• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • No language data
  • Tagged with
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Tailoring Nanoscopic and Macroscopic Noncovalent Chemical Patterns on Layered Materials at Sub-10 nm Scales

Jae Jin Bang (5929496) 20 December 2018 (has links)
<p></p><p></p><p>The unprecedented properties of 2D materials such as graphene and MoS2 have been researched extensively [1,2] for a range of applications including nanoscale electronic and optoelectronic devices [3–6]. Their unique physical and electronic properties promise them as the next generation materials for electrodes and other functional units in nanostructured devices. However, successful incorporation of 2D materials into devices entails development of high resolution patterning techniques that are applicable to 2D materials. Patterning at the sub-10 nm scale is particularly of great interest as the next technology nodes require patterning of (semi)conductors and insulators at 7 nm and 5 nm scales for nanoelectronics. It will also benefit organic photovoltaic cells as phase segregation of p/n-type semiconducting polymers on 2D electrodes at length scales smaller than the typical exciton diffusion length (10 nm)</p> <p>is expected to improve the charge separation efficiency [7].</p><br><p></p><p></p><p>Characterizing locally modulated properties of non-ovalently functionalized 2D materials requires high-resolution imaging techniques capable of extracting measurements of various physical/chemical properties. One such method is scanning probe microscopy (SPM) [18–21]. In Chapter 1, we present a brief review of SPM modalities, some of which are used to characterize interfacial properties, such as conductivity and local contact potential differences that can be modulated by amphiphilic assemblies [17, 22]. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is one of main techniques that we use to determine topography. All imaging in this work were performed in attractive AC mode [23,24] in order to minimize disruption to the self-assembly of the amphiphiles by the scanning tip.</p><br><p></p><p></p><p>One challenge of using SAMs for locally modulated functionalization is that the proximity to the nonpolar interface can modify the behavior of the functionalities present on the surface in conjunction with the steric hindrance of 2D molecular assemblies. For instance, ionizable functional groups, one of the strongest local modulators of surface chemistry, undergo substantial pKa shifts (in some cases, > 5 units) at nonpolar interfaces, limiting their ability to ionize. In order to apply molecular assembly to create 2D chemical patterns, we needed to design alternative structures that can avoid such penalties against the intrinsic properties of functionalities present in the assemblies. Among amphiphiles, we observed that the chiral centers of phospholipids have the potential of elevating the terminal functional group in the head from the surface for improved accessibility. We refer to this type of assembly as a ’sitting’ phase. Chapter 2 describes sitting phase assembly of phospholipids; the projection of the terminal functionality allows it to maintain solution phase-like behavior while the dual alkyl tails provide additional stabilizing interactions with the substrates. Given the diversity of phospholipid architecture [25], the sitting phase assembly suggests the possibility of greatly diversifying the orthogonality of the chemical patterns, allowing highly precise control over surface functionalities.</p><br><p></p><p></p><p>While a variety of methods including drop-casting [26–28] and microcontact printing [29] have been used previously by others for noncovalent assembly of materials on the surface, they mostly address patterning scale in the sub-μm range. Here, we utilize Langmuir-Schaefer(LS) transfer, which has been historically used to transfer standing phase multilayers [30], and lying-down domains of PCDA at < 100 nm scales in the interest of molecular electronics [14, 31–33], as our sample preparation technique. LS transfer is remarkable in that the transferred molecules relinquish their pre-existing interactions in the standing phase at air-water interface to undergo ∼ 90◦ rotation and assemble into the striped phase on a substrate. This introduces the possibility of modulating local transfer rate across the substrate by manipulating local environment of the molecules. Thus, LS transfer has the potential to offer spatial control over the noncovalent chemical functionalization of the 2D substrate, essential in device applications.</p><br><p></p><p></p><p>In Chapter 3 and 4, We make comparative studies of various experimental factors such as surface pressure, temperature and molecular interactions that affect the efficiency of LS conversion. Considering the energetics of the transfer process, we predicted that the rate of transfer from the air-water interface to the substrate should be the highest from the regions around defects, which would be the energetically</p> <p>least stable regions of the Langmuir film [34, 35]. In Langmuir films, two phases of lipid assemblies—liquid expanded (LE) and liquid condensed (LC)—often coexist at the low surface pressures (< 10 mN/m) used for sample preparation. Hence, we hypothesized that the microscale structural heterogeneity of Langmuir films could be translated into microscale patterns in the transferred film on HOPG. We compare the transfer rates between LE and LC phases and investigate the impacts of physical conditions during LS transfer such as temperature, packing density, dipping rate and contact time to conclude that local destabilization of Langmuir films leads to increased transfer efficiency. (Chapter 3)</p><p><br></p><p></p><p>As in the case of lipid membranes that reorganize routinely based on the structure of the constituent molecules [36–38], the structure of Langmuir films is strongly dependent on the molecular structures of the constituent molecules [39–43]. Accordingly, we expected the molecular structures/interactions to provide additional control over the LS transfer process. In Chapter 4, we compare domain morphologies and the average coverages between three single chain amphiphiles and two phospholipids, each</p><p></p><p> </p><p>of which contain hydrogen bonding motifs of varying strengths. We show that by influencing the adsorption and diffusion rates, molecular architecture indeed influences LS conversion efficiency and subsequent assembly on the substrate. The presence of strong lateral interactions limits transfer and diffusion, forming vacancies in the transferred films with smaller domain sizes while weaker intermolecular interactions enabled high transfer efficiencies.</p><p></p><p><br></p><p></p>
2

