• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 3
  • Tagged with
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

From Synthesis To Applications Of Pristine And Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Nanotubes

Goswami, Gopal Krishna 07 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are well known as excellent electrical conductors. However, their transport properties are limited by electrical breakdown in ambient. Moreover, the electronic properties can further be modulated by doping. Devices such as Schottky diodes, transistors and logic gates based on un-doped and doped CNT junctions have been realized. Recently, nitrogen doped CNTs show potential application in replacing platinum cathode catalyst in fuel cell technology. We synthesize pristine, nitrogen-doped and nitrogen-doped:pristine CNT intratubular junctions by one-step co-pyrolysis and explore them for different applications. We show that the position of electrical breakdown can be predicted which is essential to know for high current applications. Among other applications, we show that individual CNT intratubular junction exhibits rectifying characteristics. Further investigation indicates the intratubular junction behaves like Schottky diode. Lastly, the potential replacement of platinum by nitrogen doped CNTs in direct methanol fuel cell has been explored.
2

Synthesis, Characterization and Electrical Transport In Carbon Nanotubes

Mahanandia, Pitamber 01 1900 (has links) (PDF)
In this thesis, synthesis, characterization and electrical transport of Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have been discussed. The first chapter contains a brief introduction of various forms of carbon including CNT. The CNTs are currently the materials of intense research interest due to their remarkable mechanical and electrical properties. CNTs can be visualized as a graphene sheet that has been rolled into a seamless tube. CNTs are either single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) or multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT). SWCNT is a tube with only one wall and MWCNT has many coaxial tubes and weak Van der Waal forces hold them together. The properties depend on chirality, diameter and length of the tubes. Chirality is defined by the symmetry and the chiral angle formed between the carbon bonds. The atomic structure of CNTs is described in terms of the tube chirality, which is defined by the chiral vector Ch and the chiral angle . The chiral vector is Ch = na1 + ma2, where the integers (n, m) are the number of steps along the zig-zag carbon. Depending on the tube chirality the electrical properties of the CNTs differ; they can be metallic or semiconducting. When n-m = 3p, where p is an integer, the CNTs are metallic and when n-m  3p, the CNTs are semiconducting. Due to the high anisotropy and high aspect ratio, CNTs have many potential applications with great technological importance such as functionalized molecules, conductive wires, bearings of rotational motors, field emitters, hydrogen storage, sensors, polymer composites, nanotube yarn and nanotube filters, X-ray generator, electron sources for microscopy and lithography, gas discharge tubes and vacuum microwave amplifiers, etc. The first chapter gives a brief introduction about various forms of carbon and their properties, particularly of CNTs. The nature of the CNTs depends on the method of production, which controls the degree of graphitization, the tube diameter and the chirality. Most synthesis methods originate from the idea of obtaining adequately active carbon atomic species or clusters from carbon sources and assembling them into CNTs without or with catalysts. The commonly used methods for the synthesis of carbon nanotubes are arc-discharge, Laser ablation, high-pressure catalytic decomposition of carbon monoxide (HiPCO), electrophoretic deposition (EPD), flame synthesis, pyrolysis, chemical vapour deposition (CVD), hot-filament CVD, plasma enhanced chemical vapour deposition (PECVD) using DC, RF, and micro wave power sources, hot-filament dc (HF-dc PECVD), inductively coupled plasma (ICPECVD) and electron cyclotron resonance (ECR PECVD). Although many efforts have been made to develop various synthesis methods, most of them require many steps. Moreover, the complicated and rigorous control of parameters and expensive materials are unavoidable that has put limitation in reproducing the same in large scale. In this chapter, a simple method for the synthesis of CNTs on a large scale that eliminates nearly the entire complex and expensive machinery associated with widely used growth techniques has been discussed. In Chapter 2, the synthesis and characterization of entangled CNTs are discussed. It is shown that entangled CNTs can be synthesized in one step by using double stage furnace. Tetrahydrofuran as carbon source material and nickelocene as catalyst source material have been used to synthesize CNTs. With this method CNTs can be synthesized at a temperature as low as at 600 0C. In this technique the self-developed pressure carries the vapours to the hot zone of the furnace. This has led to think in modifying the double stage furnace. A single stage furnace having temperature gradient is made to synthesize CNTs. The vapours are carried from low temperature zone to hot zone where the carbon