4.6 Article

Bridging the Junction: Electrical Conductivity of Carbon Nanotube Networks

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 126, Issue 40, Pages 17266-17274

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.2c03904

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Business Finland [3767/31/2019]

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Carbon nanotube (CNT) films with excellent conductivity and flexibility are suitable for chemical sensing and touch screen devices. This study investigates the effects of different metals and chemicals on the electrical conductivity of CNT networks. Doping agents can enhance the conductivity of the network, with aluminum having the greatest impact along the nanotubes and copper having the greatest impact across the intersections. Silver doping activates the conductivity of semiconductor nanotubes in heterogeneous networks. Small amounts of doping agents can significantly alter the directional conductivity of the nanotube network and provide new pathways for charge transport.
Carbon nanotube (CNT) films have excellent conductivity and suitable flexibility for chemical sensing and touch screen devices. Understanding the pathways of charge transport within the network is crucial to develop new functional materials and improve existing devices. Here, we study the electrical conductivity of networks of CNTs containing Group 11 metals (Au, Ag, and Cu), s-p metals (K, Ca, and Al), AuCl3, AuCl4, and Cl using quantum mechanical methods and semiclassical Boltzmann transport theory. The conductivity is characterized along the nanotubes and across the intersecting junction. The conductivity is much weaker across the junction than along the nanotubes and could be strengthened in all directions using dopants. The largest increase in conductivity is induced by Al along the nanotubes and by Cu across the intersection [389-fold and 14-fold relative to the pristine (8,0) network, respectively]. Additionally, Ag dopants activate charge transport along the semiconducting nanotube in heterogeneous networks of mixed metal and semiconducting nanotubes. The conductivity along the semiconducting nanotube increased 781-fold. This activation removes the bottleneck of charge transport along the semiconducting nanotubes within the network of mixed chiralities. Small amounts of dopants within nanotube networks drastically change the directional conductivity and provide new pathways for charge transport for applications such as chemical sensing or touch screens.

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