Abstract— Carbon nanotubes have quickly emerged over the last several years as a potential candidate material to replace metal oxides in devices which require transparent and conductive electrodes. Typically, these materials are coated onto substrates such as PET and PEN for flexible electrodes and glass for rigid electrodes. Recently, there has been interest in more durable and lightweight substrates to replace glass, one such substrate being polycarbonate. Sputter coating of indium tin oxide onto polycarbonate leads to low conductivity and inconsistent results, due to out‐gassing and materials mismatch issues. In this work, it is shown that direct coating of carbon nanotubes onto polycarbonate leads to high‐performance films with facile manufacturing.
Boron nitride nanotubes (BN-NTs) were synthesized in “mass” quantities (∼0.6 g/h) using a continuous CO2 laser ablation reactor described in the literature [1]. High-resolution electron microscopy (HRTEM) analyses have shown the nanotubes to be organized in “ropes” comprising ∼10 tubes. Analysis of HRTEM images indicate that the majority of the tubes are zig-zag. The chemical composition of the tubes was confirmed using electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) analysis, which also determined that nanoparticles terminating tube ends were composed of pure boron covered by BN fullerene-like “cages”. The growth mechanism of the nanotubes seems to be “root-based” with tubes growing from boron nanoparticles dispersed throughout the samples; the non-particle-terminated ends of the tubes exhibit flat “caps” characteristic of BN-NTs [2].
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