species and catalysts react to form CNTs. The advantage of this furnace is that it is one-step process. Using another carbon source material such as Diethyl Ether and nickelocene as catalyst source material CNTs are synthesized. The as synthesized and purified CNTs are characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), Scanning electron microscope (SEM), transmission electron microscope (TEM), high resolution TEM (HRTEM) and Raman spectroscopy. The CNTs are multi-walled in nature as observed by HRTEM. In Chapter 3, the synthesis of aligned CNTs is discussed by using benzene as carbon source and ferrocene as catalyst source materials. Aligned MWCNTs were synthesized in the temperature range between 650 - 1100 0C in a single stage furnace without the need for carrier gas nor predeposited metal catalyst substrate. The essential need of CNTs are (1) to obtain aligned nanotubes with millimeter lengths to enable the formation of novel nanotube-polymer composites that incorporate continuous nanotubes throughout their thickness for highly anisotropic thermal and electrical conductivities; and (2) to provide samples for detailed physical characterization - tensile strength, thermal, electrical conductivity, field emission etc. SEM observation reveals the increase in length of nanotubes from 85 m to 1.4 mm with the increase of preparation temperature. The diameter as investigated by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) remains almost constant 70-80 nm (75-85 layers). Once nanotube formation is established, the growth continues in the same direction and may well be reinforced by the presence of surrounding CNTs i.e. almost every particle produces a nanotube and bundling of neighboring tubes lead to collective vertical growth. The increase in length is due to the enhanced diffusion of active carbon with increasing preparation temperatures. The alignment of CNTs is also observed to the lateral side of the substrate. In Chapter 4, the synthesis and characterization of carbon nanoribbon and singled crystal iron filled CNTs is discussed. Particularly interesting are those CNTs filled with magnetic nanowires, which can provide an effective barrier against oxidation and consequently ensure a long-term stability in the core. The filling of metals within carbon nanotubes has extended the potential application base of these materials to quantum memory elements, high density magnetic storage media, semiconducting devices, field electron emitters, high resolution magnetic atomic force microscopy tips, magnetic field sensors and scanning probe microscopes etc. Tetrahydrofuran as carbon source material and ferrocene as catalyst materials has been used to synthesize mixture of carbon nanoribbons and iron filled CNTs. The techniques used to characterize the materials are XRD, SEM, HRTEM and superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID). The powder XRD pattern shows that the bcc -Fe phase of iron is present. HRTEM studies reveal the presence of multi-walled carbon nanotubes and well-crystallized -Fe phase filled inside the core region. Closer inspection of the HRTEM images indicated that the bcc structure -Fe nanowires are monocrystalline and Fe (110) plane is indeed perpendicular to the G (002) plane. Large coercivity (i.e. 1037 Oe at 300 K and 2023 Oe at 10 K) in the iron filled CNTs and carbon nanoribbons have been observed. The high coercivity is mainly attributed to the following two factors. Firstly, it is known that due to the uniaxial magnetic anisotropy of the nano size iron in the core region of the carbon nanotubes. Secondly, ferromagnetic behavior exhibited by the localized states at the edges of the carbon nanoribbons. The anisotropic electrical transport property of MWCNTs has been discussed in the chapter 5. The activated diffusive nature of transport along axial direction of CNT is explained. The transport perpendicular to the tube direction is explained in terms of a hopping mechanism. The anisotropic resistivity (N/P) value obtained is 3. The temperature dependent magnetoresistance (MR) is studied in magnetic fields up to 11 Tesla at low temperatures both in the parallel and perpendicular direction of an aligned MWCNT mat. In both cases a negative MR is observed. Chapter 6 discusses the preparation of CNT-polymer composites. The temperature dependence of the conductivity and magnetoresistance (MR) has been studied making four-point contact method on the carbon nanotubes polymer composites as result of increasing CNT content. The conductivity increases with increasing carbon nanotube weight percentage. The increase in conductivity as a function of the CNT weight percent is attributed to the introduction of conducting CNT paths in the polymer matrix. With the increasing CNT content the number of interconnections present in a random system is found to vary. Electrical conduction in nanotube mat or nanotube composites is explained by a variable range hopping (VRH) conduction mechanism. The negative magnetoresistance has been observed for the polymer composites. It is consistent with the report on CNTs bundles and polymer composites. Finally a brief summary of the work presented in this dissertation is discussed along with future directions in this research.
3

Low Temperature Charge Transport And Magnetic Properties Of MWNTs/MWNT-Polystyrene Composites

