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  • 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

Forêt de nanofils semiconducteurs pour la thermoélectricité / Forest of semiconducting nanowires for thermoelectricity

Singhal, Dhruv 20 May 2019 (has links)
La conversion thermoélectrique a suscité un regain d'intérêt en raison des possibilités d'augmenter l'efficacité tout en exploitant les effets de taille. Par exemple, les nanofils montrent théoriquement une augmentation des facteurs de puissance ainsi qu'une réduction du transport des phonons en raison d'effets de confinement et/ou de taille. Dans ce contexte, le diamètre des nanofils devient un paramètre crucial à prendre en compte pour obtenir des rendements thermoélectriques élevés. Une approche habituelle consiste à réduire la conductivité thermique phononique dans les nanofils en améliorant la diffusion sur les surfaces tout en réduisant les diamètres.Dans ce travail, la caractérisation thermique d'une forêt dense de nanofils de silicium, germanium, silicium-germanium et alliage Bi2Te3 est réalisée par une méthode 3-omega très sensible. Ces forêts de nanofils pour le silicium, le germanium et les alliages silicium-germanium ont été fabriqués selon une technique "bottom-up" suivant le mécanisme Vapeur-Liquide-Solide en dépôt chimique en phase vapeur. La croissance assistée par matrice et la croissance par catalyseurs en or des nanofils à diamètres contrôlés ont été réalisés à l'aide d'alumine nanoporeuse comme matrice. Les nanofils sont fabriqués selon la géométrie interne des nanopores, dans ce cas le profil de surface des nanofils peut être modifié en fonction de la géométrie des nanopores. Profitant de ce fait, la croissance à haute densité de nanofils modulés en diamètre a également été démontrée, où l'amplitude et la période de modulation peuvent être facilement contrôlées pendant la fabrication des matrices. Même en modulant les diamètres pendant la croissance, les nanofils ont été structurellement caractérisés comme étant monocristallins par microscopie électronique à transmission et analyse par diffraction des rayons X.La caractérisation thermique de ces nanofils a révélé une forte diminution de la conductivité thermique en fonction du diamètre, dont la réduction était principalement liée à une forte diffusion par les surfaces. La contribution du libre parcours moyen à la conductivité thermique observée dans ces matériaux "bulk" varie beaucoup, Bi2Te3 ayant une distribution en libre parcours moyen (0,1 nm à 15 nm) très faible par rapport aux autres matériaux. Même alors, des conductivités thermiques réduites (~40%) ont été observées dans ces alliages attribuées à la diffusion par les surfaces et par les impuretés. D'autre part, le silicium et le germanium ont une conductivité thermique plus élevée avec une plus grande distribution de libre parcours moyen. Dans ces nanofils, une réduction significative (facteur 10 à 15 ) a été observée avec une forte dépendance avec la taille des nanofils.Alors que les effets de taille réduisent la conductivité thermique par une meilleure diffusion sur les surfaces, le dopage de ces nanofils peut ajouter un mécanisme de diffusion par différence de masse à des échelles de longueur atomique. La dépendance en température de la conductivité thermique a été déterminée pour les nanofils dopés de silicium afin d'observer une réduction de la conductivité thermique à une valeur de 4,6 W.m-1K-1 dans des nanofils de silicium fortement dopés avec un diamètre de 38 nm. En tenant compte de la conductivité électrique et du coefficient Seebeck calculé, on a observé un ZT de 0,5. Avec l'augmentation significative de l'efficacité du silicium en tant que matériau thermoélectrique, une application pratique réelle sur les appareils n'est pas loin de la réalité. / Thermoelectric conversion has gained renewed interest based on the possibilities of increasing the efficiencies while exploiting the size effects. For instance, nanowires theoretically show increased power factors along with reduced phonon transport owing to confinement and/or size effects. In this context, the diameter of the nanowires becomes a crucial parameter to address in order to obtain high thermoelectric efficiencies. A usual approach is directed towards reducing the phononic thermal conductivity in nanowires by achieving enhanced boundary scattering while reducing diameters.In this work, thermal characterisation of a dense forest of silicon, germanium, silicon-germanium and Bi2Te3 alloy nanowires is done through a sensitive 3ω method. These forest of nanowires for silicon, germanium and silicon-germanium alloy were grown through bottom-up technique following the Vapour-Liquid-Solid mechanism in Chemical vapour deposition. The template-assisted and gold catalyst growth of nanowires with controlled diameters was achieved with the aid of tuneable nanoporous alumina as templates. The nanowires are grown following the internal geometry of the nanopores, in such a case the surface profile of the nanowires can be modified according to the fabricated geometry of nanopores. Benefiting from this fact, high-density growth of diameter-modulated nanowires was also demonstrated, where the amplitude and the period of modulation can be easily tuned during the fabrication of the templates. Even while modulating the diameters during growth, the nanowires were structurally characterised to be monocrystalline through transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis.The thermal characterisation of these nanowires revealed a strong diameter dependent decrease in the thermal conductivity, where the reduction was predominantly linked to strong boundary scattering. The mean free path contribution to the thermal conductivity observed in the bulk of fabricated nanowire materials vary a lot, where Bi2Te3 has strikingly low mean free path distribution (0.1 nm to 15 nm) as compared to the other materials. Even then, reduced thermal conductivities (~40%) were observed in these alloys attributed to boundary and impurity scattering. On the other hand, silicon and germanium have higher thermal conductivity with a larger mean free path distribution. In these nanowires, a significant reduction (10-15 times) was observed with a strong dependence on the size of the nanowires.While size effects reduce the thermal conductivity by enhanced boundary scattering, doping these nanowires can incorporate mass-difference scattering at atomic length scales. The temperature dependence of thermal conductivity was determined for doped nanowires of silicon to observe a reduction in thermal conductivity to a value of 4.6 W.m-1K-1 in highly n-doped silicon nanowires with 38 nm diameter. Taking into account the electrical conductivity and calculated Seebeck coefficient, a ZT of 0.5 was observed. With these significant increase in the efficiency of silicon as a thermoelectric material, a real practical application to devices is not far from reality.
2

