Abstract
Herein we present an inexpensive facile wet-chemistry-free approach to the transfer of chemical vapour-deposited multiwalled carbon nanotubes to flexible transparent polymer substrates in a single-step process. By controlling the nanotube length, we demonstrate accurate control over the electrical conductivity and optical transparency of the transferred thin films. Uniaxial strains of up to 140% induced only minor reductions in sample conductivity, opening up a number of applications in stretchable electronics. Nanotube alignment offers enhanced functionality for applications such as polarisation selective electrodes and flexible supercapacitor substrates. A capacitance of 17F/g was determined for supercapacitors fabricated from the reported dry-transferred MWCNTs with the corresponding cyclic voltagrams showing a clear dependence on nanotube length. © 2012 Matthew Cole et al.
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CITATION STYLE
Cole, M., Hiralal, P., Ying, K., Li, C., Zhang, Y., Teo, K., … Milne, W. (2012). Dry-transfer of aligned multiwalled carbon nanotubes for flexible transparent thin films. Journal of Nanomaterials, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/272960
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