Just Scratching the Surface: New Technique Maps Nanomaterials as They Grow
The new technique maps the surface of a
nanomaterial as it grows. In this figure, a surface pole
figure has been created for magnesium nanoblades.
Credit: Rensselaer/Gwo-Ching Wang
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Technique could be quickly replicated in labs around
the world to improve material performance;
Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have
developed a measurement technique that will help scientists and
companies map nanomaterials as they grow. The discovery could
help create superior nanotechnologies and lead to the
development of more efficient solar panels and increased
magnetic data storage.
“Since we discovered this technique, we have been trying to
get the word out to the nanoscience and nanotechnology research
community,” said professor and head of physics, applied
physics, and astronomy Gwo-Ching Wang, who helped discover the
technique. “It is inexpensive because it uses existing
technology and vastly increases the rate of discovery by giving
researchers a very clear picture of how to perfect and
duplicate the growth of a new nanomaterial without spending
months characterizing its structures after the growth.”
The approach is based on a commonly used technique known as
reflection high-energy electron diffraction, or RHEED. The
traditional RHEED system creates an interference pattern of the
surface of the nanomaterial. The pattern contains only partial
information of the surface and is only a snapshot in time of
the growing surface. The researchers modified the traditional
RHEED technique by rotating the substrate on which the
nanomaterial is being grown. This gives them a diagram
containing the complete information on the crystal orientation
distribution of the growing surface.
The new technique is different from other common techniques
such as X-rays because it monitors the surface structure of the
material as it grows. X-ray and other technologies measure the
entire material, from the tip of the new growth straight
through the substrate that the material is growing on. The new
RHEED technique shows the growth of only a few nanometers of a
material at a time.
“The creation of a surface crystal orientation diagram is
particularly important for revealing the nature of the growth
of nanostructures such as nanodots, nanorods, and nanoblades,
which have strong energy and data storage capabilities, but
their orientation can change dramatically over time,” Wang
said. These changes in crystal orientation and morphology of
the material can substantially increase or decrease the
material’s efficiency. It also makes their use in consumer
products difficult because of their unpredictability, according
to Wang.
Wang views solar energy materials as one of the most
important applications for the new technique. The most
efficient solar panels on the market are comprised of single
crystal materials, meaning that the material is one unbroken
material with no grain boundaries. Grain boundaries in a
nanomaterial cause huge decreases in energy-conversion
capabilities. But, single crystal solar cells are so costly
that they could never be widely used on the consumer market,
Wang said. So, many scientists and solar cell companies are
working to create polycrystalline materials that grow in such a
way that they transfer light into electricity similar to a
single crystal material despite having grain boundaries. These
materials are also much less expensive, according to
Wang.
“The problem with creating high-quality polycrystalline
materials is that you need a powerful technique to monitor them
in nanocscale dimensions as they grow so you can quickly work
on recreating the material to maximize its efficiency,” Wang
said. “The new RHEED technique really allows researchers to
create a material, see how it formed, and then turn around and
recreate the most ideal version of that material without
extensive experimentations.”
Wang was joined in her research by Toh-Ming Lu, professor of
physics, applied physics, and astronomy, and postdoctoral
research associate Fu Tang. Together they have presented their
findings within the Proceedings of SPIE and the
Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics as well as at
conferences around the world including the American Vacuum
Society 55th International Symposium and Exhibition on Oct. 23
and before representatives from the Department of Energy on
Oct. 31.
“Everywhere we go to present these findings, people have
become more and more excited about the possibilities that it
opens up for them in their own research,” she said.
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Published
November 4,
2008 |
Contact: Gabrielle DeMarco
Phone: (518) 276-6542
E-mail: demarg@rpi.edu |
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