Hierarchical design of metal oxide multi-dimensional arrays from aqueous solutions
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0901-Rb17-01.1
Hierarchical design of metal oxide multi-dimensional arrays from aqueous solutions Lionel Vayssieres International Center for Young Scientists, National Institute for Materials Science, Tsukuba, Japan Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA USA
ABSTRACT The hierarchical design of well-defined and highly oriented two- and three-dimensional arrays of conventional semiconductor nanomaterials and their large scale manufacturing at low cost remain a crucial challenge to unfold the very promising future of nanodevices. In addition to economical manufacturing of nanostructured semiconductors, better fundamental knowledge of their electronic structure, physical, interfacial and structural properties and stability, is required to fully exploit their fascinating potentials. To combine such essential requirements, the predictive creation of structurally well-defined and well-ordered functional and multi-functional materials is essential. As an attempt to achieve such ambitious goals, a novel strategy to thin film metal oxide semiconductor nanotechnology processing has been developed and investigated. A thermodynamic growth control concept based on the chemical and electrostatic minimization of the surface energy as well as a thin film growth technique have been developed. Such original approach allows the generation of nanomaterials with novel and functional morphologies. Advanced metal oxide nanostructures consisting of oriented multidimensional arrays featuring building blocks of controlled morphologies, sizes, aspect ratios and orientations at nano-, meso-, and microscale are genuinely fabricated directly onto various substrates of large physical areas without template, surfactant, undercoating or applied field from the hydrolysiscondensation of aqueous metal salts solutions at mild temperatures (below 100°C). A survey of the innovative advances in the fabrication of highly oriented and functional nanostructure arrays of transition and post-transition metal oxides are presented as well as one-dimensional confinement effects in purpose-built bundled iron oxide quantum rods. INTRODUCTION The ability to develop advanced building blocks such as nanorods and nanowires [1] as well as to hierarchically designing, assembling, patterning, and to integrating them into functional and ordered three-dimensional networks is a crucial challenge to develop efficient and practical nanodevices [2]. The hierarchical fabrication of functional arrays of metal oxides is possible with the aqueous chemical growth thin film processing technique via a general consideration of the chemical, physical, and structural affinities and interactions of substrates, metal precursors, and synthesis conditions. Our approach to control the overall growth of nanomaterials thin films is to tune their direct aqueous hydrolysis-condensation growth onto substrates by monitoring the interfacial thermodynamics of nanocrystals as well as their kinetics of heteronucleation. This is achieved by minimizing the surface ene
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