A
previously-unknown zinc oxide nanostructure that
resembles the helical configuration of DNA could
provide engineers with a new building block for creating
nanometer-scale sensors, transducers, resonators
and other devices that rely on electromechanical
coupling.
Based
on a superlattice composed of alternating single-crystal "stripes" just a few nanometers wide,
the "nanohelix" structure is part of a family of
nanobelts – tiny ribbon-like structures with semiconducting
and piezoelectric properties – that were first reported
in 2001.
The nanohelices, which get their shape from twisting
forces created by a small mismatch between the stripes,
are produced using a vapor-solid growth process at
high temperature. Information about the growth and
analysis of the new structures will be reported in
the September 9 issue of the journal Science.
The
research was sponsored by the National Science
Foundation, NASA Vehicle Systems Program, U.S.
Department of Defense Research and Engineering
(DDR&E),
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA),
and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
"This structure provides a new building block for
nanodevices," said Zhong Lin Wang, a Regents professor
in the School of Materials Science and Engineering
at the Georgia Institute of Technology. "From them
we can make resonators, place molecules on their
surfaces to create frequency shifts – and because
they are piezoelectric, make electromechanical couplings.
This adds a new structure to the toolbox of nanomaterials."
With their superlattices composed of many near-parallel
single-crystal stripes each about 3.5 nanometers
wide and offset about five degrees, the nanohelices
are very different from the nanosprings and nanorings
of zinc oxide reported by the same research group
in Science in 2004. Nanosprings are composed of a
single crystal whose shape is governed by balancing
the electrostatic forces created by opposite electrical
charges on their edges with the elastic deformation
energy of the entire structure.
The nanohelices reach lengths of up to 100 microns,
with diameters from 300 to 700 nanometers and widths
from 100 to 500 nanometers. The nanohelices exist
in both right- and left-handed versions, with production
split approximately 50-50 between the two directions.
"This is a brand new structure which shows a new
growth model for nanomaterials," Wang said. "But
from the properties point of view, these are like
the earlier nanobelts in having semiconducting and
piezoelectric properties which makes them good for
electromechanical coupling."
However, unlike the earlier single-crystal nanosprings
which are elastic, the nanohelices are rigid and
retain their shape even when cut apart.
"When we first saw these structures, we were amazed
by their perfection," said Wang, who is also director
of Georgia Tech's Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology. "Once
you form a nanohelix, it is perfectly uniform."
The nanohelices are formed using a simple process
similar to the one used for fabricating other nanobelts.
However, changing the growth conditions leads to
entirely different structures.
Zinc oxide (ZnO) powder is positioned inside an
alumina tube in a horizontal high-temperature tube
furnace. Under vacuum, the material is heated to
approximately 1,000 degrees Celsius, at which point
an argon carrier gas is introduced. Heating continues
until the furnace reaches approximately 1,400 degrees.
The nanohelix structures form on a polycrystalline
aluminum oxide (Al2O3) substrate in the furnace.
"The key difference between growing nanohelices
and the earlier types of nanobelt is that we control
raising the temperature and when we introduce the
carrier gas," explained Wang. "With the earlier structures,
we introduced the carrier gas flow at the beginning.
With these nanohelices, we only introduce the carrier
gas when the temperature reaches a certain level.
That allows formation to begin in a vacuum, which
is the key to controlling the helix formation."
Heating
the zinc oxide powder in a vacuum leads to formation
of structures with polar surfaces. When the carrier
gas is introduced, the growth changes to minimize
the polar surfaces, creating the superlattice structure
with mismatches at the crystalline interfaces.
The nanohelices begin and end with conventional
single-crystal nanobelt structures. "By the time the carrier gas
is introduced, the crystal orientation is fixed,
but the structures must continue to grow," Wang explained. "Introducing
the carrier gas initiates a transition to the superlattice
structure."
Formation of a nanohelix is initiated from a single-crystal
stiff nanoribbon that is dominated by polar surfaces.
An abrupt structural transformation of the single-crystal
nanoribbon into stripes of the superlattice-structured
nanobelt leads to the formation of a uniform nanohelix
due to rigid structural alteration, Wang said. The
superlattice nanobelt is a periodic, coherent, epitaxial
and parallel assembly of two alternating stripes
of zinc oxide crystals oriented with their c-axes
perpendicular to one another. Growth of the nanohelix
is terminated by transforming the partially polar-surface-dominated
nanobelt into a non-polar-surface-dominated single-crystal
nanobelt.
"The data suggest that reducing the polar surfaces
could be the driving force behind the formation of
the superlattice structure, and the rigid structural
rotation and twist caused by the superlattice results
in the initiation and formation of the nanohelix," Wang
explained.
The first dozen batches of nanohelices produced
a yield of only about 10 percent, but Wang believes
that can be improved over time. Thus far, Wang's
research team has produced nearly 20 different zinc
oxide nanostructures, including nanobelts, aligned
nanowires, nanotubes, nanopropellor arrays, nanobows,
nanosprings, nanorings, nanobowls and others. And
there may yet be other structures discovered.
"You never know what other structures might be out
there that could be added to this toolbox," he said. "From
the richness of this configuration and the complete
properties, this is a unique material that could
become the new material for nanotechnology following
carbon nanotubes."
A wideband semiconductor, zinc oxide also has interesting
piezoelectric and optical properties, can produce
ultraviolet laser emissions and shows electroluminescence
at room temperature. Those properties make it potentially
useful in many applications.
"You can use it for spintronics, biomedical applications
and many things you can make with silicon technology," Wang
said. "Zinc oxide is much cheaper and easier to work
with than gallium nitride."
Other collaborators on this work included Pu Xian
Gao, Yong Ding, Wenjie Mai, William Hughes, and Changshi
Lao, all in Georgia Tech's School of Materials Science
and Engineering.
Technical Contact: Zhong L. Wang (404-894-8008);
E-mail: ( zhong.wang@mse.gatech.edu ).
Contact: John Toon
john.toon@edi.gatech.edu
404-894-6986
Georgia Institute of Technology Research
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