| Literature DB >> 25382491 |
Jae Won Jeong1, Se Ryeun Yang1, Yoon Hyung Hur1, Seong Wan Kim1, Kwang Min Baek1, Soonmin Yim1, Hyun-Ik Jang2, Jae Hong Park2, Seung Yong Lee3, Chong-Ook Park1, Yeon Sik Jung1.
Abstract
Nanotransfer printing technology offers outstanding simplicity and throughput in the fabrication of transistors, metamaterials, epidermal sensors and other emerging devices. Nevertheless, the development of a large-area sub-50 nm nanotransfer printing process has been hindered by fundamental reliability issues in the replication of high-resolution templates and in the release of generated nanostructures. Here we present a solvent-assisted nanotransfer printing technique based on high-fidelity replication of sub-20 nm patterns using a dual-functional bilayer polymer thin film. For uniform and fast release of nanostructures on diverse receiver surfaces, interface-specific adhesion control is realized by employing a polydimethylsiloxane gel pad as a solvent-emitting transfer medium, providing unusual printing capability even on biological surfaces such as human skin and fruit peels. Based on this principle, we also demonstrate reliable printing of high-density metallic nanostructures for non-destructive and rapid surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy analyses and for hydrogen detection sensors with excellent responsiveness.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25382491 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms6387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919