Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5432489 | Carbon | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Flame-synthesized (CoO)x(Al2O3)1-x spinel nanopowders with primary particles of â¼20 nm were used to grow small diameter carbon nanotubes (CNTs). The nanopowders with x â¤Â 0.35 grew few CNTs whereas that with x = 0.65 grew CNTs efficiently. Low crystalline and large-diameter multi-wall CNTs grew by annealing and chemical vapor deposition (CVD) at 800 °C for â¼10 min, whereas single-wall CNTs with high crystallinity (G-band to D-band intensity ratio of 20-100 by Raman spectroscopy) grew by annealing and CVD at â¥1000 °C for â¼10 s. The excess Co in the spinel reduced and segregated to form multiple Co nanoparticles on the surface of the single primary alumina nanoparticles in â¼10 s, yielding SWCNTs in â¼10 s. Such flame synthesized nanopowders, reduced and activated by H2, provide CNTs from C2H2, all in ten-second time scale, and as such are promising for practical, high-through-put production of small-diameter CNTs.
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