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Design of Zinc Oxide
Tetrapod Devices
In fulfillment of the requirements of
ENMA490: Materials Design
Spring 2007
University of Maryland College Park
From Left: Michael Figueroa, Abiodun Osho, ,Yilin Liu, Arthur M. Grace, Matthew Castille,
Margaret Bennett, Patrick Stahl, Aron Cepler, Paul Pineau
Not Pictured: Brian Smith
Special Thanks to Professor Gary Rubloff and Parag Banerjee for their guidance and technical support.
Thanks also to Susan Beatty, Dr. Tim Zhang, Laurent Henn-Lecordier Tom Loughran, Cytimmune, and
Northrop Grumman.
Work completed at Materials Teaching Lab, FabLab, LAMP Lab, and NISP Lab.
Outline
• Motivation
• Logistics
• Timeline
• Fabrication of Nanostructures
• Different Device Concepts
• Integration and Testing of Devices
• Lessons Learned
• Future Work
• Summary
Motivation
• The unique characteristics of ZnO nanomaterials
(wide band gap, piezoelectric effect) lends them
great potential for UV and pressure sensing
applications.
• Nanomaterials require precise structural and
electrical characterization which are complicated
by their size.
• In order to use ZnO nanostructures successfully
in macro-scale devices, we must develop
effective means to integrate nanostructures into
a working device.
Logistics
• The ENMA 490 class was divided into 5 different
groups: Research, Management/Writing, Synthesis,
Device Design, Integration/Application
– Research: Use scholarly articles to understand properties of
ZnO nanoparticles
– Management/Writing: Guide all groups in the right direction;
major writer of report and presentation
– Synthesis: Making nanoparticles
– Device design/fabrication: Work out physical problems with
device (i.e. attaching nanoparticles to substrate)
– Integration/Application: Testing of devices produced
• Group membership was not static; many members
moved around to different groups as needed
Milestones
2/12
First Nano
structures
2/26
Made
Electrode
mask
3/12
Finish Mid term
presentation
SEM of Gold
Nano particles
3/12
Take SEM of
First of first
Finish Mid
term
presentation
4/2
Made 6 PDMS
Test First Device
Testing of 6
PDMS device
4/9
Made
Kapton
tape
device
Spring Break
4/16
Made PDMS
covered
device
4/23
Made quantitative testing
device, PVA, Kapton, PVA
devices
4/16
Test
PDMS
devices
Synthesis of the Nanostructures
O2 Ar
Valves
Furnace
Alumina Boat
Glass Tube
Gas Flow
• Argon and Oxygen gas flow
• Bubbles per minute controlled the rate
• Inside the tube, solid reagents were
placed in the boat.
• In some runs, Si wafers with gold
catalyst were placed downstream from
the boat.
Used Vapor Phase Transport Method
Processing Condition A: No Wafer
• Solid Reagents: Zn metal powder
• Gas Flow: Ar- 30 bubbles/min
O2- 10 bubbles/min
• 850 Celsius and held for 90 minutes.
• Initially only Ar gas, then turn on O2 gas
when system reached 410 degrees.
• Results show a fluffy white product
throughout much of the tube.
• See Zinc Oxide Tetrapod Structures
(ZOT) from ESEM images:
Scale Bar: 20μm Scale Bar: 5μm
Processing Condition B: Colloidal Gold
•Reasoning: Instead of Zn and O2 reacting
in air (or on the glass tube/ceramic boat) to
form tetrapods, a catalyst-induced
nucleation may cause linear rods to grow.
•Cytimmune: 26 nm in 133 μg/ml H20
•Applied colloid to Si and GaN wafers.
•Placed Zn powder in boat and wafers
downstream from boat. Same gas flow and
temperature conditions as Experiment A
Si Wafer, Scale Bar: 1μm
GaN Wafer, Scale Bar: 1μm
Processing Condition C:
ZnO and Graphite with Colloidal Gold
• ZnO and graphite source material
instead of Zn powder.
• Use 1:1 ratio of ZnO and graphite
powder. Only use Argon for gas flow.
Heat to 900 degrees and dwell for 90
minutes.
• Mechanism: ZnO powder is reduced by
graphite to form Zn and CO vapor at
high T (carbothermal reduction).
• Zn vapor flows downstream to form
alloy with Au colloid.
• Vapor-Liquid-Solid growth: ZnO
nanowires form, possibly from Zn and
CO reaction.
