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PREPARAZIONI, PROPRIETA’, APPLICAZIONI di SISTEMI a BASE di NANOTUBI di CARBONIO M.L.Terranova Dip. di Scienze e Tecnologie Chimiche Interdisc. MIcro- and NAno-Structured Systems – MINASlab Universita’ di Roma “TOR VERGATA” A SINGLE GRAPHITE SHEET: GRAPHENE An example of mono-dimensional system TWO DIFFERENT CLASSES Multi-wall (MWNTs) Single-wall (SWNTs) Dext.= 20÷200 Å Dint. = 10÷100 Å D = 10÷20 Å S. Iijima Nature 354: 56 (1991) S. Iijima, T. Ichihashi Nature, 363: 603 (1993) PROPERTIES • • • • ELECTRONIC MECHANICAL CHEMICAL THERMAL OPTICAL MAGNETIC SPINTRONICS High chemical stability (inertness against oxidation..) Structural integrity after intercalation and de-intercalation High performances of gas storage Feasibility to attach foreign species or chemical groups Thermal stability (up to 2000 C under vacuum) Low density (1.33-1.40 g/cm3) (1/6 the weight of steel) Mechanical Resistance (Young modulus ~1.8 TPa) Breaking strength : 13-50 GPa (a strain of 6%) Volume compressibility : 2 x 10 –3 1/kbar Reversible deformation modes (bending, axial compression, torsion) continues……….. The highest thermal conductivity (2000-6000 W/m·K) Metallic or semiconducting behaviour Electrical conductivity (1 GA/cm2 ) High efficiency of Field Emission (FE) ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE of GRAPHITE In 3D graphite the inter-planar interactions are weak with respect to the in-plane C-C interactions The electronic structure of 2D graphite is similar (in first approximation) to that of 3D graphite The e * bands of graphene “touch” in 6 points (at the corners of hexagonal Brillouin zone ) and equal the Fermi energy for one special wavevector K- POINT HOW TO ROLL GRAPHENE Indexing scheme Chiral vector : O-A = Ch= na1+ma2 ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE of SWNT Confinement of electrons along the tube circumference kc·Ch=2j A set of 1D energy states, corresponing to sections of the band structure of 2D graphite . Depending on the position of allowed wavevector with respect to k-point METAL-LIKE SEMICONDUCTOR Metal-like Nanotubes (zero-gap) (n,n) (n,m) | n-m=3i The nanotubes (n,n) and (n,m) with n-m=3i behave as 1D metals : the density of states at the Fermi level has a finite value. In metal-like SWNTs the conduction is due to discrete 1-D electronic states (spaced of about 0.4 meV) which extend along the whole tube length Semiconducting Nanotubes (n,m) | n-m3i DOS= 0 at the Fermi level Dependance of the gap on the diameter Eg~1/R, 0.2 Eg 1.2 eV T.W. Odom, J.L. Huang, P. Kim e C.M. Lieber, Nature 391 (1998): 62 The gap decreases with diameter increasing . SWNTs represent the ideal 1D QUANTUM WIRE The transport properties are dependent on the geometrical characteristics: HELICITY -DIAMETER Depending on the structure the nanotubes can have a metal-like or semiconducting behaviour The electrons are confined along the circumference and propagate exclusively along the axis of the cylinder . The conduction is ballistic. KEY POINTS Use of synthesis techniques for the control of architecture: Alignment Density of bundles Orientation Placement Definition of post-synthesis protocols for control of : Chemical state PRODUCTION METHODS Sublimation or evaporation of carbon targets LASER ABLATION ARC DISCHARGE Decomposition of hydrocarbons , alcools … PYROLYSIS VAPOUR DEPOSITION ALL THE PROCESSES MUST BE CATALYSED BY USING TRANSITION METALS LASER ABLATION Sources: pulsed Nd:YAG lasers ( = 532 nm) pulsed CO2 lasers ( = 10.6 m) cw CO2 lasers ( = 10.6 m) double-pulsed laser systems: 532 nm pulse followed by a coaxial 1064 nm pulse T ~ 10 4 K v ~ 10 6 cm s -1 Targets : graphite metal/graphite ARC DISCHARGE Advantages : low-cost process Disavantages : low yields of SWNTs bad quality of nanotubes dispersed