Self-assembly of carbon black into nanowires that form a conductive three dimensional micronetwork

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Abstract

The authors have used mechanical self-assembly of carbon-black nanoparticles to fabricate a three dimensional, electrically connected micronetwork of nanowires embedded within an insulating, supporting matrix of poly(methyl methacrylate). The electrical connectivity, mean wire diameter, and morphological transitions were characterized as a function of the carbon-black mass fraction. Conductive wires were produced with mean diameters as low as 24 nm with lengths up to 100 μm. © 2007 American Institute of Physics.

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Levine, L. E., Long, G. G., Ilavsky, J., Gerhardt, R. A., Ou, R., & Parker, C. A. (2007). Self-assembly of carbon black into nanowires that form a conductive three dimensional micronetwork. Applied Physics Letters, 90(1). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2425011

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