|
Growing Nanostructures on Micro Cantilever
Provides New Platform for Materials Discovery
Researchers have developed a new technique that could
provide detailed information about the growth of carbon
nanotubes and other nanometer-scale structures as they
are being produced. The technique offers a way for researchers
to rapidly and systematically map how changes in growth
conditions affect the fabrication of nanometer-scale
structures.
Instead of a large furnace that is normally used to
grow nanotubes as part of the chemical vapor deposition
process, the Georgia Institute of Technology researchers
grew bundles of nanotubes on a micro-heater built into
an atomic force microscope (AFM) tip. The tiny device
provided highly-localized heating for only the locations
where researchers wanted to grow the nanostructures.
Because the resonance frequency of the cantilever changed
as the nanotubes grew, the researchers were able to
use it to accurately measure the mass of the structures
they produced. The next step in the research will be
to combine the growth and measurement processes to permit
in situ study of mass change during nanostructure growth.
"There are hundreds of materials – electronic,
magnetic and optical – that are grown using a
similar thermally-based technique," said William
P. King, an assistant professor in Georgia Tech's School
of Mechanical Engineering. "By growing these structures
on cantilevers, we will be able to determine exactly
what is happening with the materials growth as it occurs.
This could provide a new tool for investigating the
growth of these structures under different conditions."
Using arrays of cantilevers operating at different temperatures
would allow researchers to accelerate the process for
mapping the kinetics of nanostructure growth. Because
the cantilevers can be heated and cooled more rapidly
than a traditional furnace, batches of nanostructures
can be produced in just 10 minutes – compared
to two hours or more for traditional processing.
Scanning electron microscope image showing
carbon nanotubes growing on the heated portion of an
atomic force microscope cantilever. (Image courtesy
Erik O. Sunden)
We can change the structures being grown by rapidly
changing the temperature," explained Samuel Graham,
also an assistant professor in Georgia Tech's School
of Mechanical Engineering. "We can also change
the kinetics of growth, which is something that is difficult
to do using conventional technology."
By demonstrating that carbon nanotubes can be growth
on an AFM cantilever, the technique also provides a
new way to integrate nanometer-scale structures with
microdevices.
King, Graham and collaborators Erik O. Sunden, Jungchul
Lee and Tanya L. Wright began with an AFM cantilever
fabricated in their Georgia Tech lab. The cantilever
had an integrated electric-resistance heater whose output
temperature could be controlled by varying the current.
Actual heater temperatures were measured to within four
degrees Celsius using Laser Raman thermometry.
Calibration of the cantilevers over a large temperature
range using Raman spectroscopy was a key aspect of the
success of this research, allowing the first detailed
temperature maps of these devices, Graham noted.
The researchers used electron beam evaporation to deposit
a 10 nanometer iron catalyst film onto the cantilever.
After heating, the iron film formed islands that provided
catalytic sites for growing nanotubes.
The cantilever was then placed into a quartz tube, which
was purged of contaminants with argon gas. The cantilever
heating was then turned on and the temperature held
at approximately 800 degrees Celsius for 15 minutes.
A combination of methane, hydrogen and acetylene –
precursors for carbon nanotubes – was then flowed
into the chamber. Only the cantilever tip and the reaction
gas immediately around it were heated, leaving the remainder
of the experimental set-up at room temperature.
After removal from the tube, the cantilever was examined
using a scanning electron microscope, which showed vertically
aligned carbon nanotubes growing from the cantilever
heater region. The nanotubes ranged in length from five
to 10 microns, and were 10 to 30 nanometers in diameter.
Although the entire cantilever was coated with the iron
catalyst, the nanotubes grew only on the heated area.
A temperature gradient on the heater created differences
in the types of nanotubes grown.
Both before and after the growth, the cantilever was
vibrated so its resonance frequency could be measured.
Those measurements showed a frequency decline from 119.10
to 118.23 kHz after the nanotubes were grown on the
cantilever. After the resonance measurements were made,
the cantilever was heated beyond 900 degrees Celsius
in air to burn off the nanotubes. When the resonance
frequency was measured again, it had changed to 119.09
kHz, showing that the frequency drop had been due to
the mass of the nanotubes.
From the change in the resonance frequency, the researchers
were able to calculate the mass of the carbon nanotubes
they had grown as approximately four picograms (4 x
10-14) kg.
"We are working on integrating the growing and
weighing of the nanotubes so we can do both of them
at the same time," said King. "That would
allow us to monitor the materials growth as it happens."
Once the two processes are integrated, the researchers
expect to increase the number of cantilevers operating
simultaneously. Cantilever arrays could allow many different
growth temperatures and conditions to be measured in
parallel, accelerating the task of charting the growth
kinetics to determine the optimal settings.
"This is a platform for materials discovery, so
we could test tens or even thousands of different chemistry
or growth conditions in a very short period of time,"
King said. "With a thousand cantilevers, we could
do in a single day experiments that would take years
using conventional growth techniques. Once the right
conditions were found, the production process could
be scaled up."
Visit www.gatech.edu

|
|