Toposelective vapor deposition of hybrid and inorganic materials inside nanocavities by polymeric templating and vapor phase infiltration

0Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Selective deposition of hybrid and inorganic materials inside nanostructures could enable major nanotechnological advances. However, inserting ready-made composites inside nanocavities may be difficult, and therefore, stepwise approaches are needed. In this paper, a poly(ethyl acrylate) template is grown selectively inside cavities via condensation-controlled toposelective vapor deposition, and the polymer is then hybridized by alumina, titania, or zinc oxide. The hybridization is carried out by infiltrating the polymer with a vapor-phase metalorganic precursor and water vapor either via a short-pulse (atomic layer deposition, ALD) or a long-pulse (vapor phase infiltration, VPI) sequence. When the polymer-MOx hybrid material is calcined at 450 °C in air, an inorganic phase is left as the residue. Various suspected confinement effects are discussed. The infiltration of inorganic materials is reduced in deeper layers of the cavity-grown polymer and is dependent on the cavity geometry. The structure of the inorganic deposition after calcination varies from scattered particles and their aggregates to cavity-capping films or cavity-filling low-density porous deposition, and the inorganic deposition is often anisotropically cracked. A large part of the infiltration is achieved already during the short-pulse experiments with a commercial ALD reactor. Furthermore, the infiltrated polymer is more resistant to dissolution in acetone whereas the inorganic component can still be heavily affected by phosphoric acid.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Lovikka, V. A., Airola, K., McGuinness, E., Zhang, C., Vehkamäki, M., Kemell, M., … Leskelä, M. (2022). Toposelective vapor deposition of hybrid and inorganic materials inside nanocavities by polymeric templating and vapor phase infiltration. Nanoscale Advances, 4(19), 4102–4113. https://doi.org/10.1039/d2na00291d

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free