1 research outputs found
Field Emission from Decorated Carbon Nanotube–QDs Microstructures with a View to the Dominant Electron Paths
We
present a study on the field emission properties of a hybrid
system comprised of carbon nanotube (CNT) micropillars decorated with
quantum dots (QDs). With controlled decoration of QDs on the CNT micropillars
through a simple assisted self-assembly process, further enhancement
in the field emitting property of the hybrid microstructures was detected.
Upon irradiation of the hybrid structure with a broad visible-light
laser beam, additional enhanced field emission was observed. Analyses
using fluorescence and confocal microscopy, as well as ultraviolet
photoelectron spectroscopy, suggested that electron transfer from
QDs to the CNT strands and the reduced work function of the hybrid
system as the contributing factors behind the enhanced field emissions.
In addition, we discovered that the field emission process gave rise
to lost of the QDs’ fluorescence luminosity on the microstructures
in specific patterns attributable to transfers of charge carrier from
QDs to the CNTs. This observation provided a new means to understand
and to determine the predominant 3D path of the emission of electrons
from the sample down to a micrometer scale level