Mohd. Yusop, Mohd. Zamri and Yamaguchi, K. and Suzuki, T. and Ghosh, P. and Hayashi, A. and Hayashi, Y. and Tanemura, M. (2011) Morphology and size of ion induced carbon nanofibers: effect of ion incidence angle, sputtering rate, and temperature. Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, 50 (1(P1)). 001-006. ISSN 0021-4922
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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1143/JJAP.50.01AF10
Abstract
Graphite surfaces were bombarded with oblique Ar + ions at 1 keV to induce the carbon nanofiber (CNF) growth at room temperature and at high temperature (300 °C), and their dependence of length, diameter and number density on ion-incidence angle and sputtering rate was investigated in detail. The sputtered surface ion-irradiated at normal incidence produced huge cones and rod-like structures. It was found that some of the cones possessed the non-aligned thick carbon fibers on the top. By contrast, obliquely ion-irradiation induced the formation of densely distributed CNF-tipped cones. The higher ion-incidence angle produced CNF of smaller diameter and high fabrication temperature favors the formation of longer fiber with higher numerical density. In addition, the number density of the CNF-tipped cones strongly depended upon the ion-incidence angle rather than the sputtering rate. Thus, the diameter, length and number density of CNFs were strongly dependent upon the ion-irradiation parameters. It is believed that myriad of applications is possible with ion-induced CNFs by selecting the suitable ion-irradiation parameters.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | fabrication temperature, graphite surfaces, high temperature |
Subjects: | T Technology > TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering |
Divisions: | Mechanical Engineering |
ID Code: | 29450 |
Deposited By: | Yanti Mohd Shah |
Deposited On: | 12 Mar 2013 02:14 |
Last Modified: | 22 Oct 2020 04:05 |
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