2005 72nd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of the APS
Thursday–Saturday, November 10–12, 2005;
Gainesville, FL
Session FA: Nanoscience Invited Session
8:30 AM–10:18 AM,
Friday, November 11, 2005
Hilton
Room: Century A
Chair: Andrew Rinzler, Ho Bun Chan, University of Florida
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.SES.FA.1
Abstract: FA.00001 : Time-Resolved Measurements of Carbon Nanotube and Nanohorn Growth
8:30 AM–9:06 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
David Geohegan
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
Mechanisms for carbon nanotube growth have been investigated for
both laser
vaporization (LV) and chemical vapor deposition (CVD) synthesis
techniques
through the use of time-resolved, in situ laser-based diagnostics
for the
measurement of absolute growth rates. Optimization of both the
production of
loose single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) by LV and the
sustained growth of
mm-long, vertically-aligned carbon nanotube arrays (VANTAs) by
CVD are
described. For SWNT growth by laser co-vaporization of carbon and
trace
metal catalysts at high (1200\r{ }C) temperatures, nanotubes are
found to
grow at $\sim $ 1--5 microns/second to lengths of only several
microns, as
determined by gated-ICCD imaging and laser spectroscopy of the
plume of
ejected material. Efforts to scale the LV production of SWNTs
utilizing an
industrial Nd:YAG laser (600 W average power, 1-500 Hz repetition
rate,
0.5-10ms pulse width) are described. In addition to vaporizing
material at
much higher rates, the high-power laser irradiation provides
sufficient
plasma plume density and temperature to enable the growth of novel
single-wall carbon nanohorn (SWNH) structures without the need
for metal
catalysts in the target. Applications of these SWNH structures as
metal
catalyst supports will be discussed. Through the application of
time-resolved reflectivity and direct imaging, CVD growth of
VANTAs from
hydrocarbon gases at sustained rates of 0.2 -- 0.5 microns/second
have been
directly measured over millimeters of length at lower ($\sim $
700\r{ }C)
temperatures. Now, through a new laser-CVD setup at the ALPS
(Advanced Laser
Processing and Synthesis) facility at ORNL, high-power laser
heating is
being employed for the fast and position-controlled growth of carbon
nanotubes on substrates. In situ fast optical pyrometry is
employed to
record the rapid thermal processing of metal-catalyst-prepared
substrates to
investigate the nucleation and early growth behavior of CVD-grown
nanotubes.
New nanotube growth and tunable Raman spectroscopy facilities at
the Center
for Nanophase Materials Sciences at ORNL will be outlined. In
collaboration with Alex Puretzky, Zuqin Liu, David
Styers-Barnett, Christopher M. Rouleau, Hongtao Cui, Ilia Ivanov,
Bin Zhao, and Hui Hu, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the
Center for Nanophase Material Sciences.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.SES.FA.1