Title: What are Nanotubes?
1Carbon Nanotube Formation Detection of Ni atom
and C2 Gary DeBoer LeTourneau
University Longview, TX NASA Johnson Space
Center Thermal Branch Structures and Mechanics
Division Engineering Directorate Summer, 2000
by Laser Induced Fluorescence
2What areCarbon Nanotubes?
3SEM of Nanotube Bundles
4Why should we care?
Strong light-weight materials
Thermal and electrical properties
Gas (hydrogen) storage
5Whats the Problem?
Nanotubes from Tubes_at_Rice Price 1000/gram
Minimum order 250 milligrams Please
order in 1/4-gram increments only.
Carbon nanotubes, single-walled Sigma-Aldrich
Package Sizes US 100MG
395.90 500MG
1624.00 Product Comments CarboLex SE-
grade, 12-15 angstrom
6Increase Production
modify current methods or design new methods
- Understand the chemical mechanism
- (particularly the role of the catalyst)
7Nanotube Formation Theories
- Atomic scooter
- Metal clusters (nm diameters)
- Melt (mm sized particles or droplets)
8Laser Induced Fluorescence (LIF)
Detector
Optics
Laser
Sample
9Nanotube diagnostics
10Laser Ablation
target
tube
11Plume Emission Spectrum
12Physical Principles for C2 LIF
Upper electronic state
Fluorescence at 513 nm
Long wavelength filter
Detector
Detector
Absorbance at 473 nm
Intermediate state
Lower electronic state
13C2 LIF
14C2 Rotational Spectra
15Rotational Temperature
16ICCD
LeCroy or Digital Scope
Energy meter
Boxcar Averager
Laser 3 Dye Pump 355 nm
DDG
Laser 4 Dye tunable
Laser 2 IR 1064 nm
17C2 Experiment and Synthetic
18C2 Rot Temperature and Intensity
19C2 Rot Temperature and Position
20Summary of C2 LIF results
- Lifetimes of more than 50 ms
- Rotational temperatures 300-700 K
- Rotational temperature is proportional to
intensity - Signal can be seen up to 5 mm from the target
surface - Signal propagates at 50 m/s
21Physical Principles for Ni LIF
Upper electronic state
non radiative decay
intermediate state
filter
detector
Fluorescence at 301 nm
Absorbance 224-226 nm
Lower electronic state
22Nickel Transitions in LIF
23ICCD
LeCroy or Digital Scope
Energy meter
Laser 1 Gr 532 nm
Boxcar Averager
DDG 2
Laser 3 Dye Pump 355 nm
DDG 1
60 Hz - 10 Hz
Laser 4 Dye tunable
Laser 2 IR 1064 nm
24(No Transcript)
25Nickel LIF Spectra
26Ni Experiment and Synthetic
27Nickel Temperature
28Nickel Propagation
29Summary of Ni LIF Results
- Lifetime of several milliseconds with a hot
target, 20 microseconds with a room temperature
target - Electronic temperatures from 200 - 1500 K
- Electronic temperature is proportional to signal
intensity - Signal can be seen up to 3 mm from the target
- Signal propagates at about 10 m/s
30Co resultsLaser Induced Luminescence(LIL)Lifet
imesCo atom millisecondsCarbon
secondsGeohegan et al.Appl. Phys. Letts.,
2000, 76 (3) p 182
31Other Observations
- Hot emission and cooler LIF is not unique.
Brinkman, Appl. Phys. B, 1996 64 p. 689
Pobst, IEPC, 1995 95 (28) p. 203
Raiche, Appl. Opt. 1993 32 p. 4629 - Ablation small molecules and atoms. Becker,
Nanostructured Materials, 1998 10 (5) p. 853
Song, Applied Surface Science, 1998
127-129 p 111
Aguilera, Applied Surface Science, 1998 127-129
p. 309 Dillon, Advances
in Laser Ablation of Materials (USA), 1998 p.
403-408
32Summary of Results
- ablation produces small molecules and atoms
(lifetimes) - C2 - hot emission 50 ms C2
- cooler LIF/LIL 100 ms - Ni and Co LIF/LIL 3 ms
- Cn LIL 3 s
- C2 propagation 50 m/s
- Ni propagation 10 m/s
33Conclusions
- Inconsistent with the melt theory
- Consistent with atomic catalyst theory
- Could be consistent with small metal cluster
theory - Need to know when and where nanotubes are formed
34Future Work
- Analysis of three laser ablation experiments
- Analysis of DC arc spectra
- Further parametric studies
- C2 LIF using two ablation lasers
- Computational modeling for
- nanotube formation mechanisms
- nanotube interactions with other materials
35AcknowledgementsSivaram ArepalliWilliam
HolmesPasha NikolaevCarl ScottBrad FilesSFF
NASA-ASEE