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CCVD synthesis of carbon nanotubes from (Mg,Co,Mo)O catalysts: influence of the proportions of cobalt and molybdenum
Author(s) -
Emmanuel Flahaut,
Alain Peigney,
Wolfgang Bacsa,
Revathi Bacsa,
Christophe Laurent
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of materials chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1364-5501
pISSN - 0959-9428
DOI - 10.1039/b312367g
Subject(s) - molybdenum , cobalt , catalysis , carbon nanotube , materials science , carbon fibers , amorphous carbon , carbon nanotube supported catalyst , chemical vapor deposition , metal , amorphous solid , chemical engineering , inorganic chemistry , nanotechnology , chemistry , composite number , composite material , metallurgy , organic chemistry , carbon nanofiber , engineering
International audienceCarbon nanotubes have been synthesised by catalytic chemical vapour deposition of a H2-CH4 mixture (18 mol% CH4) over (Mg,Co,Mo)O catalysts. The total amount of cobalt and molybdenum has been kept constant at 1 cat% and the proportion of molybdenum with respect to cobalt has been varied from x(Mo) = 0.25-1.0. This variation has important effects on both the yield and the nature (number of walls, straight walls or bamboo-like structures) of the carbon nanotubes. It also has an influence on the purity of the samples (amount of encapsulated metal particles, presence or not of amorphous carbon deposits). For x = 0.25, the nanotubes were mainly double- and triple-walled (inner diameter less than 3 nm); samples prepared from catalysts with higher molybdenum ratios contained larger multi-walled carbon nanotubes (inner diameter up to 9 nm), having up to 13 concentric walls. It is proposed that different growth mechanisms may occur depending on the initial composition of the catalyst

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