Nanostructure and Mechanism of Metal Deposition by a Laser-Induced Photothermal Reaction

Ehud Greenberg, Nina Armon, Omree Kapon, Moshit Ben-Ishai, Hagay Shpaisman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Laser-induced photothermal reaction of metal ions is a promising one-step method for production of conductive micropatterns for electronic devices and sensors. However, the mechanism that governs the process in which thermally activated materials are deposited on a substrate is not clear. Here, light is shed on the mechanism through systematic analysis of photothermal reaction products forming iron oxide and silver at different interfaces. Examination of the nanostructure of deposits on a substrate using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and selected area diffraction pattern analysis reveals a combination of both amorphous and crystalline moieties. It is found that focusing the laser inside the solution leads to exclusive formation of crystalline products, while focusing at the liquid/air interface leads to formation of amorphous products due to kinetic considerations. Ring-shaped microstructures observed on the substrate indicate that microbubbles are involved in the deposition. The findings suggest that crystalline nanoparticles formed in solution are pinned to the base of the microbubbles. These stationary deposits absorb the laser light, resulting in extensive local heating, which leads to a fast thermal-reaction of the metal ions that are added as amorphous nanostructures. The presence of both crystalline and amorphous nanostructures therefore results from two different mechanisms.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1900541
JournalAdvanced Materials Interfaces
Volume6
Issue number14
DOIs
StatePublished - 23 Jul 2019

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

Funding

The authors acknowledge Eitan Edri for assistance with graphics, Yuval Elias for scientific editing, Hannah-Noa Barad for technical assistance with TEM lamella preparation, and Ilana Perelshtein for her aid with SADP analysis. The authors thank Bar-Ilan University for the generous start-up package.

FundersFunder number
The Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment
Bar-Ilan University

    Keywords

    • amorphous metal
    • direct laser writing
    • directed assembly
    • microbubble
    • photothermal reaction

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