In-situ elektronová mikroskopie / In-situ electron microscopy

Bukvišová, Kristýna January 2019 (has links)
Cílem diplomové práce je popsat oxidaci nanotrubic sulfidu wolframičitého za zvýšených teplot v přítomnosti vodní páry. Na jejich povrchu se nejprve vytvoří nanočástice oxidu wolframu, ze kterých potom vyrůstají nanodráty. Na základě in-situ experimentů v rastrovacím elektronovém mikroskopu je navržen mechanismus reakce a ten je zjednodušeně popsán analyticky. Ukazuje se, že elektronový svazek má zásadní vliv na reakci.
3

Exploring Growth Kinematics and Tuning Optical and Electronic Properties of Indium Antimonide Nanowires

Algarni, Zaina Sluman 12 1900 (has links)
This dissertation work is a study of the growth kinematics, synthesis strategies and intrinsic properties of InSb nanowires (NWs). The highlights of this work include a study of the effect of the growth parameters on the composition and crystallinity of NWs. A change in the temperature ramp-up rate as the substrate was heated to reach the NW growth temperature resulted in NWs that were either crystalline or amorphous. The as-grown NWs were found to have very different optical and electrical properties. The growth mechanism for crystalline NWs is the standard vapor-liquid-solid growth mechanism. This work proposes two possible growth mechanisms for amorphous NWs. The amorphous InSb NWs were found to be very sensitive to laser radiation and to heat treatment. Raman spectroscopy measurements on these NWs showed that intense laser light induced localized crystallization, most likely due to radiation induced annealing of defects in the region hit by the laser beam. Electron transport measurements revealed non-linear current-voltage characteristics that could not be explained by a Schottky diode behavior. Analysis of the experimental data showed that electrical conduction in this material is governed by space charge limited current (SCLC) in the high bias-field region and by Ohm's law in the low bias region. Temperature dependent conductivity measurements on these NWs revealed that conduction follows Mott variable range hopping mechanism at low temperatures and near neighbor hopping mechanism at high temperature. Low-temperature annealing of the amorphous NWs in an inert environment was found to induce a phase transformation of the NWs, causing their crystallinity to be enhanced. This thesis also proposes a new and low-cost strategy to grow p-type InSb NWs on InSb films grown on glass substrate. The high quality polycrystalline InSb film was used as the host on which the NWs were grown. The NWs with an average diameter of 150 nm and length of 20 μm were shown to have hole concentration of about 1017 cm-3 and mobility of about 1000 cm2V-1s-1. This thesis also proposes a strategy for the fabrication of metal-semiconductor nanocomposites. InSb NWs grown by electrochemical deposition were decorated with nanometer sized Au and Ag nanoparticles to form the nanocomposite.
4

