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Nanomaterials
with a Bright Future
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
New, inexpensive
fabrication technique can increase production
A
new fabrication technique, known as soft interference
lithography (SIL), makes it possible to inexpensively
produce large sheets of gold films with virtually infinite
arrays of perforations and microscale "patches" of
nanoscale holes. A combination of interference lithography
and soft lithography, SIL offers many significant advantages
over existing techniques. It can be used to scale-up the
nanomanufacturing process to produce plasmonic metamaterials
and devices in large quantities. Devices such as films of
nanoholes can also serve as templates to make their inverse
structures, such as nanoparticles. (Legend: Si=silicon;
Cr=chromium; PEEL=electron spectroscopy method called
parallel electron energy loss spectroscopy.)
Credit:
Reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd:
"Multiscale patterning of plasmonic metamaterials,"
Joel Henzie, Min Hyung Lee and Teri W. Odom, Nature
Nanotechnology 2, 549 - 554 (2007)
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An innovative and
inexpensive way of making nanomaterials on a large scale has
resulted in novel forms of advanced materials that pave the way
for exceptional and unexpected optical properties. The new
fabrication technique, known as soft lithography, or SIL, offers
many significant advantages over existing techniques, including
the ability to scale-up the manufacturing process to produce
devices in large quantities.
The research, funded by the
National Science Foundation (NSF) and led by Teri Odom of
Northwestern University, appears as the cover story in the
September 2007 issue of Nature
Nanotechnology.
The optical nanomaterials in
this research are called 'plasmonic metamaterials' because their
unique physical properties originate from shape and structure
rather than material composition only. Two examples of
metamaterials in the natural world are peacock feathers and
butterfly wings. Their brightly colored patterns are due to
structural variations at the hundreds of nanometers level, which
cause them to absorb or reflect light.
Through the development of a
new nanomanufacturing technique, Odom and her co-workers have
succeeded in making gold films with virtually infinite arrays of
perforations as small as 100 nanometers--500-1000 times smaller
than a human hair. On a magnified scale, these perforated gold
films look like Swiss cheese except the perforations are
well-ordered and can spread over macroscale distances. The
researchers' ability to make these optical metamaterials
inexpensively and on large wafers or sheets is what sets this
work apart from other techniques.
"One of the biggest
problems with nanomaterials has always been their 'scalability,'"
Odom said. "It's been very difficult or prohibitively
expensive to pattern them over areas larger than about one square
millimeter. This research is exciting not only because it
demonstrates a new type of patterning technique that is cheap,
but also one that can produce very high quality optical materials
with interesting properties."
For example, if the
perforations or holes are patterned into microscale "patches,"
they show dramatically different transmission behavior of light
compared to an infinite array of holes. The patches appear to
focus light while the infinite arrays do not.
Moreover, their optical
transmission can be altered simply by changing the geometry of
perforations rather than having to "cook" a new
composition of materials. This feature makes them very attractive
in terms of tuning their behavior to a given need with ease.
These materials can also be superior as optical sensors, and they
open the possibility of ultra-small sources of light.
Furthermore, given their precise organization, they can serve as
templates for making their own clones or for making other ordered
structures at the nanoscale, such as arrays of nanoparticles.
"This work is exactly the
kind of high-risk, high-potential transformative research NSF's
Division of Materials Research is interested in supporting,"
said Harsh Deepak Chopra, NSF program manager. "The early
results are extremely promising and suggest a whole new
generation of optical devices."
Source:
NSF

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