Title: Nano-Electronics and Nano-technology
1Nano-Electronics and Nano-technology
- A course presented by S. Mohajerzadeh,Department
of Electrical and Computer Eng,University of
Tehran
2Carbon structures
3Fullerene
- C60, a type of carbon arrangement with 60 carbon
atoms placed in 1nm lattice separation. - Discovery 1985 by Bukminister Fuller.
- 12 pentagonal and 20 hexagonal shapes.
- Fullerene can be doped (26) by alkali atoms
(sodium) because its empty space is that much.
4??????1nm in diameter Discovery 1985
C70
C60
5Fullerene
Total 10,000 publications! 2,000 PhD students?!
6Multi-wall and single-wall tubes
- Transmission electron micrograph of single-wall
CNT, (bundles of CNTs) - Schematic diagram of single-wall tube
7Multi-wall tubes
8(No Transcript)
9Physical characteristics
- Single wall nanotubes 1 5 nm diameter
- Types of nanotube formation Armchair, Zigzag,
Chiral - Multi-wall tubes 2-50 nm concentric tubes, ID
1.5 15 nm, OD 2.5 30 nm - 100 times stronger than steel, r 1/6 (1.3
1.4 g/cm3) - Strong, lightweight materials
- kCNT 2000 (Copper 400) W/m.K
- Transmission of heat is better than diamond
10Chirality vector
- Although the fabrication of nanotubes is not by
rolling the graphite sheets, they are modeled by
this phenomenon - Ch or Chirality vector or circumferential
vector is the translation vector of graphite
plane onto nanotube. - Axis vector is T which is perpendicular to
chilarity vector Ch and shows the tube axis. - Ch na1 m a2 where a1 and a2 represent the
main constructing vectors of graphite sheet.
11Chirality vectors
12Electrical properties
- Semiconductor, metallic behavior
- If n-m3q then metallic
- Armchair structures, metallic,
- Chiral and Zigzag structures, semiconductor
- Band gap depends on the diameter
- Reducing the diameter leads to higher band gaps.
13Mechanical properties
- Nanotubes are very strong materials.
- If a wire of area A is stressed by a weight W,
the level of stress is SW/A, - Strain is defined as e?L/L and SE e
- e is called Youngs module and it is 0.21TPa for
nanotubes!!, 10 times more than steel! - 1 TPa is equivalent to 10millions atmospheric
pressure!! - If we bend the tubes, they act like straws, but
come back to their original status,
self-repairing! - When the tube is severely bent, the sp2
structure converts onto sp orbitals and once
the pressure is removed, sp2 orbitals are
reconstructed. - Tensile strength is the measure of how much force
is needed to take apart a material. - For nanotubes, tensile strength is 45 billion
Pascal (GPa) whereas for steel it is only 2GPa!
14Characterization methods
- SEM
- TEM
- Raman (interaction of incoming light with solid
vibrations) - SPM (AFM , STM ,)
- XRD (X-ray diffraction) similar to electron
diffraction - TPO, TGA (temperature programmed oxidation) and
(thermal gravimetric analysis) - Electrical characterization
15Applications
- Electronics
- Hydrogen storage,
- Chemical Sensors
- Fuel Cells
- Nano-transistors, nano-structures
- Application in STM
- Composite materials,
- Catalysts
- 4.2, 8, 300 (!)wt of hydrogen in CNT at 25oC
16Nano-wires
17Single electron behavior
- FET structure at below 1degree Kelvin!
