Abstract

Purified multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) were irradiated by 60Co γ-ray with different doses. The structural change of the MWCNTs was revealed by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy. It was found that under γ-ray irradiation some amorphous structure homogeneously covers the inner tube walls with graphite structure in irradiated MWCNTs. Moreover, the amorphous structure continuously proceeds and the graphite structure is reduced during the γ-ray irradiation till the irradiated MWCNTs become amorphous nanowires with a hollow structure. Based on the interaction between photons and carbon nanotubes, the structural transformation process and the corresponding mechanisms are discussed. In MWCNTs, the collision of a photon with a carbon atom will result in displacement of the atom, i.e. formation of a vacancy (single- or multi- vacancy) and a number of primary knock-on atoms which, if their energy is high, leave the tube or displace other atoms in the MWCNTs. If their energy is low, they can be adsorbed onto the tube walls. These adsorbed atoms play the role of interstitials. All the displaced atoms can be sputtered from the MWSNTs. The carbon atoms sputtered from the MWCNTs can further create some damage in a nearby MWCNTs or be absorbed onto its surface. Along with the simple defects, a number of more complex defects can be formed. The behavior of complex irradiation-induced defects is governed in part by annealing and diffusion of original defects-vacancies and interstitials. The γ-ray irradiation induced structural transformation of MWCNTs was a unique graphite to amorphous structural transition from the outer walls to the inner walls of the irradiated MWCNTs due to the removal of carbon atoms by knock-on displacements.

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