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Direct Growth of Carbon Nanotubes on Inconel Sheets Using Hot Filament Chemical Vapor DepositionYi, Wenwen 24 March 2009 (has links)
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have great potential in many applications due to their unique structure and properties. However, there are still many unsolved problems hampering their real applications. This thesis focuses on three important issues limiting their applications, namely: (1) direct growth of CNTs without additional catalyst, (2) secondary growth of carbon nanotubes on primary CNT bed without using extra catalyst, (3) and CNT alignment mechanisms during the growth.<p>
The CNTs used in this thesis were prepared by hot filament chemical vapor deposition (CVD) reactor and characterized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray diffractometry (XRD), and Raman spectroscopy. Field electron emission (FEE) properties of the CNTs were also tested.<p>
Oxidation-reduction method was adopted in direct growth of CNTs on Inconel 600 plates and proved effective. The effect of oxidation temperature on the growth of CNTs was studied. It was found that the oxidation temperature had an influence on CNT height uniformity and FEE properties: the higher the treatment temperature, the more uniform the resultant CNTs, and the better the FEE properties of the resultant CNTs. The contribution of different oxides formed at different temperatures were investigated to explain the effect of oxidation temperature on the CNT height uniformity.<p>
Secondary CNTs were grown on primary ones by simply changing the carbon concentration. No additional catalyst was used during the whole deposition process. It was found that synthesizing primary CNTs at extremely low carbon concentration is key factor for the secondary growth without additional catalyst. The CNT sample grown with secondary nanotubes exhibited improved field emission properties.<p>
The effect of bias voltage on growth of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes was investigated. The CNTs grown at -500V shows the best alignment. At the early growth stage, simultaneous growth of randomly oriented and aligned carbon nanotubes was observed. This was consistent with the alignment mechanism involving stress that imposed on catalyst particles on tube tips. Through the observation of CNT growth on the scratched substrates, catalyst particle size was found as another determining factor in the alignment of CNTs. Big catalyst particles promoted aligned growth of CNTs.
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Fabrication of Carbon/Silicon Carbide Laminate Composites by Laser Chemical Vapor Deposition and their Microstructural CharacterizationGillespie, Joshua Robert 09 January 2004 (has links)
Laser Chemical Vapor Deposition (LCVD) is a process by which reagent gases are thermally activated to react by means of a laser focused on a substrate. The reaction produces a ceramic or metallic deposit. This investigation focuses on the use of LCVD as a method for producing laminated composites, specifically carbon/silicon carbide laminates. The laminates that were produced were examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and electron dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) to determine composition. Deposit geometrical characteristics such as laminate thickness and volcano depth as well as deposit morphology were also determined using SEM. Another subset of experiments was performed for the purpose of simultaneously depositing carbon and silicon carbide, ie., codeposition.
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Laser Processing of Biological MaterialsPatz, Timothy Matthew 14 July 2005 (has links)
I have explored the use of the matrix assisted pulsed laser evaporation (MAPLE) and MAPLE direct write (MDW) to create thin films of biological materials. MAPLE is a novel physical vapor deposition technique used to deposit thin films of organic materials. The MAPLE process involves the laser desorption of a frozen dilute solution (1-5%) containing the material to be deposited. A focused laser pulse (~200 mJ/cm2) impacts the frozen target, which causes the solvent to preferentially absorb the laser energy and evaporate. The collective action of the evaporated solvent desorbs the polymeric solute material towards the receiving substrate placed parallel and opposite to the target. The bioresorbable polymer PDLLA and the anti-inflammatory pharmaceutical dexamethasone were processed using MAPLE, and characterized using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. MDW is a CAD/CAM controlled direct writing process. The material to be transferred is immersed in a laser-absorbing matrix or solution and coated onto a target or support positioned microns to millimeters away from a receiving substrate. Using a UV microscope objective, a focused laser pulse is directed at the backside of the ribbon, so that the laser energy first interacts with the matrix at the ribbon/matrix interface. This energy is used to gently desorb the depositing material and matrix onto the receiving substrate. I have deposited neuroblasts within a three-dimensional extracellular matrix. These two laser processing techniques have enormous potential for functional medical device and tissue engineering applications.
