This study focuses on the fabrication of two nanodevice prototypes which utilized vertical and horizontal carbon nanotubes used the focused ion beam to localize the catalysts, followed by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition. First, metal-gated carbon nanotube field emitter arrays were fabricated on multilayer substrates containing an imbedded catalyst layer. Second, horizontally aligned single-walled carbon nanotubes were grown on a transmission electron microscopy grid. This allows the carbon nanotubes to be directly analyzed in a transmission electron microscope. It is expected that the methodology introduced here will open up opportunities for the direct fabrication of carbon nanotube based nanodevices.
Periodic heterogeneous structures exhibit color with brilliance through constructive interference of electromagnetic waves in accordance with Bragg's law. However, the wavelength of diffracted light is strictly angle-dependent, and such periodic structures generate only iridescent color. Here we report that periodically porous, microellipsoidal shells of diatom Pinnularia sp. wavelength-selectively backscatter light at arbitrary incidence. The biosilica frustules could be approximated as many polygonal faces of two-dimensional photonic crystal slabs. Furthermore, surface decoration of the frustule with magnetite nanoparticles produced photonic band gaps in the near-infrared. Magnetite nanoparticle-decorated frustules behave as angle-independent near-infrared reflectors and near-infrared contrast agents in optical coherence tomography.
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