material (all round the walls) V = 20-25 V I = 50-120 A Targets : graphite metal/graphite PYROLYSIS Carbon sources : hydrocarbons Advantages : continuous production at low cost low process temperatures easy to scale-up Disadvantages : large amounts of amorphous C large amounts of residual catalysts T = 700-1000 C P = 1 Atm CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION Activation of reactants in vapour phase by : # PLASMAS (RF,MW..) , # FLAMES T = 700-1000 C P < 1 Atm # HOT FILAMENTS Carbon sources: hydrocarbons , acetone, alcools, ferrocene… BUT ALSO: C powders (graphite, amorphous nanoparticles….) Advantages Production of aligned and oriented bundles Growth onto selected areas Straightforward scaling up Easy collection of the material from substrate CVD APPARATUSES at MINASlab Microwave Plasma Enhanced CVD Hot Filament CVD Thermal CVD T HE GROWTH Control of density and orientation 10m Deposition on shaped substrates Deposition on patterned surfaces POST-SYNTHESIS TREATMENTS Purification -to separate catalyst particles -to suppress contamination by other C forms Opening - to increase the reactivity at the open edges - to make easier filling of nanotubes with gases Chemical functionalization - to solubilize nanotubes - to selective modificate the intrinsic properties Filling - with metals , oxides, salts, carbides, semiconductors , enzymes…. (wet chemistry, molten materials ) - with a gas Mixing -to prepare nanocomposites FUNCTIONALIZATION On sidewalles The scope : SOLUBILIZATION in POLAR MEDIA LINKING of COMPLEX STRUCTURES MODIFICATION of the PROPERTIES PREPARATION OF NANOCOMPOSITES At an open end CNT-BASED COMPOSITES The techniques: BLENDING MIXING ELECTROPOLYMERIZATION The matrices: Mineral oils Polymers metals Glasses-ceramics Mechanical properties Charge transport Energy storage Optical properties POLYMER-BASED NANOCOMPOSITES fibers » Conducting Polymers: polythiophene, polyaniline, polypirrole,… » Thermoplastic Polymers: polystyrene, polyamides, … » Thermally Conductive Polymers: silicones, epoxy resins … » Liquid crystals thermotropic, lyotropic polymer … flexible layers films pastes A critical issue in nanocomposites: control of distribution CONTROL of DISTRIBUTION POLYMER-ENWRAPPED NANOTUBES CONDUCTING NETWORKS FILLER-MATRIX DISPERSIONS The homogeneity and uniformity of the nanotube dispersion inside the matrices can be checked using the microscopy techniques AFM and AFAM (Atomic Force Acousitc Microscopy). . AFM AFAM AFAM map The maps enable to evaluate the quality of the nanotube dispersion inside the host matrix HOW TO CHARACTERIZE THE NANOTUBES MORPHOLOGY -Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) -Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) -Scanning Tunnelling Microscopy (STM) -Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) STRUCTURE -Nanodiffraction Techniques : *Reflection High Energy Electron Diffr. (RHEED) *X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) -Raman Spectroscopy NANOTUBES in ACTION CHARGE TRANSPORT in CNT SYSTEMS -Low electrical resistance : in a 1D system the electrons travelling only forward or backward have few possibilities to scatter -Energy dissipated is very small -Carried currents per given cross-sectional areas larger with respect to common metals (Cu, Al..) -No electromigration of atoms (covalent bonds vs. metal bonds) But the properies of nanotube systems depends on their aggregation . Membranes Pressed tablets Ribbons/wires Oriented arrays EXHIBIT DIFFERENT ELECTRICAL BEHAVIOUR MICRO-NANO-WIRES and CIRCUITS 7 2mm 3mm 5mm 6 CNT ribbons Current (mA) 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 0 1 2 3 4 Voltage (V) CNT aligned by electrical fields (multifinger device) CNT coated by Ni 5 6 ORGANIZATION & CONDUCTIVITY The orientation of SWNT bundles strongly improves