Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8035244 | Thin Solid Films | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The field emission (FE) properties of TiO2 nanotube arrays (TNAs) fabricated by anodization are dramatically enhanced by ammonia annealing at a low temperature of 90 °C with various annealing durations of 5-15 h, which can spontaneously tailor the as-anodized amorphous TNAs to be an anatase hierarchical structure of worm-like TiO2 decorated TNAs, and simultaneously implant nitrogen into the hierarchical structure. Compared to the as-anodized TNAs, the turn-on field of ammonia annealed TNAs are significantly dropped from 23.11 to 2.94 V/μm, and related to the annealing time. Importantly, the optimized sample of ammonia annealed TNAs treated for 10 h exhibits excellent FE properties involving both a low turn-on field of 2.94 V/μm, a high FE current density of about 3.35 mA/cm2 at 7.35 V/μm, and a remarkable FE stability. The substantially enhanced FE properties can be attributed to the combination of the optimized morphology, the improved conductivity, and the presence of localized oxygen vacancy states and N 2p states created by N-doping of ammonia annealed TNAs.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Nanotechnology
Authors
Cheng-Wei Wang, Wei-Dong Zhu, Jian-Biao Chen, Xian Hou, Xu-Qiang Zhang, Yan Li, Jian Wang, Feng Zhou,