University at Buffalo chemists have developed a novel
way to grow chemically pure, zinc oxide thin films
characterized by dense, bristle-like nanostructures
and a new method for depositing them on
temperature-sensitive substrates, including polymers,
plastics and tapes.
The research, published online last month in the
Journal of Physical Chemistry, may make possible
the deposition of versatile zinc oxide films onto
flexible surfaces, enabling the development of more
efficient solar cells, liquid-crystal displays,
chemical sensors and optoelectronic devices.
The issue of the journal commemorates the career of
Richard E. Smalley, a pioneer of nanotechnology, with
whom the lead UB author, James F. Garvey, Ph.D.,
professor of chemistry, worked while on sabbatical in
1995.
High-quality zinc oxide thin films are versatile
and can be fabricated into many shapes, including
films, nanorods and nanoparticles. However, there is a
drawback: They usually are deposited at high
temperatures, which can damage or even melt the
substrate they are coating.
"That makes it impossible to coat plastic, a hard
drive, an electronic device or even contact lenses
since the deposition process damages the underlying
surface," Garvey said.
By contrast, the UB researchers have developed a
technique in which the metal oxide molecules are cool
enough to safely coat temperature-sensitive
substrates.
The UB researchers grow the thin films by first
reacting zinc metal and oxygen in the presence of a
high power, electrical arc discharge.
The method they developed, called Pulsed Arc
Molecular Beam Deposition (PAMBD), strikes a discharge
between two pure zinc rods.
"This lightening-like discharge creates a bright,
blue plasma five times hotter than the surface of the
sun," Garvey said.
At these high temperatures, the pure zinc metal is
vaporized and reacts completely with an oxygen gas
pulse to create chemically zinc oxide molecules.
The gaseous zinc oxide is then sprayed through a
tiny aperture, a process that results in cooling the
expanding gas down to about 50 degrees Kelvin, he
explained, allowing the beam of now cold metal oxides
to safely coat even the most temperature-sensitive
surfaces.
"This is an enabling technology that will allow for
the deposition of thin films on batteries, credit
cards, on any flexible surface you have," Garvey said,
adding that the UB process can use any metal and a
wide array of different metal oxides can be produced
easily.
"Since it is a pulsed technique, the thickness of
the resulting films can be precisely controlled," he
noted. "In this way, our PAMBD source is really a
high-temperature chemical reactor that generates metal
oxide molecules on demand and then rapidly cools them
down for subsequent coating of any surface."
The chemists now are working with researchers in
the UB Department of Physics to use the thin films and
the deposition technique to create nanorods and
spintronic devices.
In addition to Garvey, co-authors on the paper are
Chi-Tung Chiang, Ph.D., post-doctoral associate, and
Robert L. DeLeon, Ph.D., adjunct associate professor,
both in the Department of Chemistry in the UB College
of Arts and Sciences.
The research was funded by the Missile Defense
Agency of the U.S. Department of Defense.