the conductivity of the material. An example: bundles aligned between electrodes by dielectroforesys 700 without Electric Field Electric Field at 1MHz, Vpp=20V 600 Current (A) 500 400 300 200 100 0 -100 0 As deposited nanotubes Aligned bundles (AC field 1MHz) 1 2 3 Voltage (Volt) 4 5 6 WORK in PROGRESS *Integrated nanocircuits *Inverters *Interconnections *Intramolecular junctions FIELD-EMISSION A mechanism for electron emission alternative to thermoionic emission Thermoionic emission Field emission F.E. is a quantum tunnelling: the electrons pass through a barrier in the presence of a high E.F. F.E. does not require any heat to extract electrons F.E. advantages: higher efficiency, less scatter, faster turn-on times, building of robust and compact devices F.E. disadvantages: dependence on the materials properties and on the shape of the cathode THE Fowler-Nordheim LAW b J E exp E a 3/ 2 2 Density of emitted current 2 • • • • Emitting area Current density Macrosc. electrical fieldc. Enhancement Factor • Work function • STRATEGIES to IMPROVE FIELD EMISSION • • • Increase of A Decrease of Increase of β A J = I/A E Organized Arrays Specific materials High form factors L.W.Nordheim Proc.Royal Soc.London A121(1928)626 FIELD EMISSION from SWNT NANOTUBES Very high emission current densities : up to 1 A/cm2 at 5 V/m Low values of : turn-on and threshold ( few V/ m ) Energy spread 0.2 eV Long term stability F.E : GEOMETRICAL REQUIREMENTS The F.E efficiency depends on the structure : SW,MW,open/closed tips… …but also on density and organization of nanotube arrays COLD CATHODES for … • • • • • • • Flat panel displays (FPD) MEMS systems Light sources (lamps) Coherent electron sources AFM tips X-rays tubes Vacuum microelectronics (tube amplifier) CNT-BASED LIGHT SOURCES J Wei et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 84 (2004) 4869 BUILDING a CNT-BASED DISPLAY Diode configuration C.A.Spindt et al. J.Appl.Phys.47(1976)5248 In a FED, each pixel has its individual electron source (no electron scanning required ). COLD CATHODES for X-RAY SOURCES X-ray emission from a metallic anode bombarded by electrons The use of a triode-type architecture increases the performances (reduced threshold voltage, improved emission control ) 1,5 – 3 W! CheMin spectrometer 2009 Mars Science Laboratory The quick response of CNT-based cold cathodes can be used for 3D X-ray imaging, obtained irradiating the object from different angles , activating sequentially different e- sources (without moving and precision mechanics) Sarrazin et al Adv. X-Ray Anal. 48 (2005) 194] CNT-BASED FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTORS Transistors are the basic building blocks of integrated circuits. CNFET In the generic CNFET a CNT is placed between two electrodes :a separate gate electrode controls the flow of current in the channel. This devices can operate at R.T. with efficiency similar to that of conventional Si transistors, but with extremely riduced dimensions and shorter commutation times . THE FABRICATION of a CNFET The amount of current flowing through the nanotube channel can be varied by a factor of 100,000 by changing the voltage applied to the gate (VG). R. Martel et al APL 73 (1998):2447 IBM Research Division AFM nanomanipulation SINGLE-ELECTRON CNT TRANSISTOR The world’s first single-electron transistor : two sharp bends (i.e., large potential barriers) placed in a CNT 20 nm apart to create a “conducting island” that electrons must tunnel in to. Source: Delft University and IBM Circuit example : CNTFET inverter CNFETs have already been used, at research lab level, to implement basic logic circuits such as the inverter. Source: Delft University VACUUM TUBES 1904 ,Sir Flemming discovers the thermoionic effect and develops the first vacuum tube. 1904-1930 Different vacuum tubes: • Diode • Triode • Tetrode • Pentode kinds of After : the “era” of solid state devices BUT….. development of high frequency/high power electronic components require compact and efficient valves assembled with material with specific properties : radiation hardness possibility to operate over a wide range of temperatures reduced dimensions Propagation of electrons in vacuum : with respect to solids Longer mean-free path Lower energy loss CNT-BASED VACUUM TUBES Integrated gated F.E. devices based on CNT electron emitters brings together the advantages of vacuum tubes and solid state power transistors Last generation of vacuum tubes competitive with solid-state devices Vacuum tubes represent the amplifier of choice for radar, telecommunications and space-based communications AMPLIFIERS : Starting from an initial electrical signal,the aim is to obtain -special gains -shape modifications Miniaturized efficient and compact devices No heating required Operational extension to higher frequencies (THz region ) MW and THz AMPLIFIERS THz sources for : radar telecommunications space-based communications security applications THz SOURCES for ….. security medical applications communications PLANNING a TECHNOLOGY FOR A CNT-TRIODE -PREPARATION BY LITOGRAPHY of LOCATIONS -DEPOSITION OF THE CATALYST INSIDE THE PATTERNS -IN SITU CVD GROWTH OF ORDERED CNT ARRAYS Measured output characteristic of the trio OPTHER- FP7 project OPTOELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY CNT-based transistors can be made ambipolar : the current is conducted by electrons for positive gate voltage holes for negative gate voltage Under appropriate bias conditions electrons and holes can enter the nanotube channel simultaneously from opposite ends. When electron/holes meet, they release energy in form of heat or light Electronically controlled light sources EXTRA-BRIGHT BEAMS of IR LIGHT An array of carbon nanotube transistors partially suspended from a silicon dioxide substrate UNIPOLAR TRANSPORT CONDITIONS Electrons were injected ( gate : -2.1 V) from the contacting electrodes into the nanotube and gained enough energy at the suspended/supported substrate interface to generate tightly-bound electron-hole pairs, which subsequently neutralize each other and emit light. 3 A current generated 107 photons /nm2 s courtesy of IBM P.Avouris (IBM) Science CMOL Architecture : hybrid CMOS/nanowire/nanodevice CMOS : complementary metal oxide semiconductor The basic idea of CMOL circuits is to combine the advantages of CMOS technology (including its flexibility and high fabrication yield) with the extremely high potential density of molecularscale two-terminal nanodevices. The challenge: precise alignment of nanowires Source: Stony Brook University CMOL : advantages and applications The density of active devices in CMOL may be up to 1012 cm2 and could provide unparalleled information processing performance up to 1020 operations/cm2/s. Terabit scale memories Reconfigurable digital circuits with multi tera-flops scale performance Mixed signal Neuromorphic networks that may compete with biological neural systems in area density, exceeding their speed at acceptable power dissipation time-to-market > 15-20 years! Source: Stony Brook University OPTICAL PROPERTIES Non-linear optical properties are evidenced in nanocomposites , suspended–solubilized nanotube systems or in specific nanotube aggregates . * HIGH ORDER HARMONIC GENERATION produced by specific solid aggregates *STRONG LUMINESCENCE (UV-Vis) for SWNTs embedded in varius polymeric matrices *OPTICAL LIMITING BEHAVIOUR of SWNTs functionalized with selected groups or chains HIGH-ORDER HARMONIC GENERATION The generation of 2° and 3°-order harmonics is due to quantum confinement of the electrons and is related to the helicity of the SWNT samples. Centrosymmetric materials do not generate 2° harmonics . The generation of 2°hamonics indicate partial anysotropy (chiral CNT or disorientation ) Pressed SWNT tablets: a Q-switched Nd:Yag laser (1064 nm) laser pulse : 10 Hz, 100-200 mJ (nanosecond time scale) 2nd Generazione della seconda armonica armonics 1,2 1,8 Terza armonica nanotubi da SiC 1,6 1 Intensità normalizzata (a. u.) 1,4 i n ten si tà (a. u .) 