Thermal degradation of metal-loaded hydrogel films is a powerful tool to synthesize high-quality metal oxide thin films with nanometric grain size, but the formation mechanism is still poorly known. We exploited fluorescence X-ray absorption fine structure as a short-range probe to investigate the first stages of nucleation and the following development of ZnO nanoparticles in Zn-loaded hydrogels, annealed for 20 min at temperatures between 150 and 500 °C. The experimental results evidenced that the first nuclei of ZnO begin to form at 300 °C, whereas at 350 °C the ZnO nanoparticles are already well crystallized. By coupling the results with those obtained by thermal analysis, profilometry, HR-TEM, diffraction and μ-FTIR, a formation mechanism was suggested. The optical and electrical properties of the samples confirm that the polymer forms an insulating shell around the nanoparticles up to 450 °C: the intimate hybridization promotes stress relaxation during the annealing, yielding crack-free metal oxide films. Prolongation of the annealing time allowed the removal of the organic shell at 350 °C, yielding fully conductive, transparent ZnO films with particle size reduced to 7 nm.

Mechanisms of Zinc Oxide Nanocrystalline Thin Film Formation by Thermal Degradation of Metal-Loaded Hydrogels

TREDICI, ILENIA GIUSEPPINA;RESMINI, ALESSANDRO;GHIGNA, PAOLO;ROVETTA, TOMMASO;PATRINI, MADDALENA;ANSELMI TAMBURINI, UMBERTO
2013-01-01

Abstract

Thermal degradation of metal-loaded hydrogel films is a powerful tool to synthesize high-quality metal oxide thin films with nanometric grain size, but the formation mechanism is still poorly known. We exploited fluorescence X-ray absorption fine structure as a short-range probe to investigate the first stages of nucleation and the following development of ZnO nanoparticles in Zn-loaded hydrogels, annealed for 20 min at temperatures between 150 and 500 °C. The experimental results evidenced that the first nuclei of ZnO begin to form at 300 °C, whereas at 350 °C the ZnO nanoparticles are already well crystallized. By coupling the results with those obtained by thermal analysis, profilometry, HR-TEM, diffraction and μ-FTIR, a formation mechanism was suggested. The optical and electrical properties of the samples confirm that the polymer forms an insulating shell around the nanoparticles up to 450 °C: the intimate hybridization promotes stress relaxation during the annealing, yielding crack-free metal oxide films. Prolongation of the annealing time allowed the removal of the organic shell at 350 °C, yielding fully conductive, transparent ZnO films with particle size reduced to 7 nm.
2013
Materials Science and Engineering is concerned with admixtures of matter or the basic matter from which products are made. The category covers ceramics, paper and wood products, polymers, textiles, composites, coatings & films, and biomaterials. Other areas covered in this category include Materials Chemistry, the application of chemistry to materials design and testing; Condensed Matter/Solid State Physics, the branch of physics concerned with the structure and properties of condensed matter (superconductors, semiconductors, ferroelectrics, and dielectrics); and Physical Chemistry/Chemical Physics, the application of the concepts and laws of physics to chemical phenomena.
Esperti anonimi
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
117
25108
25117
10
Zinc oxide; Nanocrystalline thin films
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp407993q?prevSearch=%255BContrib%253A%2BPatrini%255D&searchHistoryKey=
9
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Tredici, ILENIA GIUSEPPINA; Resmini, Alessandro; Sonia, Pin; Ghigna, Paolo; Rovetta, Tommaso; Patrini, Maddalena; Nicola, Rotiroti; Monica, Dapiaggi; ...espandi
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/822650
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