| Literature DB >> 31192615 |
Hye Jin Lee1, U Jeong Yang1, Kyeong Nam Kim2, Soojin Park3, Kye Hyoung Kil4, Jun Soo Kim4, Alec M Wodtke5, Won Jun Choi6, Myung Hwa Kim4, Jeong Min Baik1.
Abstract
The remarkable electronic and mechanical properties of nanowires have great potential for fascinating applications; however, the difficulties of assembling ordered arrays of aligned nanowires over large areas prevent their integration into many practical devices. In this paper, we show that aligned VO2 nanowires form spontaneously after heating a thin V2O5 film on a grooved SiO2 surface. Nanowires grow after complete dewetting of the film, after which there is the formation of supercooled nanodroplets and subsequent Ostwald ripening and coalescence. We investigate the growth mechanism using molecular dynamics simulations of spherical Lennard-Jones particles, and the simulations help explain how the grooved surface produces aligned nanowires. Using this simple synthesis approach, we produce self-aligned, millimeter-long nanowire arrays with uniform metal-insulator transition properties; after their transfer to a polymer substrate, the nanowires act as a highly sensitive array of strain sensors with a very fast response time of several tens of milliseconds.Entities:
Keywords: Lennard−Jones potential; VO nanowires; directional Ostwald ripening; self-aligned; strain sensors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31192615 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b00684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189