Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7851566 | Carbon | 2015 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The growth of carbon nanotube (CNT) forests has been limited to the centimeter scale due to insufficient understanding of their growth kinetics. To investigate the growth kinetics of CNT forests, we characterized the mass transport phenomena arising during CNT forest. We formulated the hypothesis that such growth is mass transport limited and proposed a model describing this mass transport. According to our model, the effects of diffusion boundary layers on the growth rate are significant. The initial growth rate is expected to increase with the velocity of the bulk gas flow as the boundary layer thickness decreases. To test this prediction, CNT forests were grown at various total gas flow rates in the range 170-1700Â sccm, which correspond to flow velocities in the range 0.79-to 7.9Â cm/s. The initial growth rate was found to increase from 1.4Â mm/h to 3.5Â mm/h as the total flow rate increases from 170Â sccm to 1700Â sccm. Thus there is a clear inverse proportionality between the initial growth rate and the thickness of the diffusion boundary layer, which confirms that the growth of CNT forests is mass transport limited. These results provide new insight into the growth kinetics of CNT forests.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Energy (General)
Authors
Jaegeun Lee, Eugene Oh, Teawon Kim, Jeong-Hoon Sa, Sung-Hyun Lee, Junbeom Park, Dustin Moon, In Seok Kang, Myung Jong Kim, Seung Min Kim, Kun-Hong Lee,