| Literature DB >> 21711721 |
Kehan Yu1, Zheng Bo, Ganhua Lu, Shun Mao, Shumao Cui, Yanwu Zhu, Xinqi Chen, Rodney S Ruoff, Junhong Chen.
Abstract
Carbon nanowalls (CNWs), two-dimensional "graphitic" platelets that are typically oriented vertically on a substrate, can exhibit similar properties as graphene. Growth of CNWs reported to date was exclusively carried out at a low pressure. Here, we report on the synthesis of CNWs at atmosphere pressure using "direct current plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition" by taking advantage of the high electric field generated in a pin-plate dc glow discharge. CNWs were grown on silicon, stainless steel, and copper substrates without deliberate introduction of catalysts. The as-grown CNW material was mainly mono- and few-layer graphene having patches of O-containing functional groups. However, Raman and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies confirmed that most of the oxygen groups could be removed by thermal annealing. A gas-sensing device based on such CNWs was fabricated on metal electrodes through direct growth. The sensor responded to relatively low concentrations of NO2 (g) and NH3 (g), thus suggesting high-quality CNWs that are useful for room temperature gas sensors.PACS: Graphene (81.05.ue), Chemical vapor deposition (81.15.Gh), Gas sensors (07.07.Df), Atmospheric pressure (92.60.hv).Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21711721 PMCID: PMC3211258 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-6-202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1Experimental setup for atmospheric pressure dc PECVD growth of CNWs.
Figure 2Morphology of the as-grown CNWs displayed in the SEM images. (a) An SEM image of CNWs on a silicon substrate; primary beam incident kinetic energy was 30 keV. (b) CNWs uniformly distributed on the substrate over approximately 1 cm2. (c-e) The CNWs were quasi-transparent to the SEM electron beam. (f) The cluster of CNWs is "flower-like".
Figure 3Raman and XPS spectra. (a) Raman spectrum of CNWs (original and reduced) showing the presence of D and G bands as well as the overtone and combination mode features taken with 532 nm laser excitation. (b) The C1 s and (c) the O1 s XPS spectra of CNWs before and after thermal annealing. The as-grown CNWs contained many oxygen functional groups, while only a low fraction of hydroxyl groups remained after thermal reduction in H2 for 2 h at 900°C. The peak components (green curves) were analyzed with a Gaussian fit.
Figure 4TEM characterization of CNWs. (a) A CNW sheet supported on a Cu grid. Electron diffraction from the CNW is shown as an inset. (b) The areas of a CNW with different thicknesses and wrinkles. (c) and (d) HRTEM images showing the edges of CNW film consisting of one, and five graphene layers, respectively. (d corresponds to the area defined by the white box in b). (e) HRTEM iamge of a CNW sheet with two well-crytallined regions (arrowed). The diffractogram (the inset) is from the red-squared region in (e). (f) A filtered image of the squared region in (e). (g) The intensity profile along the red dashed line in (f).
Figure 5Gas sensing performance of as-produced CNWs. (a) SEM image of CNWs bridging two neighboring Au fingers of an interdigitated electrode. Gases are detected by measuring the change in the device current while applying a constant dc bias to the device. (b) Room-temperature sensing response for NO2 and NH3.