A Mini-Microplasma-Based Synthesis Reactor For Growing Highly Crystalline Carbon Nanotubes

CARBON(2021)

Cited 6|Views10
No score
Abstract
In this work, we report a novel, mini microplasma-assisted gas-phase synthesis reactor which enables the localized deposition of high quality carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Analogous to conventional gas-phase growth, which utilizes the furnace heating to induce dissociation of the reactant species, formation of the catalyst nanoparticles, and nucleation of the CNTs, our process replaces the furnace with the micro-plasma as the sole reaction source. In doing so, this reactor takes full advantage of the merits of the microplasma apparatus, specifically atmospheric pressure operation, efficient dissociation of molecular species, and small size to synthesize highly crystalline small diameter single and double-walled CNTs at an estimated growth rate of 1000-6400 mu m/s. In addition, being in gas phase and channeled through a 0.8 mm inner diameter ceramic reactor, the grown CNTs could be localized onto a substrate located downstream in the reactor. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
More
Translated text
Key words
Small diameter CNT, Microplasma, Localized deposition, Crystallinity, Growth rate
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined