Abstract
The ability to produce small scale, crystalline silicon spheres is of significant technological and scientific importance, yet scalable methods for doing so have remained elusive. Here we demonstrate a silicon nanosphere fabrication process based on an optical fibre drawing technique. A silica-cladded silicon-core fibre with diameters down to 340 nm is continuously fed into a flame defining an axial thermal gradient and the continuous formation of spheres whose size is controlled by the feed speed is demonstrated. In particular, spheres of diameter <500 nm smaller than those produced under isothermal heating conditions are shown and analysed. A fibre with dual cores, p-type and n-type silicon, is drawn and processed into spheres. Spatially coherent break-up leads to the joining of the spheres into a bispherical silicon 'p-n molecule'. The resulting device is measured to reveal a rectifying I-V curve consistent with the formation of a p-n junction. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gumennik, A., Wei, L., Lestoquoy, G., Stolyarov, A. M., Jia, X., Rekemeyer, P. H., … Fink, Y. (2013). Silicon-in-silica spheres via axial thermal gradient in-fibre capillary instabilities. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3216
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.