Tube setup from left: GaN, Si, Boat with mixed 1:1 ratio of ZnO and graphite
Scale Bar: 2 μm
Processing Condition D: Gold Coated Wafers
• Motivation: a uniform 10 nm gold-
coated Si wafer will induce better
nucleation sites for nanorod growth
than colloidal gold
• Used ZnO and C powder with Ar and
O2 gas
• Heated to 900 Celsius
• See rod-like structures, forming more
material than with gold colloid
processing conditions.
Conclusions from nanostructure synthesis:
•Processing Condition A (without wafer)
produced high yield of ZnO tetrapods
(ZOTs).
•Methods employing wafers with gold colloid
or coating were able to grow nanorods, but
not in high enough yield to collect and use
in devices.
•All devices used ZOTs fabricated from
processing condition A.
Scale Bar: 10μm
Horizontal and Vertical Device Concepts
• In Figure A, the unaligned
nanostructures are placed
between two electrodes.
• In Figure B, a pattern is used to
induce alignment in rod-like
nanomaterial.
• In both figures, the light blue area
indicates nanomaterial, yellow
block show the polymer matrix,
and dark blue shapes represent
the electrodes
• One concept involved use of a
patterned catalyst (red) to grow
vertically aligned nanorods.
Horizontal Device Top View Vertical Device Cross Section
Figure A
Figure B
Horizontal Device Processing
• Multiple electrode variations were fabricated
• Common features include a protective layer of photoresist to cover the electrodes and two holes in
the layer to provide contact points
• One version had trenches between the electrodes. If a polymer-dispersed method was used, the
trenches were intended to keep the liquid dispersed nanomaterial in place.
• Another version has one open field between the electrodes.
• Two masks were used to create each electrode design
Photoresist
Trenches
Au Electrode
Active Area
Contact Holes
Integrating Nanomaterial into
Device
• Langmuir-Blodgett and integration via PDMS fluidic flows
were investigated. These techniques were considered
too complex for our time frame.
• Polymer matrix dispersions chosen
• Various polymers were researched and utilized in
experiments
Kapton PDMS PVA Glue
Jung, et al. Nano Letters,
Vol.,6, No. 3 413-418.
www2.dupont.com/Kapton/en_US/assets/d
ownloads/pdf/summaryofprop.pdf
Our First Device
A
B
An ESEM image of the Ag contact / ZOT interface.
A higher magnification of the Ag / ZOT interface. The arrow
indicates a ZOT arm clearly embedded in the contact metal..
• Two silver paint contacts on a
microscope slide ~½ inch apart.
• A pile of ZOT was placed in between
(see A).
• More silver paint was applied at the
contact regions (see B).
Scale Bar: 20μm
Scale Bar: 5μm
Proof of Concept: Initial Device Testing
• The device was tested on
the probe station in the
Kim Building teaching lab.
• Force was applied by
hand with a glass rod
laying across the
nanoparticles.
• Light was applied with a
lamp at the work station
• From both tests we saw
electrical response and
decided to investigate
pressure applications of
ZnO nanostructures
Considerations: Pressure Device
• Before we integrated the ZOT into our microdevice we needed
to test several approaches by making macrodevices using:
– Kapton Tape
– PDMS
– Poly Vinyl Acetate Glue
• The qualitative results obtained from these macrodevices
would allow us to select the best method of integration into
our microdevices.
• Considerations we wanted to address in our macrodevice
were:
– ZOT connectivity in the given integration method
– Noticeable electrical response to stimuli
– Structural Stability of the device
– Ease of integration into microdevice
Zinc Oxide Tetrapods (ZOT) in PDMS
• For our pressure sensing device,
we investigated two devices that
used PDMS. The first device
contained a mixture of PDMS
and the ZOT powder
The IV curve of 29 wt. % ZOT shows a lack of
repeatability. It was determined through ESEM
images that there was little connectivity between
the dispersed ZOT at this wt.% High wt.% designs
were too mechanically unstable to test.
29 wt. % ZOT suspended in PDMS
PDMS Cover Design
• Pile of ZOT (similar to device
one) covered with PDMS and
degassed.
