carbon nanotube(cnt) process & application. outline introduction history structure synthesis...
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Carbon NanoTube(CNT)Process & Application
OUTLINE
•Introduction•History•Structure•Synthesis•Properties•Application•Challenges•References
What is CNT?
CNT is a tubular form of carbon
with diameter as small as 1nm.Length: few nm to microns.CNT is configurationally equivalent
to a two dimensional graphene
sheet rolled into a tube.Can have caps at the ends
making them look like pills
What CNT Really look like!
•Clumps, ropes, Bundles, mats
•Very high tendency to stick together
History
In 1970s, Morinobu Endo prepared the first carbon filament of nanometer dimensions
Richard E. Smalley (Nobel Prize winning in 1996)
discovered the buckyball (C60) and other
fullerenes (1985)
In 1991, Sumio Iijima had been using TEM
To analyze new type of finite carbon structure, that is
composed of needle-like tubes
Structure
The structure of CNT can be represented based on 2D graphene lattice.
Properties depending only on tube diameter and chiral angle.
For a random chirality distribution,1/3 of the nanotubes are metallic
Cont
What is so unique about CNT is due to the different electrical and thermal conductivities they exhibit when their hexagonal structures are orientated differently. For instance, armchair, chiral and zig-zag structure allow the CNT to act like metal, semiconductor and insulator, respectively.
The difference in orientation can be determined by a method of measurement termed chiral vector .
Chiral Vector: Ch = n â1 + m â2,
Chiral Angle
Cont..
Armchair: n=m = 30Chiral: n!=m0 < < 30Zig zag: m=0 = 0
Where n and m are the number of unit vector along two directions in the honeycomb crystal lattice of graphene.
Cont…
Carbon nanotubes can be metallic or semiconductor depending on their chirality
Chiral Vector C is defined as the vector from one open end of the tube to the other after it is rolled
If (n-m) is divisible by 3, the tube is metallicIf (n-m) is not divisible by 3, the tube is semiconducting.
Why do Carbon Nanotubes form?
Carbon Graphite (Ambient conditions)
sp2 hybridization: planar
Diamond (High temperature and pressure)
sp3 hybridization: cubic
Nanotube/Fullerene (certain growth conditions)
sp2 + sp3 character: cylindrical
Finite size of graphene layer has dangling bonds. These dangling
bonds correspond to high energy states.
Eliminates dangling bonds
Nanotube formation + Total Energy
Increases Strain Energy decreases
Types of CNTs
Single Wall CNT (SWCNT) Consist of just one layer of carbonaverage diameter 1.2 nm
Multiple Wall CNT (MWCNT) Consist of 2 or more layers of carbonaverage diameter 20 nm
(Can be metallic or semiconducting depending on their geometry)
Synthesis of CNT’s
Evaporation of solid carbon in arc discharge
Laser ablation
Catalytic chemical vapor deposition of carbon containing gases
Arc Discharge
Traditional method
carried out in a medium of a Nobel Gas such as Helium or Argon.
requires complex vacuum equipments.
Such methods are, not only expensive but rather, time consuming too.
only MWNT and ropes
Cont..
Two carbon electrodes are kept with a gap in between. When high current, about 80 A is passed through the electrodes where gap is filled with helium under 300 torr. Cylindrical deposit then grows at about 2 to 3 mm per minute. This cathode deposit contains two portions: the inside is a black fragile core and the outside a hard shell.
Laser Abaltion
A well mixed acetylene-air mixture is burned inside a tube furnace
A laser is used to vaporize a metal target (either Fe or Ni)
The post-flame exhaust gas is mixed with the metallic vapor and allowed to cool
During cooling, carbon nanotubes are formed
Spongy black deposit Diameters, chiralities, metallic or
semiconductor all uncontrolled
Chemical vapor Depostion(CVD)
Single SWNT for the 1st time.
