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Parametric studies of field-directed nanowire chaining for transparent electrodesAlsaif, Jehad 25 August 2017 (has links)
Transparent electrodes (TEs) have become important components of displays, touch
screens, and solar photovoltaic (PV) energy conversion devices. As electrodes, they
must be electrically conductive while being transparent. Transparent materials are
normally poor conductors and materials with high electrical conductivity, such as
metals, are typically not transparent. From the few candidate materials, indium
tin oxide (ITO) is currently the best available, but indium is an expensive material
and ITO cost has risen with increasing demand. Therefore, alternative materials
or methods are sought to encourage production needs of applications and help in
reducing their price. This thesis presents and discusses results of experimental work
for a method, field-directed chaining, to produce a TE device which is nanowire-based,
with a figure of merit FoM= 2.39 x10E-4
Ohm E-1, comparable to ITO but with potential
for far lower cost.
Using electric field-directed chaining, multiple parallel long chains of metal nanowires
are assembled on inexpensive transparent materials such as glass by field directed
nanowire chaining, using methods first demonstrated in our laboratory.
In this work, we have improved the fraction of functional chains, by tuning the
field/voltage, a key step in increasing the FoM and lowering the cost. The effect
of operating parameters on TE optical and electrical properties has been studied and identified as well. From experiments with twenty seven substrates, each with
a range of electric field and nanowire concentration, the highest light transmission
achieved is 78% and the lowest sheet resistance achieved is 100 Ohm/sq. Among all
the operating parameters, the electric field has the most significant influence on the
fraction of nanowire chains that are functional. In the operating range of electric field strength available to us, we observed a monotonic increase in the fraction of
functional nanowire chains. We found a counter-intuitive change in TE properties in
a sub-range of nanowire concentration, associated with a change in the structure of
chained patterns. / Graduate
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Towards small scale sensors for turbulent flows and for rarefied gas dampingEbrahiminejad Rafsanjani, Amin 02 January 2018 (has links)
This thesis makes contributions towards the development of two different small-scale sensing systems which show promise for measurements in fluid mechanics.
Well-resolved turbulent Wall Shear Stress (WSS) measurements could provide a basis for realistic computational models of near-wall turbulent flow in aerodynamic design. In aerodynamics field applications, they could provide indication of flow direction and regions of separation, enabling inputs for flight control or active control of wind-turbine blades to reduce shock and fatigue loading due to separated flow regions. Traditional thermal WSS sensors consist of a single microscale hot-film, flush-mounted with the surface and maintained at constant temperature. Their potential for fast response to small fluctuations may not be realized, as heat transfer through the substrate creates heat-exchange with fluid, leading to loss of spatial and temporal resolution.
The guard-heated thermal WSS sensor is a design introduced to block this loss of resolution. A numerical flow-field with a range of length and time and scales was generated to study the response of both guard-heated and conventional single-element thermal WSS sensors. A conjugate heat transfer solution including substrate heat conduction and flow convection, provides spatiotemporal data on both the actual and the “measured” WSS fluctuations calculated from the heat transfer rates experienced due to the WSS field. For a single-element sensor in air, we found that the heat transfer through the substrate was up to six times larger than direct heat transfer from the hot-film to the fluid. The resulting loss of resolution in the single-element sensor can be largely recovered by using the guard-heated design. Spectra for calculated WSS from heat transfer response show that high frequencies are considerably better resolved in guard-heated sensors than in the single element sensor.
Nanoresonators are nanowires (NWs) excited into mechanical vibration at a resonance frequency, with a change in spectral width created by gas damping from the environment, or a shift in the resonance peak frequency created by added mass. They enable a wide range of applications, from sensors to study rarefied gas flow friction to the detection of early-stage cancer. The extraordinary sensitivity of nanoresonators for disease molecule detection has been demonstrated with a few NWs, but the high cost of traditional electron-beam lithography patterning, have inhibited practical applications requiring large arrays of sensors. Field-directed assembly techniques under development in our laboratory enable a large number of devices at low cost. Electro-deposition of metals in templates yields high-quality single nanowires, but undesired clumps must be removed. This calls for separation (extraction) of single nanowires. In this work, single nanowires are extracted by using the sedimentation behavior of particles. Based on numerical and experimental analyses, the optimum time and region for extracting samples with the highest fraction of single nanowires ratio was found. We show that it is possible to take samples free of large clumps of nanowires and decrease the ratio of undesired particles to single nanowires by over one order of magnitude. / Graduate
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