- Electron-by-electron transport through the
nanotube, step-wise response
18Nano-transistors
19Photonic crystals
- Similar to atomic periodicity, a structure with
matter periodicity is created to form a band-gap
for optical wavelengths. - Only at certain wavelengths, standing waves can
be created and at some other wavelengths,
transmission is prohibited
20Field emission devices
- Each sharp tip of nanotube acts as a
field-emitter device. - The emitted electrons hit the top
electro-luminescent material (like ZnS). - Pixels are clusters of nanotubes
- Standard micro-meter photo-lithography,
- Large area applications
- Stable structures are needed for a reliable
application
21Hydrogen storage
- Computer simulations of Adsorption of hydrogen (
) in tri-gonal arrays of single-walled carbon
nanotubes ( )
22Fabrication (growth) Techniques
- Direct current arc-discharge between carbon
electrodes in an inert-gas environment - Laser Ablation or Pulsed Laser Vaporization (PLV)
- Plasma Enhanced CVD
- Catalytic Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)
- CCVD
- High-pressure CO conversion (HiPCO)
23Carbon Arc-discharge method
- Carbon Atoms are evaporated by a plasma of Helium
gas that is ignited by high currents passed
through opposing carbon anode and cathode
24Carbon Arc Discharge
25CNT by Carbon Arc Discharge
- Basic Process
- A vacuum chamber is pumped down and back filled
with some buffer gas, typically neon or Ar to 500
torr - A graphite cathode and anode are placed in close
proximity to each other. The anode may be filled
with metal catalyst particles if growth of single
wall nanotubes is required. - A voltage is placed across the electrodes,
- The anode is evaporated and carbon condenses on
the cathode as CNT
26Pulsed Laser Vaporization /Ablation
- Used for the production of SWNTs
- Uses laser pulses to ablate (or evaporate) a
carbon target - Target contains 0.5 atomic percent nickel
and/or cobalt - The target is placed in a tube-furnace
- Flow tube is heated to 1200C at 500 Torr
- 10-200 mg/hr depending on the laser power
density
27Plasma CVD
Gas inlet
- Low temperature
- Low Pressure
- DC, RF13.56MHz
- Microwave2.47GHz
- Reacting gas
- CH4 C2H4 C2H6 C2H2 CO
- Catalytic metal (Fe, Ni, Co)
Substrate
Power suplly
Gas outlet
28High-pressure CO conversion (HiPCO)
- New method of growing SWNT
- Primary carbon source is carbon monoxide
- Catalytic particles are generated by in-situ
thermal - decomposition of iron penta-carbonyl in a
reactor heated to 800 - 1200C - Process is done at a high pressure to speed up
the growth (10 atm) - Promising method for mass production of SWNTs
29Chemical Vapor Deposition
- Involves heating a catalyst material to high
temperatures in a tube furnace and flowing a
hydrocarbon gas through the tube reactor. - The materials are grown over the catalyst and
are collected when the system is cooled to room
temperature. - Key parameters are
- Catalysts
- support
- active component
- Source of carbon
- Operational condition
simplicity of apparatus Absolute advantage in
Mass Production
30CVD technique
31Catalyst
- Support
- Silicon substrates
- Quartz substrates
- Silica
- Zeolites
- MgO
- Alomina
- Active components
- Transition metals i.e.
- Co , Fe, Ni / Mo (or oxides of them)
32Nanometric islands
33Catalysts effect
34Sources of carbon
- Carbon monoxide
- Hydrocarbons
- Methane
- Ethylene
- Acetylene
- propylene
- Acetone
- n-pentane
- Methanol
- Ethanol
- Benzene
- Toluene ,
35Operational condition
- Temperature 600-1100 oC
- Pressure 1-10 atm
- Reaction time 0.5-3 h
- Dilutent gas He, Ar, H2
- Resident time of gases
- Volume fraction ( partial
pressure) - Flow rate
36Carbon products
- Vertical growth, random growth,
- Wall thickness in the case of multi-wall growth
- Single-wall (shell) nanotube (SWNT)
- Multi-wall (shell) nanotube (MWNT)
- Graphitic form of carbon
- Amorphous form of carbon
-
- selectivity of SWNT MWNT
37Carbon Nanotubes, Production by Catalytic
Chemical Vapor Deposition (CCVD)
- SWNT-reinforced composites needs tons of CNT per
year - Laser vaporization and arc
discharge gs/day SWNT - Carbon source CO HCs CH4 , C2H2-6 , C6H6
- Conditions 700-1000 oC, 1-5 atm
- Catalyst formulation Co/Fe/Ni-Mo on SiO2 ,
zeolite, - Quantification of SWNT SEM , TEM, AFM, Raman,
TPO - Purification steps
- Caustic to remove silica
- Acid to remove metals
38Carbon Nanotubes
CO deposition on Co-Mo/Silica
39Carbon Nanotubes Characterization-Quantification
AFM
40Carbon Nanotubes Raman characterization
Graphite
SWNT
Disordered C
41CCVD CNT Cat. Reaction Eng. Lab.
1mm
20 Kx
42Storage of Gases
- Hydrogen storage
- Average storage capacity at least 8 wt.
- 100 km 1.2 kg H2 13,500 L(gaseous)
- For 500 km 6 kg H2
100 kg CNT -
- ?CNT ? 1.2 kg/lit
84 lit. CNT
( 3.1 kg !?) (DOE)