The role of solid, liquid and gaseous hydrocarbon precursors on chemical vapor deposition grown carbon nanomaterials' growth temperature — Nasrat Hannah Shudin (2021) | RDL Network
The role of solid, liquid and gaseous hydrocarbon precursors on chemical vapor deposition grown carbon nanomaterials' growth temperature
Synthetic Metals 274: 116735-116735
Article 2021 English
Authors
NS
Nasrat Hannah Shudin
MM
Mohd ‘Azizir -Rahim Mukri
MA
Madzlan Aziz
Abstract
1 min read
Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) has been hugely favored when producing high-quality carbon nanomaterials and repeatable output. Despite being hugely favored, CVD typically requires a high temperature of above 1000 °C, which becomes the downside of this method. It requires a high cost and complicated processing environment, which explains the urgent need for low-temperature processing. Molecule properties of hydrocarbon precursors are believed to have played an essential role in CVD synthesis as it can affect the growth temperature, yield, crystallinity properties and indirectly affect the morphology of the carbon nanomaterials. In this review, various solid, liquid, and gaseous hydrocarbon precursors and how they affect the growth temperature of carbon nanomaterials syntheses via CVD are discussed.
Matin Amani, Robert A. Burke, Xiang Ji, Peida Zhao, Der‐Hsien Lien, Peyman Taheri, Geun Ho Ahn, Daisuke Kirya, Joel W. Ager, Eli Yablonovitch, Jing Kong, Madan Dubey, Ali Javey
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.