| Literature DB >> 28691821 |
Liang Zhao1, Huy Q Ta1,2, Arezoo Dianat3, Akash Soni1, Artem Fediai3,4,5, Wanjian Yin1, Thomas Gemming6, Barbara Trzebicka2, Gianaurelio Cuniberti3,4, Zhongfan Liu7, Alicja Bachmatiuk1,2,6, Mark H Rummeli1,2,6.
Abstract
The promise of sp2 nanomaterials remains immense, and ways to strategically combine and manipulate these nanostructures will further enhance their potential as well as advance nanotechnology as a whole. The scale of these structures requires precision at the atomic scale. In this sense electron microscopes are attractive as they offer both atomic imaging and a means to structurally modify structures. Here we show how Cr atoms can be used as physical linkers to connect carbon nanotubes and fullerenes to graphene. Crucially, while under electron irradiation, the Cr atoms can drive transformations such as catalytic healing of a hole in graphene with simultaneous transformation of a single wall carbon nanotube into a fullerene. The atomic resolution of the electron microscopy along with density functional theory based total energy calculations provide insight into the dynamic transformations of Cr atom linkers. The work augments the potential of transmission electron microscopes as nanolaboratories.Entities:
Keywords: Cr atoms; In situ TEM; carbon nanotube; dynamic transformations; pillared graphene
Year: 2017 PMID: 28691821 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b01406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189