Spontaneous formation of boron nitride nanotube fibers by boron impurity reduction in laser ablation of ammonia borane

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Abstract

Highly crystalline and few-walled boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs) had been synthesized by laser ablation using only ammonia borane as a precursor. As a molecular precursor, ammonia borane supplied both B and N atoms with a ratio of 1:1, and BNNTs were formed via the homogeneous nucleation of BN radicals, not the growth from boron nano-droplets, which is a generally accepted growth mechanism of the laser-grown BNNTs. Owing to the absence of amorphous boron impurities, the van der Waals interaction among BNNTs became effective and thus a BNNT fibers was formed spontaneously during the BNNT synthesis. The BNNT growth and the subsequent fiber formation are found to occur only at high pressures of a surrounding gas. The mechanism behind the critical role of pressure was elucidated from the perspective of reaction kinetics and thermal fluid behaviors. A polarized Raman study confirmed that the BNNT fiber formed exhibits a good alignment of BNNTs, which implies great potential for continuous production of high-quality BNNT fibers for various applications.

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Bae, D. S., Kim, C., Lee, H., Khater, O., Kim, K. S., Shin, H., … Kim, M. J. (2022). Spontaneous formation of boron nitride nanotube fibers by boron impurity reduction in laser ablation of ammonia borane. Nano Convergence, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40580-022-00312-y

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