Controlled Transfer Of Macroscopically Organized Nanoscopically Patterned Sub–10 nm Features onto 2D Crystalline and Amorphous Materials

Tyson C Davis (9121889) 05 August 2020 (has links)
<div>Surface level molecules act as an interface that mediates between the surface and the environment. In this way, interfacial molecules are responsible for conferring characteristics of relevance to many modern material science problems, such as electrical conductivity and wettability. For many applications, such as organic photovoltaics and nanoelectronics, macroscopic placement of chemical patterns at the sub-10 nm must be achieved to advance next generation device applications.</div><div><br></div><div>In the work presented here, we show that sub-10 nm orthogonal features can be prepared by translating the building principles of the lipid bilayer into striped phase lipids on 2D materials (e.g. highly ordered pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), MoS2). Macroscopic patterning of these nanoscopic elements is achieved via Langmuir Schafer deposition of polymerizable diyne amphiphiles. On the Langmuir trough, amphiphiles at the air water interface are ordered into features that can be observed on the macroscale using Brewster angle microscopy. Upon contact of the 2D material with the air-water interface the macroscopic pattern on the trough is transferred to the 2D material creating a macroscopic pattern consisting of sub-10 nm orthogonal chemistries. We also show here how hierarchical ordering can be accomplished via noncovalent microcontact printing of amphiphiles onto 2D materials. Microcontact printing allows a greater measure of control over the placement and clustering of interfacial molecules.</div><div><br></div><div>The alkyl chain/surface enthalpy has a great deal of influence over the ordering of amphiphiles at the sub-nm scale. Here, we examine this influence by depositing diyne amphiphiles onto MoS2 which has a weaker alkyl adsorption enthalpy compared to HOPG. We found that dual-chain amphiphiles deposited on MoS2 adopt a geometry that maximized the molecule-molecule interaction compared to the geometry adopted on HOPG.</div><div><br></div><div>Finally, we show how the hierarchical pattern of diyne amphiphiles can be transferred off of the 2D material onto an amorphous material. This is done by reacting the amorphous material with the conjugated backbone of the diyne moiety through a hydrosilylation reaction to exfoliate the film from the 2D crystalline material. The resulting polymer ‘skin’ has many applications were controlling interfacial properties of an amorphous material is important.</div>
3

DEVELOPMENT OF THERMALLY CONTROLLED LANGMUIR–SCHAEFER CONVERSION TECHNIQUES FOR SUB-10-NM HIERARCHICAL PATTERNING ACROSS MACROSCOPIC SURFACE AREAS

Tyler R Hayes (9754796) 14 December 2020 (has links)
<div> As hybrid 2D materials are incorporated into next-generation device designs, it becomes more and more pertinent that methods are being developed which can facilitate large-area structural control of noncovalent monolayers assembled at 2D material interfaces. Noncovalent functionalization is often leveraged to modulate the physical properties of the underlying 2D material without disrupting the extended electronic delocalization networks intrinsic to its basal plane. The bottom-up nanofabrication technique of self-assembly permits sub-10-nm chemical patterning with low operational costs and relatively simple experimental designs.</div><div> The Claridge Group is interested in leveraging the unique chemical orthogonality intrinsic to the cellular membrane as a means of creating sub-10-nm hydrophilic-hydrophobic striped patterns across 2D material interfaces for applications ranging from interfacial wetting to large-area molecular templates to guide heterogeneous nanoparticle assembly. Using Langmuir–Schaefer conversion, standing phases of polymerizable amphiphiles at the air-water interfaces of a Langmuir trough are converted (through rotation) to lying-down phases on 2D material substrates. Using room temperature substrates, transfer of amphiphiles to a lowered substrate results in small domains and incomplete surface coverage.</div><div> Recognizing that heating the substrate during the LS conversion process may lower the energy barriers to molecular reorientation, and promote better molecular domain assembly, we developed a thermally controlled heated transfer stage that can maintain the surface temperature of the substrate throughout the deposition process. We found that heating during transfer results in the assembly of domains with edge lengths routinely an order of magnitude larger than transfer using room temperature substrates that are more stable towards rigorous repeat washing cycles with both polar and nonpolar solvents.</div><div> To promote the effectiveness of the LS conversion technique beyond academic environments for the noncovalent functionalization 2D material substrates for next-generation device designs, we designed and built a thermally controlled rotary stage to address the longstanding scaling demerit of LS conversion. First, we report the development of a flexible HOPG substrate film that can wrap around the perimeter of the heated disk and can be continuously cycled through the Langmuir film. We found that thermally controlled rotary (TCR) LS conversion can achieve nearly complete surface coverage at the slowest translation speed tested (0.14 mm/s). TCR–LS facilitates the assembly of domains nearly 10,000 μm<sup>2</sup> which were subsequently used as molecular templates to guide the assembly of ultranarrow AuNWs from solution in a non-heated rotary transfer step. Together, these findings provide the foundation for the use of roll-to-roll protocols to leverage LS conversion for noncovalent functionalization of 2D materials. A true roll-to-roll thermally controlled LS conversion system may prove to be advantageous and a cost-efficient process in applications that require large areas of functional surface, or benefit from long-range ordering within the functional film.</div>

Page generated in 0.0619 seconds