Abstract

Metallic-impurity-free, nano-sized, short multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) in the form of a tape have been synthesized using stabilized arc discharge under atmospheric conditions. The long, thin tape consisted of crystalline MWCNTs exhibiting indiscernibly blurred interior lattice images and a narrow, hollow core, as well as small and large nanoparticles. The disordered interior regions of the tubes were enlarged into hollow cores by thermal treatment at 2000°C, suggesting that the elongated tubes crystallize via a super-cooling process. The proposed macroscopic model for the growth process of the tubes in the arc resembles the fiber formation of a recently reported electrospinning process; thermally activated carbon ion and vapor create viscous carbon clusters, and the built-up charge in the clusters leads to the elongation into tubules.

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