Journal
THIN SOLID FILMS
Volume 515, Issue 3, Pages 1142-1146Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.tsf.2006.07.120
Keywords
carbon nanotubes; carbon nano-onions; pulsed laser deposition; room-temperature deposition; laser ablation; optical emission spectroscopy
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Numerous investigators have reported on pulsed laser deposition of carbon nanotubes, mostly using the Nd:YAG laser for ablation. In all cases the depositions have been conducted at high-temperatures and high pressures. Here we report on the deposition of carbon nanostructures at room temperature using a 248 nm excimer laser nm to ablate mixed graphite-nickel/cobalt targets. We find that the formation of the carbon nanomaterials is dependent on the particular ambient gas employed. In O-2 gas, carbon nanotubes and nano-onions are produced. The nanotubes have notably large channel diameters of 100-200 nm and the nano-onion structures are 100-200 nm in diameter, also much larger than previously observed. High-resolution, in-situ, time-resolved emission spectroscopy has been used to follow the production of molecular carbon species such as C-2 and C-3, as well as metals such as Ni or Co in the different ambients employed. Spectral modeling reveals significant differences in the vibrational-rotational temperatures of C-2 spectra in O-2 versus Ar. Mechanistic details of the formation of carbon nanotubes and nano-onions, and in-situ optical emission spectroscopy are described. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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