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The preparation of aligned and/or micropatterned carbon nanotubes is important to applications ranging from nanocomposites to field-emitting displays. By pyrolysis of iron (II) phthalocyanine under Ar/H2 at 800−1100 °C, we have synthesized large arrays of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes on various substrates, including quartz glass plates, from which substrate-free films were obtained simply by immersing the nanotube-deposited quartz plates into an aqueous hydrofluoric acid solution. Micropatterns of the aligned nanotubes suitable for device fabrication were generated either by patterned growth of the nanotubes on a partially masked/prepatterned surface or through a contact printing process involving region-specific transfer of the substrate-free nanotube films to other substrates (e.g., polymer films), which otherwise may not be suitable for nanotube growth at high temperatures.
Huang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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