Growth mechanism, photoluminescence, and field-emission properties of ZnO nanoneedle arrays

J Phys Chem B. 2006 May 4;110(17):8566-9. doi: 10.1021/jp0568632.

Abstract

ZnO nanoneedle arrays have been grown on a large scale with a chemical vapor deposition method at 680 degrees C. Zn powder and O(2) gas are employed as source materials, and catalyst-free Si plates are used as substrates. Energy-dispersive X-ray and X-ray diffraction analyses show that the nanoneedles are almost pure ZnO and preferentially aligned in the c-axis direction of the wurtzite structure. The growth mechanism of ZnO nanoneedle arrays is discussed with the thermodynamic theory and concluded to be the result of the co-effect of the surface tension and diffusion. Photoluminescence spectrum of the as-grown products shows a strong emission band centering at about 484 nm, which originates from oxygen vacancies. Field-emission examination exhibits that the ZnO nanoneedle arrays have a turn-on voltage at about 5.3 V/microm.