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Charlier, J. .-C., Arnaud, L., Avilov, I. V., Delgado, M., Demoisson, F., Espinosa, E. H., Ewels, C. P., Felten, A., Guillot, J., Ionescu, R., Leghrib, R., Llobet, E., Mansour, A., Migeon, H. .-N., Pireaux, J. .-J., Reniers, F., Suarez-Martinez, I., Watson, G. E. & Zanolli, Z. (2009) Carbon nanotubes randomly decorated with gold clusters: from nano(2)hybrid atomic structures to gas sensing prototypes. Nanotechnology, 20 375501. 
Added by: Laurent Cournède (2016-03-10 21:41:23)
Type de référence: Article
DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/20/37/375501
Numéro d'identification (ISBN etc.): 0957-4484
Clé BibTeX: Charlier2009
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Catégories: PMN
Mots-clés: chemical sensors, Defects, electron-gas, functionalization, layers, state
Créateurs: Arnaud, Avilov, Charlier, Delgado, Demoisson, Espinosa, Ewels, Felten, Guillot, Ionescu, Leghrib, Llobet, Mansour, Migeon, Pireaux, Reniers, Suarez-Martinez, Watson, Zanolli
Collection: Nanotechnology
Consultations : 1/979
Indice de consultation : 7%
Indice de popularité : 1.75%
Résumé     
Carbon nanotube surfaces, activated and randomly decorated with metal nanoclusters, have been studied in uniquely combined theoretical and experimental approaches as prototypes for molecular recognition. The key concept is to shape metallic clusters that donate or accept a fractional charge upon adsorption of a target molecule, and modify the electron transport in the nanotube. The present work focuses on a simple system, carbon nanotubes with gold clusters. The nature of the gold-nanotube interaction is studied using first-principles techniques. The numerical simulations predict the binding and diffusion energies of gold atoms at the tube surface, including realistic atomic models for defects potentially present at the nanotube surface. The atomic structure of the gold nanoclusters and their effect on the intrinsic electronic quantum transport properties of the nanotube are also predicted. Experimentally, multi-wall CNTs are decorated with gold clusters using (1) vacuum evaporation, after activation with an RF oxygen plasma and (2) colloid solution injected into an RF atmospheric plasma; the hybrid systems are accurately characterized using XPS and TEM techniques. The response of gas sensors based on these nano(2)hybrids is quantified for the detection of toxic species like NO2, CO, C2H5OH and C2H4.
Added by: Laurent Cournède  
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