A new way to gauge the growth of nanowires

21-Mar-2018 - USA

In a new study, researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne and Brookhaven National laboratories observed the Formation of two kinds of defects in individual nanowires, which are smaller in diameter than a human hair.

Megan Hill/Northwestern University

Argonne and Brookhaven researchers observed two kinds of defects forming in individual nanowires, depicted here. These nanowires are smaller in diameter than a human hair.

These nanowires, made of indium gallium arsenide, could be useful for a wide range of applications in a field scientists have termed optoelectronics, which encompasses devices that work by converting light energy into electrical impulses. Fiber optic relays are a good example.

"We just have to get close enough to hit somewhere on the target; we don't have to split the proverbial arrow." -- Stephan Hruskewycz, Argonne materials scientist

The effectiveness of these devices, however, can be affected by tiny defects in their components. These defects, which can change both the optical and electronic properties of these materials, interest scientists who seek to tailor them to boost the functionality of future optoelectronics, including materials that will be able to manipulate quantum information.

In the study, the team, which also involved collaborators from Northwestern University and two European universities, observed two kinds of defects in a single nanowire. The first kind of defect, caused by strain, affects the entire nanowire, preventing it from growing perfectly straight. The second kind of defect, called a stacking fault, occurs close to the atomic level, as individual planes of atoms are laid down to lengthen the nanowire.

"To visualize the difference between stacking faults and strain, you can think of shuffling a deck of cards," said Argonne materials scientist Stephan Hruszkewycz, a study author. "A stacking fault occurs when a card from the deck is shuffled imperfectly -- as if two cards come from the right hand before one can come from the left."

Strain, Hruszkewycz explained, "looks as if a tower of decks of cards were tilted in a certain direction instead of standing perfectly straight."

Because stacking faults and strain occur at such different scales, understanding how they interact to change a nanowire's characteristics requires scientists to use sophisticated imaging technology and complex mathematical algorithms.

By using a technique called Bragg ptychography to observe the defects, the Argonne researchers created a method they could use to see the nanowire within its operating environment.

"We've developed a technique that allows us to investigate the actual local structure in the material," Hruszkewycz said. "This will allow us to make valuable comparisons to theories that people have come up with that describe how these defects could affect not only the nanowire, but the entire device of which it is a part."

"The method provides a missing link between nanoscale defect structure and variations in strain on longer length scales that will enable us to better control the optoelectronic properties of nanowires," said Northwestern University materials science professor Lincoln Lauhon.

In Bragg ptychography, researchers shine an X-ray beam at a series of overlapping spots all over the material, like a stagehand slowly moving a spotlight across a stage. The information produced by the atoms' scattering of the X-rays gives researchers a three-dimensional view of the material at close to atomic resolution. The researchers used the technique at Brookhaven's Hard X-ray Nanoprobe at the National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II), a DOE Office of Science User Facility.

"Beamline 3-ID is capable of producing a coherent nanofocused beam, so it is well suited for reconstructing images through techniques like Bragg ptychography," said Brookhaven lead beamline scientist Yong Chu, an author of the study. "This collaboration has been extremely valuable for advancing Bragg ptychography capabilities at NSLS-II, as well as our understanding of nanowires."

Scientists have recently improved the algorithms that generate this picture, an improvement that has dramatically changed the X-ray information collection process. Instead of having to use a spot-by-spot grid-based approach as done in earlier ptychographic studies, Hruszkewycz and his collaborators could move their X-ray beam around more freely, collecting useful information from across their sample. "It's like instead of doing a very simple and repetitive line dance, all we have to do is make sure that we place our feet on each part of the dance floor at one point or another," he said.

This flexibility has another advantage: it allows researchers to illuminate smaller features using a smaller spot size -- enabled in large part by X-ray zone plates fabricated by Michael Wojcik, a physicist at Argonne's Advanced Photon Source. These zone plates are a diffractive optic that consists of several radially symmetric rings, called zones, which alternate between opaque and transparent. They are spaced so that light transmitted by the transparent zones constructively interferes at the desired focus.

"When we're trying to hit our target, we don't have to be Robin Hood," Hruszkewycz said. "We just have to get close enough to hit somewhere on the target; we don't have to split the proverbial arrow."

Original publication

Other news from the department science

Most read news

More news from our other portals

Is artificial intelligence revolutionising chemistry?