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Au nanowire junction breakup through surface atom diffusion

  • Simon Vigonski
  • , Ville Jansson
  • , Sergei Vlassov
  • , Boris Polyakov
  • , Ekaterina Baibuz
  • , Sven Oras
  • , Alvo Aabloo
  • , Flyura Djurabekova
  • , Vahur Zadin
  • University of Tartu
  • University of Helsinki

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

37 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Metallic nanowires are known to break into shorter fragments due to the Rayleigh instability mechanism. This process is strongly accelerated at elevated temperatures and can completely hinder the functioning of nanowire-based devices like e.g. transparent conductive and flexible coatings. At the same time, arranged gold nanodots have important applications in electrochemical sensors. In this paper we perform a series of annealing experiments of gold and silver nanowires and nanowire junctions at fixed temperatures 473, 673, 873 and 973 K (200 °C, 400 °C, 600 °C and 700 °C) during a time period of 10 min. We show that nanowires are especially prone to fragmentation around junctions and crossing points even at comparatively low temperatures. The fragmentation process is highly temperature dependent and the junction region breaks up at a lower temperature than a single nanowire. We develop a gold parametrization for kinetic Monte Carlo simulations and demonstrate the surface diffusion origin of the nanowire junction fragmentation. We show that nanowire fragmentation starts at the junctions with high reliability and propose that aligning nanowires in a regular grid could be used as a technique for fabricating arrays of nanodots.

Original languageEnglish
Article number015704
JournalNanotechnology
Volume29
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Jan 2018

Keywords

  • fabrication of nanodots
  • gold
  • kinetic monte carlo
  • Nanowire junctions
  • rayleigh instability

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