| Researchers
at the National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST) have demonstrated a technique for growing well-formed,
single-crystal nanowires in place---and in a predictable
orientation---on a commercially important substrate.
The
method uses nanoparticles of gold arranged in rows
on a sapphire surface as starting points for growing
horizontal semiconductor "wires" only 3
nanometers (nm) in diameter. Other methods produce
semiconductor nanowires more than 10 nm in diameter.
NIST chemists' work was highlighted in the Oct. 11
issue of Applied Physics Letters.*
Part
of the vision of nanotechnology is the possibility
of building powerful, extraordinarily compact sensors
and other devices out of atomic-scale components.
So-called "nanowires"---long thin crystals
of, e.g., a semiconductor--- could not only link nanoelectronic
devices like conventional wire but also function as
devices themselves, tipped with photodetector or light-emitting
elements, for example.
An
obvious stumbling block is the problem of working
with components so small that only the most sophisticated
measurement instruments can even track them. To date,
the most successful nanowire alignment method involved
growing large numbers of the rod-like crystals on
a suitable base like blades of grass, shearing them
off, mixing them in a solvent, and forcing them to
align by either flow or surface confinement on the
test substrate to orient most of the crystals in a
specific horizontal direction. Further photolithography
steps are required to ensure that nanowires are positioned
correctly.
In
contrast, the NIST technique grows arrays of nanowires
made of zinc oxide, a semiconductor widely used in
optoelectronics, with precise alignments. The gold
"anchors" are placed with a chemical etching
step and the orientation of the wires--horizontal,
vertical or at a 60 degree angle from the surface--is
determined by tweaking the size of the gold particles.
Contact:
Michael Baum
michael.baum@nist.gov
301-975-2763
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
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