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Carbon dioxide-boosted growth of high-density and vertically aligned carbon nanotube arrays on a stainless steel mesh.

Jun Jie CaoYu JiangHang ZhanYu ZhangJian Nong Wang
Published in: RSC advances (2022)
Vertically aligned carbon nanotubes (VACNTs), a unique group of highly aligned CNTs normal to a substrate, have been extensively studied during the past decades. However, it is a long-standing challenge to improve the height of VACNTs due to the incidental deactivation of catalysts during growth. Herein, we demonstrate a facile strategy toward synthesizing high-density and well-aligned CNT arrays from in situ formed Fe-based catalysts on a stainless steel (SS) mesh. These catalysts were generated by direct oxidation-reduction treatment to the SS, which had excellent adhesion on the mesh substrate, and thus suppressed catalyst aggregation and promoted CNT growth under the flow of C 2 H 2 . In particular, by feeding additional CO 2 at an optimal rate, the height of CNT arrays could be boosted from ca. 15 μm to ca. 80.0 μm, one of the highest heights observed for VACNTs on SS-based substrates so far. This is attributed to the prolonged activity of the catalysts by CO 2 induced removal of extra carbon. Our study might provide an insight into the development of efficient strategies for VACNT growth on conductive substrates.
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