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2017 | Book

Doping of Carbon Nanotubes

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About this book

This book addresses the control of electronic properties of carbon nanotubes. It presents thermodynamic calculations of the formation of impurities and defects in the interaction of nanotubes with hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and boron, based on theoretical models of the formation of defects in carbon nanotubes. It is shown that doping and adsorption lead to changes in the electronic structure of the tubes as well as to the appearance of impurity states in the HOMO-LUMO gap. The book presents examples of specific calculations for doping of carbon nanotubes with oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen and boron, together with numerous experimental results and a comparison with the author’s thermodynamic calculations. Possible directions of the technological processes of optimization are pointed out, as well as the perspectives of p-n-transition creation with the help of carbon nanotube arrays.

The results presented were derived from the physics of the processes and a theoretical model of the technological processes. Though a wealth of empirical information on doping nanotubes has been accumulated in the scientific literature, what is lacking is a theoretical model for their analysis. As such, the book develops a thermodynamic model of the self-organization of structural elements in multicomponent systems – including carbon nanotubes, clusters and precipitates in condensed matter – and subsequently adapts it to the doping of carbon nanotubes. This approach allows readers to gain a far deeper understanding of the processes of doping carbon nanotubes.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Adsorption and Doping as Methods for the Electronic Regulation Properties of Carbon Nanotubes
Abstract
This chapter contains general information about the doping of carbon nanotubes, which allows the reader better understand the main problem addressed in the book. It examines the interaction of gas molecules with the graphene lattice, discusses the differences between physical and chemical adsorption, as well as the differences between chemical adsorption and doping.
Alexandr Saurov
Chapter 2. Thermodynamics and Kinetics of Adsorption and Doping of a Graphene Plane of Carbon nanotubes and Graphene
Abstract
This chapter presents a theoretical introduction to the problem of doping carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and graphene. It examines the basic concepts of thermodynamics, such as thermodynamic systems, balance the internal energy, and free energy.
Sergey Bulyarskiy, Alexandr S. Basaev
Chapter 3. Interaction of Hydrogen with a Graphene Plane of Carbon Nanotubes and Graphene
Abstract
Chapter 3 examines the reaction of hydrogen with CNTs. We have made an overview that describes the existing scientific literature experimental results and calculations on the interaction of hydrogen with CNTs. Review of the literature shows the prospect of using nanotubes as hydrogen storage, we continue this in the chapter, confirming the research via calculations.
Sergey Bulyarskiy, Alexandr S. Basaev, Darya A. Bogdanova
Chapter 4. Oxygen Interaction with Electronic Nanotubes
Abstract
Analysis of the scientific literature shows that oxygen reacts with CNTs by physical adsorption only—when semiconductor nanotubes have acceptor-type conductivity. A calculation, made by methods of quantum mechanics, indicate this may be chemical adsorption which has a partial free energy of >10 eV. Adsorption energy is big, so this phenomenon is not observed in practice. Analysis of experimental adsorption isotherms of oxygen and desorption thermogravimetric curves allow calculation of oxygen adsorption energy for three possible locations.
Sergey Bulyarskiy, Alexandr S. Basaev, Darya A. Bogdanova, Alexandr Pavlov
Chapter 5. Nitrogen Interaction with Carbon Nanotubes: Adsorption and Doping
Abstract
Nitrogen is an important impurity in CNTs. An overview of the interaction of nitrogen with impurities will be given in this chapter. The properties of a nitrogen atom depend on its place on the graphene lattice and on the closest neighboring particles. Nitrogen, which is located in the site of a graphene lattice, is a donor, however, if there is a vacancy nearby it becomes an acceptor. Processes of nitrogen interaction with the surface of nanotubes are complex. A detailed analysis is necessary to understand this interaction.
Alexandr Saurov, Sergey Bulyarskiy, Darya A. Bogdanova, Alexandr Pavlov
Chapter 6. Carbon Nanotube Doping by Acceptors. The p–п Junction Formation
Abstract
This chapter investigates the interaction of boron with CNTs. A brief analysis of the scientific literature shows that for data for calculation of boron concentration, one can use formulas from the previous chapter.
Alexandr Saurov, Sergey Bulyarskiy, Alexandr Pavlov
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Doping of Carbon Nanotubes
Editors
Sergey Bulyarskiy
Alexandr Saurov
Copyright Year
2017
Electronic ISBN
978-3-319-55883-7
Print ISBN
978-3-319-55882-0
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-55883-7

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