Aligned nanotubes Large scale possible Relatively cheap Diameters, chiralities,
metallic or semiconductor all uncontrolled
Cont… In CVD, a substrate is prepared with a layer of metal catalyst
particles, most commonly nickel, cobalt, iron, or a combination. The metal nanoparticles can also be produced by other ways,
including reduction of oxides or oxides solid solutions. The diameters of the nanotubes that are to be grown are related to the size of the metal particles. The substrate is heated to approximately 700°C. To initiate the growth of nanotubes, two gases are bled into the reactor: a process gas (such as ammonia, nitrogen, hydrogen, etc.) and a carbon-containing gas (such as acetylene, ethylene, ethanol, methane, etc.). Nanotubes grow at the sites of the metal catalyst; the carbon-containing gas is broken apart at the surface of the catalyst particle, and the carbon is transported to the edges of the particle, where it forms the nanotubes
Properties
Electrical conductivity six orders of magnitude higher than copper
Can be metallic or semiconducting depending on chirality- ‘tunable’ bandgap- electronic properties can be tailored through application
of external magnetic field, application of mechanical deformation…
Very high current carrying capacity
Excellent field emitter; high aspect ratio and small tip radius of curvature are ideal for field emission
Cont…. The strongest and most flexible
molecular material because of C-C covalent bonding and seamless hexagonal network architecture
Young’s modulus of over 1 TPa vs 70 GPa for Aluminum
strength to weight ratio 500 time > for Al; similar improvements over steel and titanium; one order of magnitude improvement over graphite/epoxy
Maximum strain ~10% much higher than any material
Thermal conductivity ~ 3000 W/mK in the axial direction with small values in the radial direction
Application of CNT
Electronics
• quantum wire interconnects
• Diodes and transistors for computing
• Capacitors
• Data Storage
• Field emitters for instrumentation
• Flat panel displays
Carbon Nanotube FET
• First CNT-FET fabricated in 1998
CNT can be used as the conducting channel of a MOSFET.
• These new devices are very similar to the CMOS FETs.
• All CNFETs are pFETs by nature.• nFETs can be made through
• Annealing • Doping
• Very low current and power consumption
• Although tubes are 3nm thick CNFETs are still the size of the contacts, about 20nm.
Interconnect
Today chips have become “all wires”
Electro-migration failure
CNT interconnect
• High current density
• Low resistance (6.2k ohm)
• Ballistic behavior
Cont….SENSORS,NEMS,BIO
• CNT based microscopy: AFM, STM…CNT tip is robust ,offers amazing resolution.
• Nanotube sensors: force, pressure, chemical…
• Biosensors
• Molecular gears, motors, actuators
• Batteries, Fuel Cells: H2, Li storage
• Biomedical- Lab on a chip - Drug delivery- DNA sequencing
Scanning Probe
Simulated Mars dust
Challenges Selective placement of CNTs
Control of diameter, chirality
Doping, contacts
Novel architectures (not CMOS based!)
Large scale production
Development of inexpensive manufacturing processes
Carbon NanoTube(CNT)Transistor
Stanford Model
Two set of files:
•CNFET.lib - CNFET Models.
•PARAMETERS.lib - Global parameters for the model.
To instantiate the devices in the model, the library must be included at the beginning of the SPICE file.
.lib ‘CNFET.lib’ CNFET
CNT Model
The model is implemented hierarchically in three levels:
•CNFET_L1: Level 1, models the intrinsic behavior of MOSFET- like CNFET.
•CNFET_L2: Level 2, models the device non-idealities (capacitance and resistance of doped S/D CNT region).
•CNFET_L3: Level 3, models the interface between the CNFET device and CNFET circuits.
Substrate
G/S/DMetalGate
G/S/D
CNT’s
CNFET_L3
Substrate
CNTFET_L1Substrate
Metal Gate
CNT
CNFET_L2
Intrinsic CNT channel
References
• You can see animations of virtual nanotubes by following these links:
http://www.photon.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~maruyama/nanotube.html
http://www.pa.msu.edu/cmp/csc/simindex.html
• You can create your own virtual SWNT at:
http://jcrystal.com/steffenweber/JAVA/jnano/jnano.html
“Chemical Vapor Deposition.” http://www.sandia.gov/1100/CVDwww/cvdinfo.htm
“Physical Properties of Carbon Nanotubes.” http://www.pa.msu.edu/cmp/csc/ntproperties/