Gas flow-directed growth of aligned carbon nanotubes from nonmetallic seeds
Yuanjia Liu, Taiki Inoue, Mengyue Wang, Michiharu Arifuku, Noriko, Kiyoyanagi, Yoshihiro Kobayashi

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the successful growth of long, aligned carbon nanotubes using nonmetallic nanodiamond seeds in a gas flow-directed process, avoiding metal impurities and enabling cleaner electronic applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method of using nanodiamonds as nonmetallic seeds for CNT growth, replacing traditional metal catalysts and reducing impurities.
Findings
Over 100 μm long CNTs were grown successfully.
SE yield analysis distinguished nonmetallic seed origins.
High crystallinity and small diameters of CNTs were confirmed.
Abstract
Kite growth is a process that utilizes laminar gas flow in chemical vapor deposition to grow long, well-aligned carbon nanotubes (CNTs) for electronic application. This process uses metal nanoparticles (NPs) as catalytic seeds for CNT growth. However, these NPs remain as impurities in the grown CNT. In this study, nanodiamonds (NDs) with negligible catalytic activity were utilized as nonmetallic seeds instead of metal catalysts because they are stable at high temperatures and facilitate the growth of low-defect CNTs without residual metal impurities. Results demonstrate the successful growth of over 100-m-long CNTs by carefully controlling the growth conditions. Importantly, we developed an analysis method that utilizes secondary electron (SE) yield to distinguish whether or not CNTs grown from metal impurities. The absence of metallic NPs at the CNT tips was revealed by the SE…
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