Growth of Semiconductor and Semiconducting Oxides Nanowires by Vacuum Evaporation Methods

Rakesh Kumar, Rajaboina January 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Recently, there has been a growing interest in semiconductor and semiconducting oxide nanowires for applications in electronics, energy conversion, energy storage and optoelectronic devices such as field effect transistors, solar cells, Li- ion batteries, gas sensors, light emitting diodes, field emission displays etc. Semiconductor and semiconducting oxide nanowires have been synthesized widely by different vapor transport methods. However, conditions like high growth temperature, low vacuum, carrier gases for the growth of nanowires, limit the applicability of the processes for the growth of nanowires on a large scale for different applications. In this thesis work, studies have been made on the growth of semiconductor and semiconducting oxide nanowires at a relatively lower substrate temperature (< 500 °C), in a high vacuum (1× 10-5 mbar), without employing any carrier gas, by electron beam and resistive thermal evaporation processes. The morphology, microstructure, and composition of the nanowires have been investigated using analytical techniques such as SEM, EDX, XRD, XPS, and TEM. The optical properties of the films such as reflectance, transmittance in the UV-visible and near IR region were studied using a spectrophotometer. Germanium nanowires were grown at a relatively lower substrate temperature of 380-450 °C on Si substrates by electron beam evaporation (EBE) process using a Au-assisted Vapor-Liquid-Solid mechanism. High purity Ge was evaporated in a high vacuum of 1× 10-5 mbar, and gold catalyst coated substrates maintained at a temperature of 380-450 °C resulted in the growth of germanium nanowires via Au-catalyzed VLS growth. The influence of deposition parameters such as the growth temperature, Ge evaporation rate, growth duration, and gold catalyst layer thickness has been investigated. The structural, morphological and compositional studies have shown that the grown nanowires were single-crystalline in nature and free from impurities. The growth mechanism of Germanium nanowires by EBE has been discussed. Studies were also made on Silicon nanowire growth with Indium and Bismuth as catalysts by electron beam evaporation. For the first time, silicon nanowires were grown with alternative catalysts by the e-beam evaporation method. The use of alternative catalysts such as Indium and Bismuth results in the decrease of nanowire growth temperature compared to Au catalyzed Si nanowire growth. The doping of the silicon nanowires is possible with an alternative catalyst. The second part of the thesis concerns the growth of oxide semiconductors such as SnO2, Sn doped Indium oxide (ITO) nanowires by the electron beam evaporation method. For the first time, SnO2 nanowires were grown with a Au-assisted VLS mechanism by the electron beam evaporation method at a low substrate temperature of 450 °C. SEM, XRD, XPS, TEM, EDS studies on the grown nanowires showed that they were single crystalline in nature and free of impurities. The influence of deposition parameters such as the growth temperature, oxygen partial pressure, evaporation rate of Sn, and the growth duration has been investigated. Studies were also done on the application of SnO2 nanowire films for UV light detection. ITO nanowires were grown via a self-catalytic VLS growth mechanism by electron beam evaporation without the use of any catalyst at a low substrate temperature of 250-400 °C. The influence of deposition parameters such as the growth temperature, oxygen partial pressure, evaporation rate of ITO, and growth duration has been investigated. Preliminary studies have been done on the application of ITO nanowire films for transparent conducting coatings as well as for antireflection coatings. The final part of the work is on the Au-assisted and self catalytic growth of SnO2 and In2O3 nanowires on Si substrates by resistive thermal evaporation. For the first time, SnO2 nanowires were grown with a Au-assisted VLS mechanism by the resistive thermal evaporation method at a low substrate temperature of 450 °C. SEM, XRD, XPS, TEM, and EDS studies on the grown nanowires showed that they were single crystalline in nature and free of impurities. Studies were also made on the application of SnO2 nanowire films for methanol sensing. The self-catalytic growth of SnO2 and In2O3 nanowires were deposited in high vacuum (5×10-5 mbar) by thermal evaporation using a modified evaporation source and a substrate arrangement. With this arrangement, branched SnO2 and In2O3 nanowires were grown on a Si substrate. The influence of deposition parameters such as the applied current to the evaporation boat, and oxygen partial pressure has been investigated. The growth mechanism behind the formation of the branched nanowires as well as nanowires has been explained on the basis of a self-catalytic vapor-liquid-solid growth mechanism. The highlight of this thesis work is employing e-beam evaporation and resistive thermal evaporation methods for nanowire growth at low substrate temperatures of ~ 300-500 °C. The grown nanowires were tested for applications such as gas sensing, transparent conducting coatings, UV light detection and antireflection coating etc. The thesis is divided into nine chapters and each of its content is briefly described below. Chapter 1 In this chapter, a brief introduction is given on nanomaterials and their applications. This chapter also gives an overview of the different techniques and different growth mechanisms used for nanowires growth. A brief overview of the applications of semiconductors and semiconductor oxide nanowires synthesized is also presented. Chapter 2 Different experimental techniques employed for the growth of Si, Ge, SnO2, In2O3, ITO nanowires have been described in detail in this chapter. Further, the details of the different techniques employed for the characterization of the grown nanowires were also presented. Chapter 3 In this chapter, studies on the growth of Germanium nanowires by electron beam evaporation (EBE) are given. The influence of deposition parameters such as growth temperature, evaporation rate of germanium, growth duration, and catalyst layer thickness was investigated. The morphology, structure, and composition of the nanowires were investigated by XRD, SEM, and TEM. The VLS growth mechanism has been discussed for the formation of the germanium nanowires by EBE using Au as a catalyst. Chapter 4 This chapter discusses the growth of Si nanowires with Indium and Bismuth as an alternate to Au-catalyst by electron beam evaporation. The influence of deposition parameters such as growth temperature, Si evaporation rate, growth duration, and catalyst layer thickness has been investigated. The grown nanowires were characterized using XRD, SEM, TEM and HRTEM. The Silicon nanowires growth mechanism has been discussed. Chapter 5 This chapter discusses the Au-catalyzed VLS growth of SnO2 nanowires by the electron beam evaporation method as well as Antimony doped SnO2 nanowires by co-evaporation method at a low substrate temperature of 450 °C. The grown nanowires were characterized using XRD, SEM, TEM, STEM, Elemental mapping, HRTEM, and XPS. The effect of deposition parameters such as oxygen partial pressure, growth temperature, catalyst layer thickness, evaporation rate of Sn, and the growth duration of nanowires were investigated. The SnO2 nanowires growth mechanism has been explained. Preliminary studies were made on the possible use of pure SnO2 and doped SnO2 nanowire films for UV light detection. SnO2 nanowire growth on different substrates such as stainless steel foil (SS), carbon nanosheets films, and graphene oxide films were studied. SnO2 nanowire growth on different substrates, especially SS foil will be useful for Li-ion battery applications. Chapter 6 This chapter discusses the self catalyzed VLS growth of Sn doped Indium oxide (ITO) nanowires by the electron beam evaporation method at a low temperature of 250-400 °C. The grown nanowires were characterized using XRD, SEM, TEM, STEM, HRTEM, and XPS. The effect of deposition parameters such as oxygen partial pressure, growth temperature, evaporation rate of ITO, and the growth duration of the nanowires were investigated. Preliminary studies were also made on the possible use of self-catalyzed ITO nanowire films for transparent conducting oxides and antireflection coatings. ITO nanowire growth on different and large area substrates such as stainless steel foil (SS), and Glass was done successfully. ITO nanowire growth on different substrates, especially large area glass substrates will be useful for optoelectronic devices. Chapter 7 In this chapter, studies on the growth of SnO2 nanowires by a cost-effective resistive thermal evaporation method at a relatively lower substrate temperature of 450 °C are presented. The grown nanowires were characterized using XRD, SEM, TEM, HRTEM, and XPS. Preliminary studies were done on the possible use of SnO2 nanowire films for methanol sensing. Chapter 8 This chapter discusses the self-catalytic growth of SnO2 and In2O3 nanowires by resistive thermal evaporation. The nanowires of SnO2 and In2O3 were grown at low temperatures by resistive thermal evaporation using a modified source and substrate arrangement. In this arrangement, branched SnO2 nanowires, and In2O3 nanowires growth was observed. The grown nanowires were characterized using XRD, SEM, TEM, HRTEM, and XPS. The possible growth mechanism for branched nanowires growth has been explained. Chapter 9 The significant results obtained in the present thesis work have been summarized in this chapter.
5