Bhatia, Ravi 12 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have been recognized as potential candidates for mainstream device fabrication and technologies. CNTs have become a topic of interest worldwide due to their unique mechanical and electrical properties. In addition, CNTs possess high aspect ratio and low density that make them an important material for various technological applications. The field of carbon nanotube devices is rapidly evolving and attempts have been made to use CNTs in the fabrication of devices like field emitters, gas sensors, flow meters, batteries, CNT-field effect transistors etc. These molecular nanostructures are proposed to be an efficient hydrogen storage material. CNT cylindrical membranes are reported to be used as filters for the elimination of multiple components of heavy hydrocarbons from petroleum and for the filtration of bacterial contaminants of size less than 25 nm from water. Recently, CNT bundles have been proposed to be a good material for low-temperature sensing. CNTs have also been considered as promising filler materials due to extraordinary characteristics mentioned above. Fabrication of nanocomposites using CNTs as reinforcing material has completely renewed the research interest in polymer composites. The conductive and absorptive properties of insulating polymer doped with conducting filler are sensitive to the exposure to gas vapors and hence they can be used in monitoring various gases. The application of fiibre reinforced polymer composites in aeronautic industry are well known due to their high mechanical strength and light weight. Also, the conductive composite materials can be used for electromagnetic shielding. Desired properties in CNT-composites can be attained by adding small amount of CNTs in comparison to traditional filler materials. Due to high aspect ratio and low density of CNTs, percolation threshold in CNT-polymer composites can be achieved at 0.1 vol % as compared to ~16 vol. % in case of carbon particles. The research work ׽0.1 vol. %, as compared to reported in this thesis includes the preparation of multiwall carbon nanotube (MWNTs) and MWNT-polystyrene composites, experimental investigations on low temperature charge transport, and magnetic properties in these systems. This thesis contains 7 chapters. Chapter 1 provides an overview of CNTs and CNT-polymer composites. This chapter briefly describes the methods for synthesizing CNTs and fabricating CNT-polymer composites, charge transport mechanisms in CNTs and composites, and their magnetic properties as well. Chapter 2 deals with the concise introduction of various structural characterization tools and experimental techniques employed in the present work. An adequate knowledge of the strengths and limitations of experimental equipment can help in gathering necessary information about the sample, which helps in studying and interpreting its physical properties correctly. Chapter 3 describes the synthesis of MWNTs and their use as filler material for the fabrication of composites with polystyrene (PS). The characterization results of as-prepared MWNT and composites show that MWNTs possess high aspect ratio (~4000), and are well dispersed in the composite samples (thickness ~50-70 µm). The composite samples are prepared by varying the MWNT concentration from 0.1 to 15 wt %. The as¬fabricated composites are electrically conductive and expected to display novel magnetic properties since MWNTs are embedded with iron (Fe) nanoparticles. Chapter 4 presents the study of charge transport properties of aligned and random MWNTs in the temperature range 300-1.4 K. The low temperature electrical conductivity follows the weak localization (WL) and electron-electron (e-e) interaction model in both samples. The dominance of WL and e-e interaction is further verified by magneto-conductance (MC) measurements in the perpendicular magnetic field up to 11 T at low temperatures. The MC data of these samples consists of both positive and negative contributions, which originates from WL (at lower fields and higher temperatures) and e-e interaction (at higher fields and lower temperatures). Chapter 5 contains the results of charge transport studies in MWNT-PS composite near the percolation threshold (~0.4 wt %) at low temperatures down to 1.4 K. Metallic-like transport behavior is observed in composite sample of 0.4 wt %, which is quite unusual. In general, the usual activated transport is observed for systems near the percolation threshold. The unusual weak temperature dependence of conductivity in MWNT-PS sample at percolation threshold is further verified from the negligible frequency dependence of conductivity, in the temperature range from 300 to 5 K. Chapter 6 accounts on the experimental results of magnetization studies of MWNTs and MWNT-PS composites. The observation of maxima in coercivity and squareness ratio at 1 wt % of Fe-MWNT in a polymer matrix show the dominance of dipolar interactions among the encapsulated Fe-nanorods within MWNTs. The hysteresis loop of 0.1 wt % sample shows anomalous narrowing at low temperatures, which is due to significant contribution from shape anisotropy of Fe-nanorods. Chapter 7 presents brief summary and future perspectives of the research work reported in the thesis.

Page generated in 0.0405 seconds