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Journal ArticleDOI

Irradiation effects in carbon nanostructures

Florian Banhart
- 01 Aug 1999 - 
- Vol. 62, Iss: 8, pp 1181-1221
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TLDR
In this article, a review of the basic mechanisms of radiation effects in solids with particular emphasis on atom displacements by knock-on collisions is discussed. But the main part of this review deals with alterations of carbon nanostructures by the electron beam in an electron microscope.
Abstract
The paper reviews the principles of interaction of energetic particles with solid carbon and carbon nanostructures. The reader is first introduced to the basic mechanisms of radiation effects in solids with particular emphasis on atom displacements by knock-on collisions. The influence of various parameters on the displacement cross sections of carbon atoms is discussed. The types of irradiation-induced defects and their migration are described as well as ordering phenomena which are observable under the non-equilibrium conditions of irradiation. The main part of this review deals with alterations of carbon nanostructures by the electron beam in an electron microscope. This type of experiment is of paramount importance because it allows in situ observation of dynamic processes on an atomic scale. In the second part, radiation effects in the modifications of elemental carbon, in particular in graphite which forms the crystallographic basis of most carbon nanostructures, are treated in detail. It follows a review of the available experimental results on radiation defects in carbon nanostructures such as fullerenes, nanotubes and carbon onions. Finally, the phenomena of structure formation under irradiation, in particular the self-assembling of spherical carbon onions and the irradiation-induced transformation of graphitic nanoparticles into diamond, are presented and discussed qualitatively in the context of non-equilibrium structure formation.

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Evolution of Electrical, Chemical, and Structural Properties of Transparent and Conducting Chemically Derived Graphene Thin Films

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Direct evidence for atomic defects in graphene layers

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Electronic and transport properties of nanotubes

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Formation of diamond in carbon onions under MeV ion irradiation

TL;DR: In this paper, spherical carbon onions are generated by irradiating graphitic carbon soot with Ne+ ions of 3 MeV energy, and a transformation of their cores to cubic diamond crystals is observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Canonical Structure of Large Carbon Clusters: Cn, n > 100

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present direct imaging of carbon clusters using high-resolution electron microscopy and find the stable form of carbon particles, obtained after electron irradiation, to be a spherical, concentric-shelled graphitic structure, rather than a hollow cage, icosahedral or tubular.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies of MoS2 structures produced by electron irradiation

TL;DR: In this paper, a pelletron accelerator was used to irradiate the sample with electrons at an energy of 0.5 MeV, and two main structures were observed: onion layers with fullerene like structure and others with their planes rotated with respect to each other by well defined angles.
Journal ArticleDOI

The formation of curled concentric-shell clusters in boron nitride under electron irradiation

TL;DR: In this article, it was found that under intense electron irradiation in transmission electron microscopes boron nitride, as well as carbon, shows a tendency towards curling and forming concentric shells in onion-like structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

The transformation of polyhedral particles into graphitic onions

TL;DR: In this paper, the carbon particle structures which are transformed by ejection of pentagonal and neighboring carborn rings, under high electron irradiation, are flexible and can be moulded via energy minimization into quasi-spherical arrangements.
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