Vapour Phase Transport Growth of One-Dimensional Zno Nanostructures and their Applications

Sugavaneshwar, R P January 2013 (has links) (PDF)
One-dimensional (1D) nanostructures have gained tremendous attention over the last decade due to their wide range of potential applications. Particularly, ZnO 1D nanostructures have been investigated with great interest due to their versatility in synthesis with potential applications in electronics, optics, optoelectronics, sensors, photocatalysts and nanogenerators. The thesis deals with the challenges and the answer to grow ZnO 1D nanostructure by vapor phase transport (VPT) continuously without any length limitation. The conventional VPT technique has been modified for the non-catalytic growth of ultralong ZnO 1D nanostructures and branched structures in large area with controllable aspect ratio. It has been shown that the aspect ratio can be controlled both by thermodynamically (temperature) and kinetically (vapour flux). The thesis also deals with the fabrication of carbon nanotube (CNT) -ZnO based multifunctional devices and the field emission performance of ZnO nanowires by employing various strategies. The entire thesis has been organised as follows: Chapter 1 deals with Introduction. In this chapter, importance of ultralong nanowires and significance of ultralong ZnO nanowires has been discussed. Various efforts to grow ultralong ZnO nanowire with their advantages and disadvantages have been summarised. Lastly the significance of forming ZnO nanowires based nano hybrid structures and importance of doping in ZnO nanowires and has also been discussed. Chapter 2 deals with experimental procedure and characterization. In this chapter, a single step VPT method for the growth of ultralong ZnO nanowires that incorporates local oxidation barrier for the source has been described. The synthesized nanowires were characterised by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Raman & photoluminescence. Chapter 3 deals with growth of ZnO nanowires, controlling the aspect ratio of ZnO nanowires, and role of other experimental aspects. In this chapter, a way to grow nanowires continuously without any apparent length limitation, a way to control the diameter of the nanowires kinetically without catalyst particle or seed layer and obtaining smaller diameter of the nanowires by non-catalytic growth as compared to that set by the thermodynamic limit has been discussed. Furthermore, the significance and importance of local oxidation barrier on source for protecting them from degradation, ensuring the continuous supply of vapour and enabling the thermodynamically and kinetically controlled growth of nanowires has been discussed. Lastly, the scheme for large area deposition and a method to use same source material for several depositions has been presented. Chapter 4 deals with multifunctional device based on CNT -ZnO Nanowire Hybrid Architectures same device can be used as a rectifier, a transistor and a photodetector. In this chapter, the fabrication of CNT arrays-ZnO nanowires based hybrid architectures that exhibit excellent high current Schottky like behavior with p-type conductivity of ZnO has been discussed. CNT-ZnO hybrid structures that can be used as high current p-type field effect transistors (FETs) and deliver currents of the order of milliamperes has been presented. Furthermore, the p-type nature of ZnO and possible mechanism for the rectifying characteristics of CNT-ZnO has been discussed. Lastly, the use of hybrid structures as ultraviolet detectors where the current on-off ratio and the response time can be controlled by the gate voltage has been presented and also an explanation for photoresponse behaviour has been provided. Chapter 5 deals with the substrate-assisted doping of ZnO nanowires grown by this technique. In this chapter, the non-catalytic growth of ZnO nanowires on multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) and soda lime glass (SLG) with controlled aspect ratio has been presented. The elemental mapping to confirm the presence and distribution of carbon and sodium in ZnO nanowires and the transport studies on both carbon and sodium doped ZnO has also been presented. Furthermore the stability of carbon doped ZnO has also been presented. Lastly, the advantage of growing ZnO nanowires on MWCNTs and overall advantage associated with this technique has been discussed. Chapter 6 deals with formation of ZnO nanowire branched structures. In this chapter, a possibility to grow ZnO nanowires on already grown ZnO nanowires has been demonstrated. The formation of branched structure during multiple growth of ZnO nanowire on ZnO nanowire has been presented and evolution of aspect ratio in these branched structures has been discussed. Furthermore, the advantage of using ZnO branched structures and also the ZnO nanoneedles on MWCNT mat for field emission has been presented. Chapter 7 summarizes all the findings of the thesis.

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