Transport and Optical Investigations of Substitutional and Trapped Nitrogen in Carbon Nanotubes

ORAL

Abstract

Multiwall carbon nanotubes that contain nitrogen were synthesized using acetonitrile as the precursor and ferrocene as the catalysis. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy detected $\sim$ 2 atomic{\%} nitrogen in the carbon nanotubes with $\sim$ 1 atomic{\%} of the nitrogen as substitutionally doped in the carbon nanotubes skeletal structure and 1 atomic{\%} present as gaseous nitrogen trapped inside the nanotubes. Investigation of the temperature dependent transport properties (thermoelectric power and resistivity) and the phonon modes of the CNTs and the trapped gaseous nitrogen are used to further substantiate the XPS results. High pressure adsorption of CO$_{2}$ at room temperature also confirmed no porosity accessible for CO$_{2}$ molecules. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) showed presence of corrugations and wisps in the carbon nanotubes framework attributed to the curvature induced by nitrogen atoms.

Authors

  • Ali Qajar

    University of Texas, Austin

  • Danhao Ma

    The Pennsylvania State University

  • Ramakrishnan Rajagopalan

    The Pennsylvania State University-DuBois

  • Kofi Adu

    The Pennsylvania State University-Altoona College

  • Gamini Sumanasekera

    University of Louisville