techniques differ in
- Type of nanotubes (SWNT / MWNT / Aligned)
- Catalyst used
- Yield
- Purity
13Synthesis growth mechanism
- Metal catalyst
- Tip growth / extrusion growth
14Mechanisms of Carbon Nano tube
- Root Growth Mechanism
- Transition metal as catalyst
- Hydrocarbon dissociate at metal surface into H
and C. - Once surface saturated with C, it starts to form
as graphite sheet with fullerene cap - More C atoms can be inserted into Metal-C bond
so the tube get growing longer.
15Synthesis Methods for CNT
- Electric Arc Discharge similar to method used
for Bucky Ball - Laser Vaporization Graphite target with Co, Ni
powders sitting in 1200C furnace and hit by laser
pulse. CNT collected downstream at cold finger. - CVD pre-patterned structure with Fe, Mo nano
particles in a tube furnace at 1000C and methane
as precursor of carbon - Fullerene recrystallization depositing Ni and
C60 multi-layers and recrystallize at 900C
16Synthesis CVD
- Gas phase deposition
- Large scale possible
- Relatively cheap
- SWNTs / MWNTs
- Aligned nanotubes
- Patterned substrates
17Synthesis Arc Discharge
- It was first made popular by Ebbessen and Ajayan
in 1992 - It is still considered as one of the best methods
for producing carbon nanotubes other than CVD - In order to produce a good yield of high quality
nanotubes, the pressure, consistent current, and
efficient cooling of the electrodes are very
important operating parameters
18Synthesis Arc Discharge
19Synthesis arc discharge
- MWNTs and SWNTs
- Batch process
- Relatively cheap
- Many side-products
20Synthesis arc discharge
Arc discharge The electric arc that is a
particular discharge between two electrodes in a
gas or vapor which is characterized by high
cathode densities and a low voltage drop.
21Synthesis laser ablation
- Catalyst / no catalyst
- MWNTs / SWNTs
- Yield lt70
- Use of very strong laser
- Expensive (energy costs)
- Commonly applied
22Self Assembly of Carbon Nano Tube as interconnect
(Metal)
23(No Transcript)
24Purification
- Contaminants
- Catalyst particles
- Carbon clusters
- Smaller fullerenes C60 / C70
- Impossibilities
- Completely retain nanotube structure
- Single-step purification
- Only possible on very small scale
- Isolation of either semi-conducting SWNTs
25Purification
- Removal of catalyst
- Acidic treatment ( sonication)
- Thermal oxidation
- Magnetic separation (Fe)
- Removal of small fullerenes
- Micro filtration
- Extraction with CS2
- Removal of other carbonaceous impurities
- Thermal oxidation
- Selective functionalisation of nanotubes
- Annealing
26Potential applications
- lt AFM Tip
- gt Molecular electronics
- Transistor
- lt Others
- Composites
- Biomedical
- Catalyst support
- Conductive materials
- ???
- lt Energy storage
- Li-intercalation
- Hydrogen storage
- Supercaps
27Conclusions
- Mass production is nowadays too expensive
- Many different techniques can be applied for
investigation - Large scale purification is possible
- FEDs and CNTFETs have proven to work and are
understood - Positioning of molecular electronics is difficult
- Energy storage is still doubtful, fundamental
investigations are needed