This work studies the enhancement factor associated with a current emitted from a multi-wall carbon nanotube to an extremely small counter electrode. The experimental data show that the field enhancement… Click to show full abstract
This work studies the enhancement factor associated with a current emitted from a multi-wall carbon nanotube to an extremely small counter electrode. The experimental data show that the field enhancement factor increases by 1.15 times when the width of the counter electrode increases from 50 to 200 nm. To better understand this enhancement effect, field intensities at the emitter surface are numerically simulated. The experimental work and simulations demonstrate that the observed field enhancement results from increases in the capacitance between the emitter and counter electrode. In addition, corrugated counter electrodes are found to greatly affect both the capacitance and enhancement factor. This is because the corrugation of the anode surface raises the capacitance and thus provides a higher current. We experimentally show that an effective surface area enlargement of 1.67 times due to the corrugation provides a 1.06-fold increase of the enhancement factor. These results should assist in the future development of field emission devices based on semiconductor fabrication processes.
               
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