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Charge Transport Across High Surface Area Metal/Diamond Nanostructured Composites

Plana, D.; Humphrey, J. J. L.; Bradley, K. A.; Celorrio, V.; Fermín, D. J.

Authors

J. J. L. Humphrey

K. A. Bradley

V. Celorrio

D. J. Fermín



Abstract

High surface area composites featuring metal nanostructures and diamond particles have generated a lot of interest in the fields of heterogeneous catalysis, electrocatalysis, and sensors. Diamond surfaces provide a chemically robust framework for active nanostructures in comparison with sp2 carbon supports. The present paper investigates the charge transport properties of high surface area films of high-pressure, high-temperature diamond particles in the presence and absence of metal nanostructures, employing electrochemical field-effect transistors. Oxygen- and hydrogen-terminated surfaces were generated on 500 nm diamond powders. Homogeneously distributed metal nanostructures, with metal volume fractions between ca. 5 and 20%, were either nucleated at the diamond particles by impregnation or incorporated from colloidal solution. Electrochemical field-effect transistor measurements, employing interdigitated electrodes, allowed the determination of composite conductivity as a function of electrode potential, as well as in air. In the absence of metal nanostructures, the lateral conductivity of the diamond assemblies in air is increased by over one order of magnitude upon hydrogenation of the particle surface. This observation is consistent with studies at diamond single crystals, although the somewhat modest change in conductivity suggests that charge transport is not only determined by the intrinsic surface conductivity of individual diamond particles but also by particle-to-particle charge transfer. Interestingly, the latter contribution effectively controls the assembly conductivity in the presence of an electrolyte solution as the difference between hydrogenated and oxygenated particles vanishes. The conductivity in the presence of metal nanoparticles is mainly determined by the metal volume fraction, while diamond surface termination and the presence of electrolyte solutions exert only minor effects. The experimental trends are discussed in terms of the electrochemical formation of charge carriers in the diamond particles, percolation theory, and charge screening at the double layer.

Citation

Plana, D., Humphrey, J. J. L., Bradley, K. A., Celorrio, V., & Fermín, D. J. (2013). Charge Transport Across High Surface Area Metal/Diamond Nanostructured Composites. ACS applied materials & interfaces, 5(8), 2985-2990. https://doi.org/10.1021/am302397p

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Apr 4, 2013
Publication Date Apr 24, 2013
Deposit Date Jun 15, 2023
Journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Print ISSN 1944-8244
Electronic ISSN 1944-8252
Publisher American Chemical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 5
Issue 8
Pages 2985-2990
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/am302397p
Keywords General Materials Science