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Chemical Vapor Deposition of Hafnium Oxynitride Films Using Different OxidantsLuo, Qian 23 November 2005 (has links)
As the minimum feature size in complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) devices shrinks, the leakage current through the gate insulator (silicon oxide) will increase sufficiently to impair device operation. A high dielectric constant (k) insulator is needed as a replacement for silicon oxide in order to reduce this leakage. Hafnium-based materials are among the more promising candidates for the gate insulator, however, it is hampered by material quality and thus has been slow to be introduced into high volume integrated circuit production. Hafnium oxynitride films are deposited by Metalorganic Chemical Vapor Deposition (MOCVD) and downstream microwave Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) employing different oxidants including O2, N2O, O2 plasma, N2O plasma, N2O/N2 plasma, and O2/He plasma in the current research. The effects of oxidants on deposition kinetics, morphology, composition, bonding structure, electrical properties and thermal stability of the resultant films each are investigated. The possible chemical/physical causes of these observations are developed and some mechanisms are proposed to explain the experimental results. Oxygen radicals, which are known of present in oxidizing environments are determined to play an essential role in defining both structures and the resultant electronic properties of deposited hafnium oxynitride films. This systematic investigation of oxidant effects on CVD grown hafnium oxide/oxynitride layers, in the absence of post-deposition annealing, provides new understanding to this area with potential importance to the integrated circuit industry.
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Growth and Characterization of Epitaxial Graphene Grown by Thermal Annealing 6-H SiC(001) and Chemical Vapor DepositionPeng, Hung-Yu 10 August 2011 (has links)
This research has discussed the graphene growth mechanism and the achievement, the main purpose is to try the best method to grow graphene which is large size, uniform, and continue. The main issue is about growth and characterizations in full text which is separated by thermal annealing 6-H SiC(001) and chemical vapor deposition on the copper foil to grow graphenen. For instances, to adjust the growth parameters and the growth methods to get graphene and to control the quality, to analysis the number of layers, to research the characterizations during growth process, and to find the better transfer method are all the important focus in this paper. The morphology of samples is studied by SEM, AFM, STM, OM and so on, further the thickness of graphene layers can be observed by AFM and STM. Due to the limit of instruments, the thickness of graphene layer (~0.35 nm) and the thickness of 6-H SiC(001) steps (~1.5 nm) are not easy to observe actually. Raman spectroscopy is the main analysis tool I have employed, it is the fast way to calculate the number of layers (G, 2D band). In addition, Raman scattering is able to know the information of electronic structure variation (2D band), to investigate the stress which is caused by substrate and to estimate the quality of graphene (D, G band). Finally, I take chemical vapor deposition to grow graphenen on the copper foil. Sample is successfully transferred onto SiO2, and the number of graphene layers is estimated to be about two and the structure is AA stacking from these data. The data also shows the graphene is large size, uniform, and continue.
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Synthesis of Boron-Containing Carbon Nanotubes Catalyzed by Cu/£^- Al2O3Chen, Yun-chu 07 September 2011 (has links)
Boron-doped carbon nanotubes are predicted to behave as semiconductors over a large range of diameters and chiralities and might thus constitute a suitable class of material for nanoelectronics technology. Boron-doped CNTs were reported as by-products when BC2N nanotubes were prepared by an arc-discharge method. The potential doping of CNTs with different kinds of atoms might provide a mechanism for controlling their electronic properties. We have synthesized boron-doped carbon nanotubes (CNTs) directly on copper catalyst by decomposition of B(OCH3)3 in chemical vapor deposition method. The results were characterized and analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Raman, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), solid-state NMR and TGA.
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Effect of nanosized buffer layer and processing parameters on epitaxial growth of ZnO on LiAlO2 by chemical vapor depositionLu, Chien-pin 07 September 2011 (has links)
Zinc Oxide (ZnO) has great potential for applications on ultraviolet/blue light emitting devices because of high exciton binding energy and low cost. This research use low lattice-mismatched £^-LiAlO2 (LAO) substrate to grow ZnO epitaxial films by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). The first part of the present study deals with effect of processing parameters including temperature of Zinc procuser, sample position and growth temperature on ZnO epilayer. High the precuser temperature and long distance between sample and center of CVD furnace resulted in high growth rates. When growth rate was low, (10 0) ZnO (m-ZnO) was obtained and its crystallinity and luminescence property were poor. After increasing the growth rate to a certain extent, the surface of epilayer was flat and the crystallinity was improved. A further increase of growth rate resulted in a mixture of m-ZnO and c-plane in the ZnO epilayer. Based on the first part of study, the second part was focused on examining the effect of a nanosized buffer layer on inhibiting the nucleation of c-plane ZnO. Results showed that the nucleation of c-plane ZnO was indeed inhibited at low growth temperature. Finally, the crystallinity the optical property of the epilayer were improved by introducing
a thick and flat buffer layer of ~170 nm in thickness.