• When we reversed the device,
unique characteristics were
observed as shown in the
curve
• From this device we concluded
that:
– When we reversed the
polarities, the results were not
reproducible
– There was a noticeable
response to pressure
– These unique characteristics
were too complex for our
timeframe
IV C urve PDMS C over on ZOT
-3.00E -09
-2.00E -09
-1.00E -09
0.00E +00
1.00E -09
2.00E -09
3.00E -09
4.00E -09
5.00E -09
6.00E -09
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15
Voltage (v)
Current(Amps)
Test 1 Test 2 (R eversal)
Test 3 (s econd reversal test) Test 4 (40.996 grams)
0
ZOT powder covered with PDMS
Kapton Tape over Nanorods
• For our second device we decided to essentially bundle the
nanostructures with Kapton tape
• From our tests we concluded that there is an electrical
response with the application of pressure within the device
but integration of the Kapton tape into a microdevice would
be very difficult
IV Curves for Kapton Tape
-8.00E-10
-6.00E-10
-4.00E-10
-2.00E-10
0.00E+00
2.00E-10
4.00E-10
6.00E-10
8.00E-10
-6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6
Voltage (V)
Current(Amps)
Applied Force Test 1
Applied Force Test 2
No Force Applied
• Neutral pH adhesive (polyvinyl
acetate based; PVA) was
diluted with water
• Integration Methods:
– dripping diluted glue onto
the powder in place
– mixing a slurry of glue,
water and ZOT and
depositing this on the
substrate.
• From this we concluded:
– The nanorods had an
electrical response with the
application of pressure
– There was relative ease in
making the device
– That we had created a
structurally stable structure
IV Curves for Glue Pressure Tests
-2.00E-07
-1.50E-07
-1.00E-07
-5.00E-08
0.00E+00
5.00E-08
1.00E-07
1.50E-07
2.00E-07
2.50E-07
3.00E-07
-6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6
Voltage (V)
Current(Amps)
No Pressure
First Pressure Test
Second Pressure Test
PVA Adhesive and ZOT
Device Selection
• From the qualitative data we obtained
from the macrodevices, we decided to
further our venture into a microdevice
using PVA glue as an integration staple
because:
– We felt it would be easiest to integrate
– There was discernable electrical response
(which allowed us to assume there was good
conductivity)
– The structure of the device was stable
Quantifying Pressure Sensing
• In order to adequately access whether the
conductance/resistance is changing with pressure we made a
special platform that allowed us to apply quantifiable pressure on
top of a device.
• What we expect is that the conductance should decrease with the
application of pressure
Apparatus created to apply quantifiable
pressure on device. Rubber tip diameter is
3mm
Pressure Testing: Glue Dispersed Powder
on the Au Patterned Electrodes
As the applied pressure increases, a noticeable decrease in the slope is
Pressure on Glue-Dispersed ZnO - Trial 1
-3.00E-05
-2.00E-05
-1.00E-05
0.00E+00
1.00E-05
2.00E-05
3.00E-05
-4.5 -3.5 -2.5 -1.5 -0.5 0.5 1.5 2.5 3.5 4.5
Volts
Amps
1kPa
3kPa
4.5kPa
6kPa
9kPa
15kPa
Increasing Pressure
Increasing Pressure
Pressure Testing: Glue Dispersed Powder
on the Au Patterned Electrodes
Resistance varies with pressure between 1.5 and 3.5 V in both positive and negative
regions.
Pressure on Glue-Dispersed ZnO
1.00E+05
1.20E+05
1.40E+05
1.60E+05
1.80E+05
2.00E+05
2.20E+05
2.40E+05
-4.5 -3.5 -2.5 -1.5 -0.5 0.5 1.5 2.5 3.5 4.5
Volts
Resistance(ohms)
1kN
3kN
4.5kN
6kN
9kN
15kN
Increasing Pressure
Increasing Resistance
Lessons Learned
• Working in a group of 10 is challenging:
– Organization
– Communication
– Scheduling
• Even though BlackBoard is a good tool,
individual lab notebooks would have been useful
• Competition for resources/equipment is fierce
• Planning and executing a multi-phased project
requires technical foresight.
