Aerotaxy - A Gas-Phase Nanowire Growth Technique
(2014)- Abstract
- In this thesis an efficient nanowire fabrication technique, called Aerotaxy,
is investigated. Traditional nanowire fabrication techniques include
the use of a substrate as a point of nanowire nucleation which
limits the amount of nanowires that can be produced per unit time.
In contrary, Aerotaxy offers a continuous growth process, in the gasphase,
which could substantially increase the rate at which nanowires
are fabricated and thus lower their fabrication cost.
Investigations of nanowire properties such as size, shape and crystal
structure, with electron microscopy, show that growth can be controlled
and tuned to a high degree. Optical properties... (More) - In this thesis an efficient nanowire fabrication technique, called Aerotaxy,
is investigated. Traditional nanowire fabrication techniques include
the use of a substrate as a point of nanowire nucleation which
limits the amount of nanowires that can be produced per unit time.
In contrary, Aerotaxy offers a continuous growth process, in the gasphase,
which could substantially increase the rate at which nanowires
are fabricated and thus lower their fabrication cost.
Investigations of nanowire properties such as size, shape and crystal
structure, with electron microscopy, show that growth can be controlled
and tuned to a high degree. Optical properties investigated
with photoluminescence reveal that as-grown nanowires have good optical
properties and excellent spectral uniformity. Aerotaxy can thus
be used to produce high-quality nanowires, that could be integrated
into future opto-electronic devices, at a lower cost than other growth
techniques offer. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8084596
- author
- Heurlin, Magnus LU
- supervisor
- organization
- publishing date
- 2014
- type
- Thesis
- publication status
- published
- subject
- project
- A new way to grow nanowires: aerotaxy
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 1d868853-ef58-42a8-a076-85b0c81f9d12 (old id 8084596)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 13:33:26
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:14:46
@misc{1d868853-ef58-42a8-a076-85b0c81f9d12, abstract = {{In this thesis an efficient nanowire fabrication technique, called Aerotaxy,<br/><br> is investigated. Traditional nanowire fabrication techniques include<br/><br> the use of a substrate as a point of nanowire nucleation which<br/><br> limits the amount of nanowires that can be produced per unit time.<br/><br> In contrary, Aerotaxy offers a continuous growth process, in the gasphase,<br/><br> which could substantially increase the rate at which nanowires<br/><br> are fabricated and thus lower their fabrication cost.<br/><br> Investigations of nanowire properties such as size, shape and crystal<br/><br> structure, with electron microscopy, show that growth can be controlled<br/><br> and tuned to a high degree. Optical properties investigated<br/><br> with photoluminescence reveal that as-grown nanowires have good optical<br/><br> properties and excellent spectral uniformity. Aerotaxy can thus<br/><br> be used to produce high-quality nanowires, that could be integrated<br/><br> into future opto-electronic devices, at a lower cost than other growth<br/><br> techniques offer.}}, author = {{Heurlin, Magnus}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Licentiate Thesis}}, title = {{Aerotaxy - A Gas-Phase Nanowire Growth Technique}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/6149192/8084602.pdf}}, year = {{2014}}, }