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Nanolithographic control of carbon nanotube synthesisHuitink, David Ryan 15 May 2009 (has links)
A method offering precise control over the synthesis conditions to obtain carbon
nanotube (CNT) samples of a single chirality (metallic or semi-conducting) is presented.
Using this nanolithographic method of catalyst deposition, the location of CNT growth is
also precisely defined.
This technique obviates three significant hurdles that are preventing the exploitation
of CNT in micro- and nano-devices. Microelectronic applications (e.g., interconnects,
CNT gates, etc.) require precisely defined locations and spatial density, as well as
precisely defined chirality for the synthesized CNT. Conventional CVD synthesis
techniques typically yield a mixture of CNT (semi-conducting and metallic types) that
grow at random locations on a substrate in high number density, which leads to extreme
difficulty in application integration.
Dip Pen Nanolithography (DPN) techniques were used to deposit the catalysts at
precisely defined locations on a substrate and to precisely control the catalyst
composition as well as the size of the patterned catalyst. After deposition of catalysts, a
low temperature Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) process at atmospheric pressure
was used to synthesize CNT. Various types of catalysts (Ni, Co, Fe, Pd, Pt, and Rh) were
deposited in the form of metal salt solutions or nano-particle solutions. Various characterization studies before and after CVD synthesis of CNT at the location of the
deposited catalysts showed that the CNT were of a single chirality (metallic or semiconducting)
as well as a single diameter (with a very narrow range of variability).
Additionally, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) was used to characterize the
deposited samples before and after the CVD, as was lateral force microscopy (LFM) for
determination of the successful deposition of the catalyst material immediately after
DPN as well as following the CVD synthesis of the samples. The diameter of the CNT
determines the chirality. The diameter of the CNT measured by TEM was found to be
consistent with the chirality measurements obtained from Raman Spectroscopy for the
different samples. Hence, the results showed that CNT samples of a single chirality can
be obtained by this technique. The results show that the chirality of the synthesized CNT
can be controlled by changing the synthesis conditions (e.g., size of the catalyst patterns,
composition of the catalysts, temperature of CVD, gas flow rates, etc.).
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Experimental study for the local heat transfer on a rectangular substrate in TFT-LCD manufacturing processSu, Chun-shuo 17 July 2006 (has links)
Chemical vapor deposition is an important thin film process for the fabrication of TFT-LCD(Thin-Film-Transistor Liquid Crystal Display), the heat transfer coefficient on the substrate is the important influence parameter in the manufacturing process. For this reason, the main object of this thesis is to set up a temperature measurement system of transient thermochromatic liquid crystals. Furthermore, an experimental is carried out in the present study to investigate the characteristics of heat transfer resulting from a low speed air jet impinging onto a rectangular substrate confined in a vertical rectangular chamber. Finally, empirical equations are proposed to correlate the effect of Reynolds number¡BSeparation distances and Ratio of outlet.
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Chemically sensitive polymer-mediated nanoporous alumina SAW sensors for the detection of vapor-phase analytesPerez, Gregory Paul 29 August 2005 (has links)
We have investigated the chemical sensitivity of
nanoporous (NP) alumina-coated surface acoustic wave (SAW)
devices that have been surface-modified with polymeric
mediating films. The research in this dissertation covers
the refinement of the NP alumina coating, development of
dendrimer and/or polymer surface modifications, design of
composite ultrathin vapor-phase analyte gates, and
preparation of selectively permeable, polymeric films that
mediate analyte transport. Nanoporous alumina SAW devices were fabricated from planar Al SAW devices using an anodization process that yields a high-surface-area transduction platform. Refinement of the anodization process results in a homogeneously porous substrate capable of ~40 times the analyte sensitivity of conventional planar SAW devices. Attempts to directly impart selective gas-phase analyte permeation with monolayers of amine-terminated, poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimer films were investigated with and without secondary functionalization. We also prepared and characterized pore-bridging
polymeric composite ultrathin films (~12 nm) of PAMAM
dendrimers and poly(maleic anhydride)-c-poly(methyl
vinylether) (Gantrez). Access to the underlying pores of
the NP alumina coating can be modulated through the
sequential deposition of the composite film. These
tailorable ultrathin films result in impermeable surface-
modifications which fully gate the analyte response without
filling the porous structure. Thin spin-cast films (40 nm) of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) were developed to simultaneously provide selective sorption and permeation characteristics towards vapor-phase analytes. The porous nature of the underlying alumina coating provides for this real-time evaluation of sorption and permeation. The results suggest that the thin films offer preferential sorption of non-polar organics and selective permeability towards water vapor.
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