Future Work
• Better apparatus for applying quantifiable
pressure
• Worth quantitatively investigating capacitance as
a function of voltage
• Comparing electrical and piezoelectric response
of nanorods versus tetrapods
• Modeling pressure versus resistance from data
we obtain is necessary in order to:
– Make a predictable device
– Understand the nanomechanics of ZOT PVA
composite
Summary
• Synthesized nanorods and tetrapods using vapor
transport growth
• Used lithography to create two horizontal electrode
designs on silicon wafers
• Integrated tetrapods into macroscale devices with:
– Kapton Tape
– PDMS
– PVA Glue
• Observed I-V response to pressure and light stimuli in
devices
• Quantified pressure effects on resistance on a wafer
device

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Design of Zinc Oxide Tetrapod Devices

  • 1. Design of Zinc Oxide Tetrapod Devices In fulfillment of the requirements of ENMA490: Materials Design Spring 2007 University of Maryland College Park
  • 2. From Left: Michael Figueroa, Abiodun Osho, ,Yilin Liu, Arthur M. Grace, Matthew Castille, Margaret Bennett, Patrick Stahl, Aron Cepler, Paul Pineau Not Pictured: Brian Smith Special Thanks to Professor Gary Rubloff and Parag Banerjee for their guidance and technical support. Thanks also to Susan Beatty, Dr. Tim Zhang, Laurent Henn-Lecordier Tom Loughran, Cytimmune, and Northrop Grumman. Work completed at Materials Teaching Lab, FabLab, LAMP Lab, and NISP Lab.
  • 3. Outline • Motivation • Logistics • Timeline • Fabrication of Nanostructures • Different Device Concepts • Integration and Testing of Devices • Lessons Learned • Future Work • Summary
  • 4. Motivation • The unique characteristics of ZnO nanomaterials (wide band gap, piezoelectric effect) lends them great potential for UV and pressure sensing applications. • Nanomaterials require precise structural and electrical characterization which are complicated by their size. • In order to use ZnO nanostructures successfully in macro-scale devices, we must develop effective means to integrate nanostructures into a working device.
  • 5. Logistics • The ENMA 490 class was divided into 5 different groups: Research, Management/Writing, Synthesis, Device Design, Integration/Application – Research: Use scholarly articles to understand properties of ZnO nanoparticles – Management/Writing: Guide all groups in the right direction; major writer of report and presentation – Synthesis: Making nanoparticles – Device design/fabrication: Work out physical problems with device (i.e. attaching nanoparticles to substrate) – Integration/Application: Testing of devices produced • Group membership was not static; many members moved around to different groups as needed
  • 6. Milestones 2/12 First Nano structures 2/26 Made Electrode mask 3/12 Finish Mid term presentation SEM of Gold Nano particles 3/12 Take SEM of First of first Finish Mid term presentation 4/2 Made 6 PDMS Test First Device Testing of 6 PDMS device 4/9 Made Kapton tape device Spring Break 4/16 Made PDMS covered device 4/23 Made quantitative testing device, PVA, Kapton, PVA devices 4/16 Test PDMS devices
  • 7. Synthesis of the Nanostructures O2 Ar Valves Furnace Alumina Boat Glass Tube Gas Flow • Argon and Oxygen gas flow • Bubbles per minute controlled the rate • Inside the tube, solid reagents were placed in the boat. • In some runs, Si wafers with gold catalyst were placed downstream from the boat. Used Vapor Phase Transport Method
  • 8. Processing Condition A: No Wafer • Solid Reagents: Zn metal powder • Gas Flow: Ar- 30 bubbles/min O2- 10 bubbles/min • 850 Celsius and held for 90 minutes. • Initially only Ar gas, then turn on O2 gas when system reached 410 degrees. • Results show a fluffy white product throughout much of the tube. • See Zinc Oxide Tetrapod Structures (ZOT) from ESEM images: Scale Bar: 20μm Scale Bar: 5μm
  • 9. Processing Condition B: Colloidal Gold •Reasoning: Instead of Zn and O2 reacting in air (or on the glass tube/ceramic boat) to form tetrapods, a catalyst-induced nucleation may cause linear rods to grow. •Cytimmune: 26 nm in 133 μg/ml H20 •Applied colloid to Si and GaN wafers. •Placed Zn powder in boat and wafers downstream from boat. Same gas flow and temperature conditions as Experiment A Si Wafer, Scale Bar: 1μm GaN Wafer, Scale Bar: 1μm
  • 10. Processing Condition C: ZnO and Graphite with Colloidal Gold • ZnO and graphite source material instead of Zn powder. • Use 1:1 ratio of ZnO and graphite powder. Only use Argon for gas flow. Heat to 900 degrees and dwell for 90 minutes. • Mechanism: ZnO powder is reduced by graphite to form Zn and CO vapor at high T (carbothermal reduction). • Zn vapor flows downstream to form alloy with Au colloid. • Vapor-Liquid-Solid growth: ZnO nanowires form, possibly from Zn and CO reaction. Tube setup from left: GaN, Si, Boat with mixed 1:1 ratio of ZnO and graphite Scale Bar: 2 μm
