화학공학소재연구정보센터
Nature Materials, Vol.10, No.8, 596-601, 2011
Face-selective electrostatic control of hydrothermal zinc oxide nanowire synthesis
Rational control over the morphology and the functional properties of inorganic nanostructures has been a long-standing goal in the development of bottom-up device fabrication processes. We report that the geometry of hydrothermally grown zinc oxide nanowires(1-4) can be tuned from platelets to needles, covering more than three orders of magnitude in aspect ratio (similar to 0.1-100). We introduce a classical thermodynamics-based model to explain the underlying growth inhibition mechanism by means of the competitive and face-selective electrostatic adsorption of non-zinc complex ions at alkaline conditions. The performance of these nanowires rivals that of vapour-phase-grown nanostructures(5,6), and their low-temperature synthesis (< 60 degrees C) is favourable to the integration and in situ fabrication of complex and polymer-supported devices(7-9). We illustrate this capability by fabricating an all-inorganic light-emitting diode in a polymeric microfluidic manifold. Our findings indicate that electrostatic interactions in aqueous crystal growth may be systematically manipulated to synthesize nanostructures and devices with enhanced structural control.