Non-destructive functionalisation for atomic layer deposition of metal oxides on carbon nanotubes: effect of linking agents and defects

Kemnade, N; Shearer, CJ; Dieterle, DJ; Cherevan, AS; Gebhardt, P; Wilde, G; Eder, D

HERO ID

3035838

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2015

Language

English

PMID

25600058

HERO ID 3035838
In Press No
Year 2015
Title Non-destructive functionalisation for atomic layer deposition of metal oxides on carbon nanotubes: effect of linking agents and defects
Authors Kemnade, N; Shearer, CJ; Dieterle, DJ; Cherevan, AS; Gebhardt, P; Wilde, G; Eder, D
Journal Nanoscale
Volume 7
Issue 7
Page Numbers 3028-3034
Abstract The hybridisation of metal oxides and nanocarbons has created a promising new class of functional materials for environmental and sustainable energy applications. The performance of such hybrids can be further improved by rationally designing interfaces and morphologies. Atomic layer deposition (ALD) is among the most powerful techniques for the controlled deposition of inorganic compounds, due to its ability to form conformal coatings on porous substrates at low temperatures with high surface sensitivity and atomic control of film thickness. The hydrophobic nature of the nanocarbon surface has so far limited the applicability of ALD on CNTs. Herein we investigate the role of structural defects in CNTs, both intrinsic and induced by acid treatment, on coverage, uniformity and crystallinity of ZnO coatings. Furthermore, we demonstrate the potential of small aromatic molecules, including benzyl alcohol (BA), naphthalene carboxylic acid (NA) and pyrene carboxylic acid (PCA), as active nucleation sites and linking agents. Importantly, only PCA exhibits sufficiently strong interactions with the pristine CNT surface to withstand desorption under reaction conditions. Thus, PCA enables a versatile and non-destructive alternative route for the deposition of highly uniform metal oxide coatings onto pristine CNTs via ALD over a wide temperature range and without the typical surface corrosion induced by covalent functionalisation. Importantly, preliminary tests demonstrated that the improved morphology obtained with PCA has indeed considerably increased the hybrid's photocatalytic activity towards hydrogen evolution via sacrificial water splitting. The concept demonstrated in this work is transferable to a wide range of other inorganic compounds including metal oxides, metal (oxy)nitrides and metal chalcogenides on a variety of nanocarbons.
Doi 10.1039/c4nr04615c
Pmid 25600058
Wosid WOS:000349473200026
Url <Go to ISI>://WOS:000349473200026
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Scopus URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84922791006&doi=10.1039%2fc4nr04615c&partnerID=40&md5=0342143a803ec9d0762c94b55b55e56a
Is Public Yes
Language Text English