Engineering of Silica Thin-Film Nanoporosity via Alkali-Ion-Assisted
Reconstruction
Posted on 2019-03-13 - 00:00
We
report a method to prepare patterned mesoporous silica-based
films with fine control of the pore sizes and the porous fraction
by combining the sol–gel approach with an alkali ion post-treatment.
The strategy involves the porous mesostructure reconstruction of surfactant
(cetyltrimethylammonium bromide or F127)-templated silica films by
alkali metal ion diffusion into the inorganic matrix at 450 °C.
Coatings with pores ranged from 2 to 100 nm; gradients of pore sizes
and porous volumes as well as two-dimensional patterned structures
were obtained by optimizing the alkali-ion-assisted reconstruction
process (alkali ion amount, liquid deposition techniques, etc.). Na+, Li+, and K+ are demonstrated as efficient
silica network modifiers to significantly and rapidly tailor the mesostructure
of the films. Using spectroscopic ellipsometry, scanning electron
microscopy, environmental ellipsometry porosimetry, atomic absorption
spectroscopy, and phase diagram simulations, we identified two different
alkali-ion-induced mechanisms: the densification of the silica framework
and the separation of the silica matrix into two phases. Both mechanisms
are easily controlled separately by adjusting the process conditions
and the kind of ions used. This study, with the demonstration of an
adaptive multiresponsive antireflective coating, shows that alkali-ion-assisted
pore restructuration is complementary to the existing sol–gel
techniques and is promising for the design of new functional smart
materials.