RESUMO
Ordered linear arrays of titanium dioxide nanoparticles were fabricated on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite utilizing a step edge decoration method. Ag- or Pt-based nanoparticles were then photodeposited onto the titanium dioxide nanoparticles (â¼18 nm) to simultaneously verify photocatalytic activity and to demonstrate a viable route to load the titanium dioxide nanoparticles with metals. Scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy determined the morphology, size, and distribution of the particles. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy confirmed the identity of the titanium dioxide nanoparticles, and transmission electron microscopy showed that some of the particles were rutile single crystals. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy determined the chemical composition of the metal-based nanoparticles selectively loaded on the linear arrays of titanium dioxide nanoparticles.
RESUMO
Single-molecule fluorescence microscopy provided information about the real-time distribution of chemical reactivity on silicon oxide supports at the solution-surface interface, at a level of detail which would be unavailable from a traditional ensemble technique or from a technique that imaged the static physical properties of the surface. Chemical reactions on the surface were found to be uncorrelated; that is, the chemical reaction of one metal complex did not influence the location of a future chemical reaction of another metal complex.
RESUMO
We investigate electronic devices consisting of individual, metallic, single-walled carbon nanotubes contacted by Pt electrodes in a field effect transistor configuration, focusing on improvements to the metal-nanotube contact resistance as the devices are annealed in inert environments including ultrahigh vacuum. At moderate temperatures (T < 880 K), thermal processing results in high resistance contacts with thermally activated barriers. Higher temperatures (T > 880 K) achieve nearly transparent contacts. In the latter case, analytical surface measurements reveal the catalytic decomposition of hydrocarbons into graphene layers on the Pt surface, suggesting that improved electronic behavior is primarily due to the formation of an all-carbon nanotube-graphite interface rather than to the improvement of the nanotube-Pt one.