亚洲国产成人精品福利在线观看-久久久久波多野结衣高潮-午夜网站在线观看免费完整高清观看-av天堂电影网

技術文章

Technical articles

當前位置:首頁技術文章In Situ Assembly of Ordered Hierarchical CuO Microhemisphere Nanowire Arrays for High-Performance

In Situ Assembly of Ordered Hierarchical CuO Microhemisphere Nanowire Arrays for High-Performance

更新時間:2021-06-01點擊次數:2589

In Situ Assembly of Ordered Hierarchical CuO Microhemisphere Nanowire Arrays for High-

        Performance Bifunctional Sensing Applications Tiantian Dai, Zanhong Deng, Xiaodong Fang,* Huadong Lu, Yong He, Junqing Chang, Shimao Wang, Nengwei Zhu, Liang Li,* and Gang Meng*

1. Introduction

       Device fabrication/integration is a longstanding challenge issue for the practical application of metal oxide nanowires with distinctive physiochemical and unique quasi-1D geometric properties.[1–3] In comparison with conventional planar nanowire devices, in which postsynthesis alignment (Langmuir–Blodgett technique,[4] contact printing,[5] and blow bubble,[6] etc.) is first employed and then electrodes are deposited, by directly growing nanowires on the selected area of solid substrates with bottom electrodes, when the tips of nanowires growing on the counter electrodes encompass each other and form stable junctions, a “bridged” nanowire device could be formed (at a large scale) in an in situ manner.[7–10] Apart from the superior benefits of facile integration of nanowire devices, bridged nanowire devices outperform conventional planar nanowire devices in several aspects. First, in situ growth ensures good electrical contact between the nanowires and the underlying electrode,[11] which plays an essential role in the performance of diverse microelectronic devices, including sensors,[12] photodetectors,[13] field emitters,[14] and energy storage devices.[15] Second, a nonplanar (or suspended) configuration not only avoids carrier scattering at the nanowire/substrate interface (leading to increased mobility)[16] but also offers a maximal exposure surface for analyte molecule adsorption (acting as a gate-all-around effect) and thus offers an additional avenue for designing highly sensitive sensors with ultralow power consumption.[7,11,17,18] As an important p-type oxide with versatile properties, CuO nanowires have promising applications in molecular sensors for harmful vapor monitoring,[19–23] photodetectors,[24] field emitting devices,[25] energy storage devices,[26] etc. Previous studies indicate that the number and density of bridged nanowires play an important role in the device performance (i.e., response and power consumption of gas sensors),[7,27] therefore, a rational synthesis methodology is essential for constructing high-performance devices. Though thermal oxidation of Cu (powder, foil, wire, film, etc.) offers a simple and catalyst-free method[28,29] for anisotropic growth of CuO nanowires, driven by oxidation induced strain between the CuO/Cu2O interfaces, as well as the fast outer diffusivity of Cu ions across the CuO/ Cu2O/Cu interfaces[29,30] and thermal oxidation of Cu powder or sputtered (patterned) Cu film dispersed/deposited onto the electrode substrate enabling the formation of bridged nanowires,[8,19] weak adhesion (due to thermal oxidation induced strain),[31] poor uniformity and uncontrolled electrical pathways hinder their promising applications. In this work, a novel methodology based on dewetting of patterned Cu films to create ordered Cu microhemisphere arrays was reported. Ag layer was proposed as a sacrificial layer to assist the dewetting of Ag/Cu/Ag films into microhemispheres at a relatively low temperature of 850 °C. Sacrificial Ag could be readily removed by vacuum evaporation due to the higher vapor pressure of Ag than Cu. In comparison with previously reported Cu powder or Cu film devices, Ag-assisted dewetting significantly shrinks the contact area of Cu/substrate to ≈1–500 µm2 (depending on size), which allows effective release of the interfacial stress during thermal oxidation of Cu[31] and contributes to firm adhesion with the underlying substrate. In addition, the position and size of hemisphere Cu arrays could be readily controlled, which plays a vital role in manipulating the structural properties (diameter, length and bridging density of nanowires) of CuO nanowires grown by thermal oxidation on diverse insulator substrates with indium tin oxide (ITO) electrodes. The in situ formed regularly bridged CuO microhemisphere nanowire arrays (RB-MNAs) devices exhibit much higher gas molecule and light responses than irregularly bridged microsphere nanowires (IB-MNs) devices, fabricated by thermal oxidation of Cu powder dispersed on ITO electrode substrates. For example, the electrical response (toward 100 ppm trimethylamine, TMA) of the RB-MNAs device is 2.8 times as high as that of the IB-MNs device at an operation temperature of 310  °C. The on/off current ratio toward (15.6  mW cm−2 ) 810  nm of the RB-MNAs device is 1.5 times as high as that of the IB-MNs device. Finally, 4 × 4 RB-MNAs devices were integrated onto a transparent ITO/quartz wafer, demonstrating the potential of the present methodology for the mass production of bridged CuO nanowire devices for future applications.

