Abstract

Three-dimensional growth of well-aligned high-purity multiwall carbon nanotubes (CNTs) is achieved on silicon, nickel-coated silicon and cobalt-coated silicon substrates by thermal decomposition of a botanical carbon source, camphor, with different catalyst concentrations. Field emission study of as-grown nanotubes in a parallel-plate diode configuration suggests them to be an efficient emitter with a turn-on field of ∼1 V/μm (for 10 μA/cm 2) and a threshold field of ∼4 V/μm (for 10 mA/cm 2). Maximum current density lies in a range of 20–30 mA/cm 2 at 5.6 V/μm with significant reversibility. Prolonged stability test of camphor-grown CNT emitters suggests a life time of ∼5 months under continuous operation. A new feature, metal-assisted electron emission from CNTs, has been addressed. Isolated nanotubes used as a cold cathode in a field emission microscope reveal the pentagonal emission sites and hence the atomic structure of the nanotube tips.

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