Abstract

Raman spectra and transmission electron microscope images showed that diameter enlargement of HiPco, a kind of single-wall carbon nanotube, accompanied by tube–wall corrugation was caused by heat treatment (HT) at 1000 to 1700 °C. Further enlargement accompanied by straightening of the tube walls and incorporation of carbon fragments within the tubes became obvious after HT at 1800 to 1900 °C. The transformation of some single-wall carbon nanotubes into multi-wall nanotubes was observed after HT at 2000 °C, and most single-wall tubes were transformed into multi-wall ones by HT at 2400 °C. What influence the Fe contained in the HiPco tubes had on these structure changes was unclear; similar changes were observed in single-wall carbon nanohorns that did not contain any metal. This indicates that thermally induced changes in the structure of single-wall carbon nanotubes can occur without a metal catalyst. Heat treatment increased the integrity of the nanotube-papers, and this increase may have been due to tube–tube interconnections created by HT.

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