Large-Area
Self-Assembly of Silica Microspheres/Nanospheres by Temperature-Assisted
Dip-Coating
Posted on 2017-12-27 - 00:00
This
work reports a temperature-assisted dip-coating method for self-assembly
of silica (SiO2) microspheres/nanospheres (SPs) as monolayers
over large areas (∼cm2). The area over which self-assembled
monolayers (SAMs) are formed can be controlled by tuning the suspension
temperature (Ts), which allows precise
control over the meniscus shape. Furthermore, the formation of periodic
stripes of SAMs, with excellent dimensional control (stripe width
and stripe-to-stripe spacing), is demonstrated using a suitable set
of dip-coating parameters. These findings establish the role of Ts, and other parameters such as withdrawal speed
(Vw), withdrawal angle (θw), and withdrawal step length (Lw). For Ts ranged between 25 and 80 °C, the morphological
analysis of dip-coatings shows layered structures comprising of defective
layers (25–60 °C), single layers (70 °C), and multilayers
(>70 °C) owing to the variation of SP flux at the meniscus/substrate
assembling interface. At Ts = 70 °C,
there is an optimum Vw, approximately
equal to the downshift speed of the meniscus (Vm = 1.3 μm/s), which allows the SAM formation over areas
(2.25 cm2) roughly 10 times larger than reported in the
literature using nanospheres. Finally, the large-area SAM is used
to demonstrate the enhanced performance of antireflective coatings
for photovoltaic cells and to create metal nanomesh for Si nanowire
synthesis.
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García Núñez, Carlos; Navaraj, William Taube; Liu, Fengyuan; Shakthivel, Dhayalan; Dahiya, Ravinder (2018). Large-Area
Self-Assembly of Silica Microspheres/Nanospheres by Temperature-Assisted
Dip-Coating. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.7b15178