  • 11. Processing Condition D: Gold Coated Wafers • Motivation: a uniform 10 nm gold- coated Si wafer will induce better nucleation sites for nanorod growth than colloidal gold • Used ZnO and C powder with Ar and O2 gas • Heated to 900 Celsius • See rod-like structures, forming more material than with gold colloid processing conditions. Conclusions from nanostructure synthesis: •Processing Condition A (without wafer) produced high yield of ZnO tetrapods (ZOTs). •Methods employing wafers with gold colloid or coating were able to grow nanorods, but not in high enough yield to collect and use in devices. •All devices used ZOTs fabricated from processing condition A. Scale Bar: 10μm
  • 12. Horizontal and Vertical Device Concepts • In Figure A, the unaligned nanostructures are placed between two electrodes. • In Figure B, a pattern is used to induce alignment in rod-like nanomaterial. • In both figures, the light blue area indicates nanomaterial, yellow block show the polymer matrix, and dark blue shapes represent the electrodes • One concept involved use of a patterned catalyst (red) to grow vertically aligned nanorods. Horizontal Device Top View Vertical Device Cross Section Figure A Figure B
  • 13. Horizontal Device Processing • Multiple electrode variations were fabricated • Common features include a protective layer of photoresist to cover the electrodes and two holes in the layer to provide contact points • One version had trenches between the electrodes. If a polymer-dispersed method was used, the trenches were intended to keep the liquid dispersed nanomaterial in place. • Another version has one open field between the electrodes. • Two masks were used to create each electrode design Photoresist Trenches Au Electrode Active Area Contact Holes
  • 14. Integrating Nanomaterial into Device • Langmuir-Blodgett and integration via PDMS fluidic flows were investigated. These techniques were considered too complex for our time frame. • Polymer matrix dispersions chosen • Various polymers were researched and utilized in experiments Kapton PDMS PVA Glue Jung, et al. Nano Letters, Vol.,6, No. 3 413-418. www2.dupont.com/Kapton/en_US/assets/d ownloads/pdf/summaryofprop.pdf
  • 15. Our First Device A B An ESEM image of the Ag contact / ZOT interface. A higher magnification of the Ag / ZOT interface. The arrow indicates a ZOT arm clearly embedded in the contact metal.. • Two silver paint contacts on a microscope slide ~½ inch apart. • A pile of ZOT was placed in between (see A). • More silver paint was applied at the contact regions (see B). Scale Bar: 20μm Scale Bar: 5μm
  • 16. Proof of Concept: Initial Device Testing • The device was tested on the probe station in the Kim Building teaching lab. • Force was applied by hand with a glass rod laying across the nanoparticles. • Light was applied with a lamp at the work station • From both tests we saw electrical response and decided to investigate pressure applications of ZnO nanostructures
  • 17. Considerations: Pressure Device • Before we integrated the ZOT into our microdevice we needed to test several approaches by making macrodevices using: – Kapton Tape – PDMS – Poly Vinyl Acetate Glue • The qualitative results obtained from these macrodevices would allow us to select the best method of integration into our microdevices. • Considerations we wanted to address in our macrodevice were: – ZOT connectivity in the given integration method – Noticeable electrical response to stimuli – Structural Stability of the device – Ease of integration into microdevice
  • 18. Zinc Oxide Tetrapods (ZOT) in PDMS • For our pressure sensing device, we investigated two devices that used PDMS. The first device contained a mixture of PDMS and the ZOT powder The IV curve of 29 wt. % ZOT shows a lack of repeatability. It was determined through ESEM images that there was little connectivity between the dispersed ZOT at this wt.% High wt.% designs were too mechanically unstable to test. 29 wt. % ZOT suspended in PDMS
