Abstract

Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was applied to study GaN nanowires grown on carbon nanotube surfaces by chemical reaction between Ga2O and NH3 gas in a conventional furnace. These wires grew in two crystallographic directions, 〈2110âŒȘ and 〈0110âŒȘ (fast growth directions of GaN), in the form of whiskers covered by small elongated GaN platelets. The morphology of these platelets is similar to that observed during the growth of single crystals from a Ga melt at high temperatures under high nitrogen pressure. It is thought that growth of nanowires in two different crystallographic directions and the arrangement of the platelets to the central whisker may be influenced by the presence of Ga2O3 (based on the observation of the energy dispersive x-ray spectra), the interplanar spacings in the wire, and the presence of defects on the interface between the central part of the nanowire and the platelets surrounding it.

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