1,2 nanotubi di sintesi da SiC nanotubi Carbolex 1 0,8 0,6 0,4 3nd armonics Dati sperimentali nanotubi da SiC dati sperimentali particelle SiC 0,8 0,6 0,4 0,2 0,2 0 531 0 354 531,2 531,4 531,6 531,8 532 532,2 lunghezza d'onda (nm) 532,4 532,6 532,8 533 354,2 354,4 354,6 354,8 355 355,2 355,4 355,6 355,8 356 Lunghezza d'onda (nanometri) S.Botti et al. Appl. Phys.Lett (2004) OPTICAL LIMITING BEHAVIOUR Nanotubes functionalized with selected groups or chains The fluence optical limiting of pulsed lasers is due to non –linear scattering of the nanotube dispersions Promising systems for: Z.Jin et al, Chem.Phys.Lett 2002 -Manipulation of optical beams -Optical switchers -Devices for fast processing of optical signals MAGNETIC and SPINTRONICS PROPERTIES For SWNT systems in a magnetic field the changes of electron spin signals depend on the orientation with respect to the field and on the SWNT organization (dispersed/aggregates) . The encapsulation of: MAGNETIC & FERROMAGNETIC nanoparticles 1-ferromagnetic contacts and coherent transport of spin-electrons througtht nanotubes 2-protection of nanoparticles against oxidation and reduction of dipolar particle-particle interactions High-density magnetic record media Non-volatile magnetic memories Spin- electronic magnetic sensors TOWARDS CNT-BASED FLEXIBLE ELECTRONICS It is possible to integrate the nanotubes in different matrices : using polymers different plastic/flexible devices can be produced Electrodes Transistors Light-emitting diodes Plastic solar cells -ease production -flexibility -versatility -miniaturization POLYMER/CNTs HYBRID DEVICES How to fabricate a flexible transistor Pentacene PEDOT:PSS PVA Polymide Support nanocomposite Polyimid PEDOT:PSS Patterned electrode PHOTOVOLTAIC CELLS General scheme of a “DYE SENSITIZED SOLAR CELL” DSSC based on donor-acceptor systems Michael Grätzel , Nature 414 (2001) 338 The interaction of SWNTs with conjugated polymers allows charge separation of the photo-generated excitons in the polymer and efficient electron transport to the electrode through the nanotubes. SWNT-BASED CATHODES for DSSC SWNT/conjugated polymer nanocomposites represent efficient cathodes for the assembling of high performance flexible photovoltaic cells Cathode: Platinum 1,5 150 1,0 100 50 0,5 0 0,0 0 50 100 150 200 250 Potenziale (mV) 300 350 I(V) P(V) 2,5 2,0 250 200 150 1,5 1,0 100 0,5 50 0,0 0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 Potenziale(mV) 0 Potenza(W) 200 2 2,0 Potenza(W) 2 I(V) 250 P(V) Corrente (mA/cm ) 3,0 2,5 Corrente (mA/cm ) Cathode: CNT+polymers THERMAL MANAGEMENT THEORY (#) : predicts K = 6000 W/mK ( S.Berber Phys.Rev.Lett. 84 (2000) 4613 ) EXPERIMENTS : values between 1000 and 3000 W/mK Heat Sink: polymeric or epoxy matrices with CNTs Thermal Interface Materials The thermal conductivity increases up to 40% Resina Epossidica + SWCNTs1%p Resina Epossidica Potenza (W) Chip Die Substrate Package NANOTUBES for INTERCONNECTS Flip-Chip configuration : charge and heath transport 1 3 2 4 CONCLUSIONS? CNT: multifunctional structural materials which open a series of technological opportunities for micro- and nano-electronics. These exciting carbon nanomaterials are providing the scientific community with many interesting ideas and potential applications, some of them practical and some simply dreams for the future But to obtain the expected benefits a lot of research work is still needed !