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Rapid, one-step, digital selective growth of ZnO nanowires on 3D structures using laser induced hydrothermal growth
Cited 101 time in
Web of Science
Cited 107 time in Scopus
- Authors
- Issue Date
- 2013-07
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
- Citation
- Advanced Functional Materials, Vol.23 No.26, pp.3316-3323
- Abstract
- For functional nanowire based electronics fabrication, conventionally, combination of complex multiple steps, such as (1) chemical vapor deposition (CVD) growth of nanowire, (2) harvesting of nanowire, (3) manipulation and placement of individual nanowires, and (4) integration of nanowire to circuit are necessary. Each step is very time consuming, expensive, and environmentally unfriendly, and only a very low yield is achieved through the multiple steps. As an alternative to conventional complex multistep approach, original findings are presented on the first demonstration of rapid, one step, digital selective growth of nanowires directly on 3D micro/nanostructures by developing a novel approach; laser induced hydrothermal growth (LIHG) without any complex integration of series of multiple process steps such as using any conventional photolithography process or CVD. The LIHG process can grow nanowires by scanning a focused laser beam as a local heat source in a fully digital manner to grow nanowires on arbitrary patterns and even on the non-flat, 3D micro/nano structures in a safer liquid environment, as opposed to a gas environment. The LIHG process can greatly reduce the processing lead time and simplify the nanowire-based nanofabrication process by removing multiple steps for growth, harvest, manipulation/placement, and integration of the nanowires. LIHG process can grow nanowire directly on 3D micro/nano structures, which will be extremely challenging even for the conventional nanowire integration processes. LIHG does not need a vacuum environment to grow nanowires but can be performed in a solution environment which is safer and cheaper. LIHG can also be used for flexible substrates such as temperature-sensitive polymers due to the low processing temperature. Most of all, the LIHG process is a digital process that does not require conventional vacuum deposition or a photolithography mask.
- ISSN
- 1616-301X
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