2006
DOI: 10.1002/cvde.200506452
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Evolution of the Field‐Emission Properties of Individual Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes Submitted to Temperature and Field Treatments

Abstract: Field-emission (FE) electron and ion microscopies (FEM and FIM), I(V) characteristics, and FE energy spectroscopy (FEES) measurements have been made on individual multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWNTs) at various stages of their evolution under various thermal and field treatments. Before the highest temperature treatments, the FE is produced by nanometerscale structures that have specific and known characteristics such as individual peaks in the total energy distributions (TEDs), highly curved Fowler-Nordheim (… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…3).We have more recently measured up to 120 Volt for a SiC nanowire. The high temperatures in CNTs are accompanied by light emission visible by eye due to black body radiation whose wavelength dependence was also measured by optical spectroscopy [5,6] (see Fig. 4).…”
mentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…3).We have more recently measured up to 120 Volt for a SiC nanowire. The high temperatures in CNTs are accompanied by light emission visible by eye due to black body radiation whose wavelength dependence was also measured by optical spectroscopy [5,6] (see Fig. 4).…”
mentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Such studies permit the development of FE cathodes. However, in principle the spectra can be fitted to give the voltage level at the end of the nanotube EFA (Fermi level) and temperature TA at the tip apex which may be different that those of the support because of a voltage drop IR and Joule heating along the N&N length [4,5]. The positions of the spectra give directly R = (EFS -EFA)/I.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[41][42][43][44] It is interesting to note that the spectrum emitted from a MWCNT can resemble that of metallic emitters when the emitter is free of surface contamination. 40 On occasion, dramatic results were recorded during individual adsorbate events. Figure 8 shows the emission spectrum measured before and after a discrete event, presumably adsorption.…”
Section: Diamond Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…32,33 Such resonant tunneling has been observed for a variety of other field emitters including single-atom tungsten emitters, 34 alkaline earth metals and gold nanoclusters on tungsten, 35,36 phthalocyanine and pentacene on tungsten, 37 single-crystal phosphorus-doped diamond, 38 and adsorbed contaminants on CNTs. 30,39,40 The emitted spectrum should be a convolution of the cathode's band structure and the adsorbate-modified transmission probability. It should be noted that more complex emission processes, mitigated by adsorbate surface states, can contribute to observed spectral features.…”
Section: Diamond Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The F-N plots show a linear relationship, implying that a quantum-tunneling mechanism is responsible for the emission. The work function of CEY is 4.52 eV, [30] which is less than that of graphite (4.9 eV), [41] carbon nanotubes, [41] and other carbon nanostructures, [42] demonstrating that the CEYNRs have great potential as a competitive candidate for field emitters. To evaluate the field emission stability of the CEYNRs arrays, we monitored the current density over 3500 s with starting current densities of 1.3 mA cm −2 , as shown in Figure 5d.…”
Section: Wwwadvelectronicmatdementioning
confidence: 99%