| Literature DB >> 27174890 |
Ali Shah1, Petri Stenberg2, Lasse Karvonen1, Rizwan Ali2, Seppo Honkanen2, Harri Lipsanen1, N Peyghambarian1,2,3, Markku Kuittinen2, Yuri Svirko2, Tommi Kaplas2.
Abstract
Carbon is the most well-known black material in the history of man. Throughout the centuries, carbon has been used as a black material for paintings, camouflage, and optics. Although, the techniques to make other black surfaces have evolved and become more sophisticated with time, carbon still remains one of the best black materials. Another well-known black surface is black silicon, reflecting less than 0.5% of incident light in visible spectral range but becomes a highly reflecting surface in wavelengths above 1000 nm. On the other hand, carbon absorbs at those and longer wavelengths. Thus, it is possible to combine black silicon with carbon to create an artificial material with very low reflectivity over a wide spectral range. Here we report our results on coating conformally black silicon substrate with amorphous pyrolytic carbon. We present a superior black surface with reflectance of light less than 0.5% in the spectral range of 350 nm to 2000 nm.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27174890 PMCID: PMC4865946 DOI: 10.1038/srep25922
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images and optical characterization of a PyC film grown on a bare Si substrate.
(a) The film grows smoothly throughout the substrate surface. (b) High resolution SEM image shows the ultra-thin PyC film grown on surface of the Si substrate. (c) Reflectance of bare Si and Si coated with PyC in wavelength range from 350–2000 nm using a spectralon disk as a backside reflector. PyC coated Si reflects about 45% of the incident radiation through whole spectrum. It is interesting to note the drastic change in reflectance despite the carbon film thickness being only 25 nm (see also simulation in Supplementary information). (d) The measured Raman spectrum of the PyC film shows peaks at 1365 cm−1 and 1596 cm−1 typical for highly amorphous graphite carbon and very faint and wide 2D peak. (Si* at about 1000 cm−1 is the second order silicon mode).
Figure 2Black silicon surface with and without pyrolytic carbon.
(a,b) Black silicon substrate consists of sharp silicon needles randomly distributed uniformly over the Si substrate. (c,d) After coating the sample with 25 nm thick PyC layer the topography of bSi is well preserved and even smallest details are evenly coated with PyC.
Figure 3Reflectance of a bSi with and without PyC.
(a) Reflectance spectra of bSi and PyC coated bSi. Similar to the bare Si, the bSi reflectance is about 80% at wavelengths above 1000 nm. However, coating of bSi with PyC reduces the reflectance down to less than 0.5%. (b) Although, bSi reflects less than 0.5% in the visible spectral range, there is a reflection peak around 375 nm where the reflectance becomes more than 1%. In PyC coated bSi this peak is suppressed while the absorption stays higher than 99.5%. (c) bSi coated with PyC has reflectance less than 0.5% in the 1200 nm to 2000 nm spectral range while the reflectance of uncoated bSi is more than 80%.