Building superlattices from aerosol nanoparticles via evaporative self-assembly
(2019) 21th International Vacuum Congress- Abstract
- Nanoparticle superlattices consisting of densely packed particles with periodic arrangements can exhibit interesting collective properties different from those of individual nanoparticles and thus have attracted great interest in research due to their potential applications in optoelectronic, plasmonic, and magnetic devices. Evaporation-induced self-assembly on solid substrates which employs nanoparticles produced by wet chemistry is one of the most widely used methods in nanoparticle superlattice fabrication. However, impurities are inherent in the popular wet chemistry-based method and are often a cause of lack of reproducibility. Here we present a simple but novel method to generate close-packed arrays of nanoparticles uniquely created... (More)
- Nanoparticle superlattices consisting of densely packed particles with periodic arrangements can exhibit interesting collective properties different from those of individual nanoparticles and thus have attracted great interest in research due to their potential applications in optoelectronic, plasmonic, and magnetic devices. Evaporation-induced self-assembly on solid substrates which employs nanoparticles produced by wet chemistry is one of the most widely used methods in nanoparticle superlattice fabrication. However, impurities are inherent in the popular wet chemistry-based method and are often a cause of lack of reproducibility. Here we present a simple but novel method to generate close-packed arrays of nanoparticles uniquely created by combining aerosol technology with evaporation-induced self-assembly. Metal and metal oxide aerosol nanoparticles (20 - 50 nm in diameter) are generated using a spark discharge generator and are subsequently deposited on liquid droplets. We demonstrate that this way of capturing aerosol nanoparticles in the gas-liquid interface of a droplet suppresses the ubiquitous ‘coffee-ring’ effect during evaporation leading to self-assemblies of nanoparticles. This simple, effective method provides a versatile strategy for fabricating various types of nanoparticle superlattices. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/0834255e-6a96-438a-b37a-f2a8706238c5
- author
- Eom, Namsoon LU and Deppert, Knut LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2019-07-01
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- conference name
- 21th International Vacuum Congress
- conference location
- Malmö, Sweden
- conference dates
- 2019-07-01 - 2019-07-05
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 0834255e-6a96-438a-b37a-f2a8706238c5
- date added to LUP
- 2019-09-12 16:00:13
- date last changed
- 2022-04-05 14:59:43
@misc{0834255e-6a96-438a-b37a-f2a8706238c5, abstract = {{Nanoparticle superlattices consisting of densely packed particles with periodic arrangements can exhibit interesting collective properties different from those of individual nanoparticles and thus have attracted great interest in research due to their potential applications in optoelectronic, plasmonic, and magnetic devices. Evaporation-induced self-assembly on solid substrates which employs nanoparticles produced by wet chemistry is one of the most widely used methods in nanoparticle superlattice fabrication. However, impurities are inherent in the popular wet chemistry-based method and are often a cause of lack of reproducibility. Here we present a simple but novel method to generate close-packed arrays of nanoparticles uniquely created by combining aerosol technology with evaporation-induced self-assembly. Metal and metal oxide aerosol nanoparticles (20 - 50 nm in diameter) are generated using a spark discharge generator and are subsequently deposited on liquid droplets. We demonstrate that this way of capturing aerosol nanoparticles in the gas-liquid interface of a droplet suppresses the ubiquitous ‘coffee-ring’ effect during evaporation leading to self-assemblies of nanoparticles. This simple, effective method provides a versatile strategy for fabricating various types of nanoparticle superlattices.}}, author = {{Eom, Namsoon and Deppert, Knut}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{07}}, title = {{Building superlattices from aerosol nanoparticles via evaporative self-assembly}}, year = {{2019}}, }