Why Carbon Nanotubes Grow.
Li Ping DingBen McLeanZi-Wei XuXiao KongDaniel HedmanLu QiuAlister J PageFeng DingPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Despite three decades of intense research efforts, the most fundamental question "why do carbon nanotubes grow?" remains unanswered. In fact, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) should not grow since the encapsulation of a catalyst with graphitic carbon is energetically more favorable than CNT growth in every aspect. Here, we answer this question using a theoretical model based on extensive first-principles and molecular dynamics calculations. We reveal a historically overlooked yet fundamental aspect of the CNT-catalyst interface, viz., that the interfacial energy of the CNT-catalyst edge is contact angle-dependent. The contact angle increases via graphitic cap lift-off, drastically decreasing the interfacial formation energy by up to 6-9 eV/nm, overcoming van der Waals cap-catalyst adhesion, and driving CNT growth. Mapping this remarkable and simple interplay allows us to understand, for the first time, why CNTs grow.
Keyphrases
- carbon nanotubes
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics
- visible light
- room temperature
- highly efficient
- reduced graphene oxide
- density functional theory
- high resolution
- metal organic framework
- carbon dioxide
- molecular dynamics simulations
- photodynamic therapy
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- escherichia coli
- high density
- single cell
- mass spectrometry
- pseudomonas aeruginosa