| Literature DB >> 25387684 |
Xu Xie1, Sung Hun Jin2, Muhammad A Wahab3, Ahmad E Islam1, Chenxi Zhang4, Frank Du1, Eric Seabron1, Tianjian Lu5, Simon N Dunham1, Hou In Cheong6, Yen-Chu Tu1, Zhilin Guo6, Ha Uk Chung1, Yuhang Li7, Yuhao Liu1, Jong-Ho Lee8, Jizhou Song9, Yonggang Huang7, Muhammad A Alam3, William L Wilson1, John A Rogers1.
Abstract
Recent progress in the field of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) significantly enhances the potential for practical use of this remarkable class of material in advanced electronic and sensor devices. One of the most daunting challenges is in creating large-area, perfectly aligned arrays of purely semiconducting SWNTs (s-SWNTs). Here we introduce a simple, scalable, large-area scheme that achieves this goal through microwave irradiation of aligned SWNTs grown on quartz substrates. Microstrip dipole antennas of low work-function metals concentrate the microwaves and selectively couple them into only the metallic SWNTs (m-SWNTs). The result allows for complete removal of all m-SWNTs, as revealed through systematic experimental and computational studies of the process. As one demonstration of the effectiveness, implementing this method on large arrays consisting of ~20,000 SWNTs completely removes all of the m-SWNTs (~7,000) to yield a purity of s-SWNTs that corresponds, quantitatively, to at least to 99.9925% and likely significantly higher.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25387684 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms6332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919