Pure halogens clusters, especially with even numbered molecular formulae, are elusive gas-phase spectroscopic targets. Photoionization mass spectrometry coupled to tunable vacuum-ultraviolet synchrotron radiation allows for the detection and char...
Artikel
Synthesis of Silicon and Germanium Oxide Nanostructures via Photonic Curing; a Facile Approach to Scale Up Fabrication
Von Wiley-VCH zur Verfügung gestellt
Silicon oxide (SiOx) and germanium oxide (GeOx) nanoparticles are promising candidates for energy storage applications. We synthesized SiOx and GeOx nanostructures by employing photonic curing; a low-cost roll-to-roll instantaneous process. This work is a step to optimize photonic curing for semiconductor oxide nanostructures synthesis on a large scale with nanometric control for next generation energy applications.
Abstract
Silicon and Germanium oxide (SiOx and GeOx) nanostructures are promising materials for energy storage applications due to their potentially high energy density, large lithiation capacity (~10X carbon), low toxicity, low cost, and high thermal stability. This work reports a unique approach to achieving controlled synthesis of SiOx and GeOx nanostructures via photonic curing. Unlike conventional methods like rapid thermal annealing, quenching during pulsed photonic curing occurs rapidly (sub-millisecond), allowing the trapping of metastable states to form unique phases and nanostructures. We explored the possible underlying mechanism of photonic curing by incorporating laws of photophysics, photochemistry, and simulated temperature profile of thin film. The results show that photonic curing of spray coated 0.1 M molarity Si and Ge Acetyl Acetate precursor solution, at total fluence 80 J cm−2 can yield GeOx and SiOx nanostructures. The as-synthesized nanostructures are ester functionalized due to photoinitiated chemical reactions in thin film during photonic curing. Results also showed that nanoparticle size changes from ~48 nm to ~11 nm if overall fluence is increased by increasing the number of pulses. These results are an important contribution towards large-scale synthesis of the Ge and Si oxide nanostructured materials which is necessary for next-generation energy storage devices.
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