  • 19. PDMS Cover Design • Pile of ZOT (similar to device one) covered with PDMS and degassed. • When we reversed the device, unique characteristics were observed as shown in the curve • From this device we concluded that: – When we reversed the polarities, the results were not reproducible – There was a noticeable response to pressure – These unique characteristics were too complex for our timeframe IV C urve PDMS C over on ZOT -3.00E -09 -2.00E -09 -1.00E -09 0.00E +00 1.00E -09 2.00E -09 3.00E -09 4.00E -09 5.00E -09 6.00E -09 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 Voltage (v) Current(Amps) Test 1 Test 2 (R eversal) Test 3 (s econd reversal test) Test 4 (40.996 grams) 0 ZOT powder covered with PDMS
  • 20. Kapton Tape over Nanorods • For our second device we decided to essentially bundle the nanostructures with Kapton tape • From our tests we concluded that there is an electrical response with the application of pressure within the device but integration of the Kapton tape into a microdevice would be very difficult IV Curves for Kapton Tape -8.00E-10 -6.00E-10 -4.00E-10 -2.00E-10 0.00E+00 2.00E-10 4.00E-10 6.00E-10 8.00E-10 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 Voltage (V) Current(Amps) Applied Force Test 1 Applied Force Test 2 No Force Applied
  • 21. • Neutral pH adhesive (polyvinyl acetate based; PVA) was diluted with water • Integration Methods: – dripping diluted glue onto the powder in place – mixing a slurry of glue, water and ZOT and depositing this on the substrate. • From this we concluded: – The nanorods had an electrical response with the application of pressure – There was relative ease in making the device – That we had created a structurally stable structure IV Curves for Glue Pressure Tests -2.00E-07 -1.50E-07 -1.00E-07 -5.00E-08 0.00E+00 5.00E-08 1.00E-07 1.50E-07 2.00E-07 2.50E-07 3.00E-07 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 Voltage (V) Current(Amps) No Pressure First Pressure Test Second Pressure Test PVA Adhesive and ZOT
  • 22. Device Selection • From the qualitative data we obtained from the macrodevices, we decided to further our venture into a microdevice using PVA glue as an integration staple because: – We felt it would be easiest to integrate – There was discernable electrical response (which allowed us to assume there was good conductivity) – The structure of the device was stable
  • 23. Quantifying Pressure Sensing • In order to adequately access whether the conductance/resistance is changing with pressure we made a special platform that allowed us to apply quantifiable pressure on top of a device. • What we expect is that the conductance should decrease with the application of pressure Apparatus created to apply quantifiable pressure on device. Rubber tip diameter is 3mm
  • 24. Pressure Testing: Glue Dispersed Powder on the Au Patterned Electrodes As the applied pressure increases, a noticeable decrease in the slope is Pressure on Glue-Dispersed ZnO - Trial 1 -3.00E-05 -2.00E-05 -1.00E-05 0.00E+00 1.00E-05 2.00E-05 3.00E-05 -4.5 -3.5 -2.5 -1.5 -0.5 0.5 1.5 2.5 3.5 4.5 Volts Amps 1kPa 3kPa 4.5kPa 6kPa 9kPa 15kPa Increasing Pressure Increasing Pressure
  • 25. Pressure Testing: Glue Dispersed Powder on the Au Patterned Electrodes Resistance varies with pressure between 1.5 and 3.5 V in both positive and negative regions. Pressure on Glue-Dispersed ZnO 1.00E+05 1.20E+05 1.40E+05 1.60E+05 1.80E+05 2.00E+05 2.20E+05 2.40E+05 -4.5 -3.5 -2.5 -1.5 -0.5 0.5 1.5 2.5 3.5 4.5 Volts Resistance(ohms) 1kN 3kN 4.5kN 6kN 9kN 15kN Increasing Pressure Increasing Resistance
  • 26. Lessons Learned • Working in a group of 10 is challenging: – Organization – Communication – Scheduling • Even though BlackBoard is a good tool, individual lab notebooks would have been useful • Competition for resources/equipment is fierce • Planning and executing a multi-phased project requires technical foresight.
  • 27. Future Work • Better apparatus for applying quantifiable pressure • Worth quantitatively investigating capacitance as a function of voltage • Comparing electrical and piezoelectric response of nanorods versus tetrapods • Modeling pressure versus resistance from data we obtain is necessary in order to: – Make a predictable device – Understand the nanomechanics of ZOT PVA composite
  • 28. Summary • Synthesized nanorods and tetrapods using vapor transport growth • Used lithography to create two horizontal electrode designs on silicon wafers • Integrated tetrapods into macroscale devices with: – Kapton Tape – PDMS – PVA Glue • Observed I-V response to pressure and light stimuli in devices • Quantified pressure effects on resistance on a wafer device

Editor's Notes

  • #16: New Slide 37, After “Methods Suspension” New Slide 37, After “Methods Suspension” New slide 37 after “Methods Suspension” I you move the SEM pic with the arrow and circle you have to move those too. I know there is a way to “laminate” them together but … ?