 2. Results and Discussion

        Although dewetting of uniform patterned metal films offers an approach to obtain homogeneous metal micro/nanoparticle arrays,[32,33] dewetting of patterned Cu films (prepared by using Ni shadow masks, the geometric parameters are listed in Table S1, Supporting Information) fails even at a high temperature of 850  °C. The high melting point of Cu (1085  °C) probably hinders the shrinking of the patterned Cu film at 850  °C (Figure S1, Supporting Information). Binary Cu-metal phase diagrams indicate that CuAg alloy (with 71.9 wt% Ag) possesses a low melting temperature of 779 °C,[34] which suggests that alloying with Ag may facilitate the dewetting of Cu film. Moreover, as the vapor pressure of Ag is much higher than that of Cu, Ag may be removed by appropriate thermal evaporation. Inspired by the abovementioned analysis, the patterned Cu film was sandwiched between the top and bottom Ag sacrificial layers (Ag/Cu/Ag) on a SiO2/Si or quartz substrate coated by ITO interdigital electrode (Figure 1a,e). As expected, the Ag/Cu/Ag film (size of 10.5  µm, thickness of 1.2/1.2/1.2  µm, with a Ag weight ratio of ≈70%) could be dewetted into a hemisphere shape (inset of Figure 1f) via vacuum or inert gas atmosphere annealing in a tube furnace (to prevent oxidation of metals) at 850 °C (Figure 1b,f). A noticeable decrease in the diameter of hemispheres from 8.0 ± 0.3 µm (Figure S2a, Supporting Information) to 7.0  ± 0.3 µm (Figure S2b, Supporting Information) was observed after performing vacuum evaporation (850 °C, 0.1 Pa, 1 h) (Figure 1c,g and Figure S2, Supporting Information). Moreover, the appearance of a dark condensed metal film in the low-temperature zone of the quartz tube furnace infers the evaporation of Ag, because the vapor pressure of Ag (≈2.8 × 10−1  Pa) is much higher than that of Cu (≈2.3 × 10−3  Pa) at 850  °C.[35] Thermal oxidation of ordered Cu microhemispheres at 400–450  °C allows the formation of ordered hierarchical CuO microhemisphere nanowires (Figure  1d,h). Specifically, when the nanowires grown from adjacent Cu spheres contact each other, a bridged nanowire device could be formed in an “in situ” manner. To monitor the variation of sacrificial Ag, energy dispersive spectrometry (EDS) analysis was performed (Figure 1i–l). Pristine Ag/Cu/Ag shows a higher Ag ratio (78.5  wt%) than the nominal ratio (70.3 wt%), as EDS is a surface analysis method that can only collect the generated X-ray signal in a region of ≈2 µm in depth depending on the atomic number,[36] which is less than the thickness of the Ag/ Cu/Ag film (≈3.6  µm) in Figure  1e. The substantial decrease in the Ag component in the CuAg alloy from 62.7  wt% (Figure  1j) to a negligible 0.2 wt% (Figure  1k) via vacuum evaporation suggests that most of the sacrificial Ag was evaporated. Appearance of O signal in the dewetted CuAg and Cu hemispheres (Figure  1j,k) may arise from trace oxidization by remaining oxygen in the vacuum (≈0.1 Pa) tube furnace during dewetting and evaporation process. Moreover, the tiny variation in Cu volume from the initial Cu film (Figure 1e) to the hemisphere (Figure  1g) infers that Cu was maintained during the dewetting and evaporation process. The use of a Ag sacrificiallayer allows the fabrication of ordered Cu microhemisphere arrays (Figure  1c,g) on a solid substrate and further obtains ordered hierarchical CuO microhemisphere nanowire arrays (Figure 1d,h).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

以上論文信息不完整    感謝中科大的孟老師對微型探針臺的反饋!需要詳細的文獻,請到中科院一區  影響因子12    感謝所有的科研奉獻者辛勞的付出。

主站蜘蛛池模板: 大香伊蕉在人线国产最新75| av永久天堂一区二区三区| 99久久精品国产成人综合| 牲欲强的熟妇农村老妇女视频| 国产99久久久久久免费看| 亚洲av无码专区青青草原| 人妻夜夜爽天天爽三区麻豆av网站| www国产亚洲精品久久久日本| 亚洲国产精品无码中文字| 色婷婷在线精品国自产拍| 凸偷窥中国女人洗澡| 50岁丰满女人裸体毛茸茸 | 强插女教师av在线| 国产乱国产乱老熟300部视频 | 亚洲av无码av另类专区| 久久久久香蕉国产线看观看伊| 亚洲乱码一二三四区| 亚洲成av人片不卡无码| 自拍偷在线精品自拍偷无码专区| 性一交一乱一色一视频| 超碰人人模人人爽人人喊手机版| 无码人妻丰满熟妇区五十路| 无码人妻精品一区二区三区夜夜嗨| 色诱久久av| 中文字幕无码一区二区免费| 国产精品免费精品自在线观看| 国产在线精品一区二区不卡| 女人被躁到高潮嗷嗷叫游戏| 大地资源网高清在线播放| 国产成人综合色就色综合| 十八岁以下禁止观看黄下载链接 | 国产9色在线 | 日韩| 日本老熟妇xxxxx| 欧美一区二区三区红桃小说| 日本熟妇色xxxxx日本免费看| 国产普通话对白刺激| 免费看成人aa片无码视频羞羞网| 欧美孕妇变态孕交粗暴| 国产激情一区二区三区| 午夜福利麻豆国产精品| 亚洲日韩∨a无码中文字幕|