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Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA.
Growth of vertically aligned carbon nanotube (CNT) carpets on metallic substrates at low temperatures was achieved by controlled thermal treatment of ethylene and hydrogen at a temperature higher than the substrate temperature. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy showed that nanotubes were crystalline for a preheating temperature of 770 degrees C and a substrate temperature of 500 degrees C. Conductive atomic force microscopy measurements indicated electrical contact through the CNT carpet to the metallic substrate with an approximate resistance of 35 kOmega for multiwall carpets taller than two micrometers. An analysis of the activation energies indicated that thermal decomposition of the hydrocarbon/hydrogen gas mixture was the rate-limiting step for low-temperature chemical vapor deposition growth of CNTs. These results represent a significant advance toward the goal of replacing copper interconnects with nanotubes using CMOS-compatible processes.
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