Low temperature solid-state wetting and formation of nanowelds in silver nanowires
Authorized Users Only
2017
Authors
Radmilović, Vuk
Goebelt, Manuela
Ophus, Colin

Christiansen, Silke

Spiecker, Erdmann
Radmilović, Velimir R.

Article (Published version)

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This article focuses on the microscopic mechanism of thermally induced nanoweld formation between silver nanowires (AgNWs) which is a key process for improving electrical conductivity in NW networks employed for transparent electrodes. Focused ion beam sectioning and transmission electron microscopy were applied in order to elucidate the atomic structure of a welded NW including measurement of the wetting contact angle and characterization of defect structure with atomic accuracy, which provides fundamental information on the welding mechanism. Crystal lattice strain, obtained by direct evaluation of atomic column displacements in high resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy images, was shown to be non-uniform among the five twin segments of the AgNW pentagonal structure. It was found that the pentagonal cross-sectional morphology of AgNWs has a dominant effect on the formation of nanowelds by controlling initial wetting as well as diffusion of Ag atoms between the NWs. Du...e to complete solid-state wetting, at an angle of similar to 4.8 degrees, the welding process starts with homoepitaxial nucleation of an initial Ag layer on (100) surface facets, considered to have an infinitely large radius of curvature. However, the strong driving force for this process due to the Gibbs-Thomson effect, requires the NW contact to occur through the corner of the pentagonal cross-section of the second NW providing a small radius of curvature. After the initial layer is formed, the welded zone continues to grow and extends out epitaxially to the neighboring twin segments.
Keywords:
silver nanowires (AgNWs) / aluminum-doped zinc oxide (AZO) / nanoweld formation / solid-state wetting / nanowire sinteringSource:
Nanotechnology, 2017, 28, 38Publisher:
- IOP Publishing Ltd, Bristol
Funding / projects:
- 'Start Up For Science' program
- Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts [F-141]
- DFG within the Research Training GroupGerman Research Foundation (DFG) [GRK1896]
- Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U.S. Department of EnergyUnited States Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
- Cluster of Excellence 'Engineering of Advanced Materials (EAM)' at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany [EXC315]
- Synthesis, processing and applications of nanostructured multifunctional materials with defined properties (RS-45019)
- Development, characterization and application nanostructured and composite electrocatalysts and interactive supports for fuel cells and water electrolysis (RS-172054)
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/aa7eb8
ISSN: 0957-4484
PubMed: 28691926
WoS: 000413181300001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85029081121
Institution/Community
Tehnološko-metalurški fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Radmilović, Vuk AU - Goebelt, Manuela AU - Ophus, Colin AU - Christiansen, Silke AU - Spiecker, Erdmann AU - Radmilović, Velimir R. PY - 2017 UR - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3633 AB - This article focuses on the microscopic mechanism of thermally induced nanoweld formation between silver nanowires (AgNWs) which is a key process for improving electrical conductivity in NW networks employed for transparent electrodes. Focused ion beam sectioning and transmission electron microscopy were applied in order to elucidate the atomic structure of a welded NW including measurement of the wetting contact angle and characterization of defect structure with atomic accuracy, which provides fundamental information on the welding mechanism. Crystal lattice strain, obtained by direct evaluation of atomic column displacements in high resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy images, was shown to be non-uniform among the five twin segments of the AgNW pentagonal structure. It was found that the pentagonal cross-sectional morphology of AgNWs has a dominant effect on the formation of nanowelds by controlling initial wetting as well as diffusion of Ag atoms between the NWs. Due to complete solid-state wetting, at an angle of similar to 4.8 degrees, the welding process starts with homoepitaxial nucleation of an initial Ag layer on (100) surface facets, considered to have an infinitely large radius of curvature. However, the strong driving force for this process due to the Gibbs-Thomson effect, requires the NW contact to occur through the corner of the pentagonal cross-section of the second NW providing a small radius of curvature. After the initial layer is formed, the welded zone continues to grow and extends out epitaxially to the neighboring twin segments. PB - IOP Publishing Ltd, Bristol T2 - Nanotechnology T1 - Low temperature solid-state wetting and formation of nanowelds in silver nanowires IS - 38 VL - 28 DO - 10.1088/1361-6528/aa7eb8 ER -
@article{ author = "Radmilović, Vuk and Goebelt, Manuela and Ophus, Colin and Christiansen, Silke and Spiecker, Erdmann and Radmilović, Velimir R.", year = "2017", abstract = "This article focuses on the microscopic mechanism of thermally induced nanoweld formation between silver nanowires (AgNWs) which is a key process for improving electrical conductivity in NW networks employed for transparent electrodes. Focused ion beam sectioning and transmission electron microscopy were applied in order to elucidate the atomic structure of a welded NW including measurement of the wetting contact angle and characterization of defect structure with atomic accuracy, which provides fundamental information on the welding mechanism. Crystal lattice strain, obtained by direct evaluation of atomic column displacements in high resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy images, was shown to be non-uniform among the five twin segments of the AgNW pentagonal structure. It was found that the pentagonal cross-sectional morphology of AgNWs has a dominant effect on the formation of nanowelds by controlling initial wetting as well as diffusion of Ag atoms between the NWs. Due to complete solid-state wetting, at an angle of similar to 4.8 degrees, the welding process starts with homoepitaxial nucleation of an initial Ag layer on (100) surface facets, considered to have an infinitely large radius of curvature. However, the strong driving force for this process due to the Gibbs-Thomson effect, requires the NW contact to occur through the corner of the pentagonal cross-section of the second NW providing a small radius of curvature. After the initial layer is formed, the welded zone continues to grow and extends out epitaxially to the neighboring twin segments.", publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd, Bristol", journal = "Nanotechnology", title = "Low temperature solid-state wetting and formation of nanowelds in silver nanowires", number = "38", volume = "28", doi = "10.1088/1361-6528/aa7eb8" }
Radmilović, V., Goebelt, M., Ophus, C., Christiansen, S., Spiecker, E.,& Radmilović, V. R.. (2017). Low temperature solid-state wetting and formation of nanowelds in silver nanowires. in Nanotechnology IOP Publishing Ltd, Bristol., 28(38). https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6528/aa7eb8
Radmilović V, Goebelt M, Ophus C, Christiansen S, Spiecker E, Radmilović VR. Low temperature solid-state wetting and formation of nanowelds in silver nanowires. in Nanotechnology. 2017;28(38). doi:10.1088/1361-6528/aa7eb8 .
Radmilović, Vuk, Goebelt, Manuela, Ophus, Colin, Christiansen, Silke, Spiecker, Erdmann, Radmilović, Velimir R., "Low temperature solid-state wetting and formation of nanowelds in silver nanowires" in Nanotechnology, 28, no. 38 (2017), https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6528/aa7eb8 . .