Zirconium-based metal-organic frameworks, including UiO-66 and related frameworks, have become the focus of considerable research in the area of chemical warfare agent (CWA) decontamination. However, little work has been reported exploring these metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) for CWA sensing applications. For many sensing approaches, the growth of high-quality thin films of the active material is required, and thin film growth methods must be compatible with complex device architectures. Several approaches to synthesize thin films of UiO-66 have been described but many of these existing methods are complex or time consuming. We describe the development of a simple and rapid microwave assisted synthesis of oriented UiO-66 thin films on unmodified silicon (Si) and gold (Au) substrates. Thin films of UiO-66 and UiO-66-NH2 can be grown in as little as 2 min on gold substrates and 30 min on Si substrates. The film morphology and orientation are characterized and the effects of reaction time and temperature on thin film growth on Au are investigated. Both reaction time and temperature impact the overgrowth of protruding discrete crystallites in the thin film layer but, surprisingly, no strong correlation is observed between film thickness and reaction time or temperature. We also briefly describe the synthesis of Zr/Ce solid solution thin films of UiO-66 on Au and report the first synthesis of a solid solution thin film MOF. Finally, we demonstrate the utility of the microwave method for the facile functionalization of two sensor architectures, plasmonic nanohole arrays and microresonators, with UiO-66 thin films.
This study relates structure, properties and thermodynamics, through synthesis, characterization and heat of formation measurements of rare earth iridate pyrochlore (RE2Ir2O7; RE = Y, Eu, Pr) crystalline powders. The RE2Ir2O7 phases are synthesized by high temperature solid-state synthesis methods. X-ray diffraction and elemental analysis techniques are utilized to validate the synthesis and enable structural comparisons. Trends in the bond angles indicate deviations from the Y and Eu analogs for the Pr2Ir2O7 phase. High temperature oxide melt solution calorimetry is used to determine the heats of formation of each phase. Breaking the trend expected across the rare earth series, the enthalpy of formation for Pr2Ir2O7 is more exothermic than the anticipated from the Y and Eu analogs.
We present progress on the synthesis of semimetal Cd3As2 by metal–organic chemical-vapor deposition (MOCVD). Specifically, we have optimized the growth conditions needed to obtain technologically useful growth rates and acceptable thin-film microstructures, with our studies evaluating the effects of varying the temperature, pressure, and carrier-gas type for MOCVD of Cd3As2 when performed using dimethylcadmium and tertiary-butylarsine precursors. In the course of the optimization studies, exploratory Cd3As2 growths are attempted on GaSb substrates, strain-relaxed InAs buffer layers grown on GaSb substrates, and InAs substrates. Notably, only the InAs-terminated substrate surfaces yield desirable results. Extensive microstructural studies of Cd3As2 thin films on InAs are performed by using multiple advanced imaging microscopies and x-ray diffraction modalities. The studied films are 5–75 nm in thickness and consist of oriented, coalesced polycrystals with lateral domain widths of 30–80 nm. The most optimized films are smooth and specular, exhibiting a surface roughness as low as 1.0 nm rms. Under cross-sectional imaging, the Cd3As2-InAs heterointerface appears smooth and abrupt at a lower film thickness, ~30 nm, but becomes quite irregular as the average thickness increases to ~55 nm. The films are strain-relaxed with a residual biaxial tensile strain (ϵxx = +0.0010) that opposes the initially compressive lattice-mismatch strain of Cd3As2 coherent on InAs (ϵxx = - 0.042). Importantly, phase-identification studies find a thin-film crystal structure consistent with the P42/nbc space group, placing MOCVD-grown Cd3As2 among the Dirac semimetals of substantial interest for topological quantum materials studies.
Ferroelectric phase stability in hafnium oxide is reported to be influenced by factors that include composition, biaxial stress, crystallite size, and oxygen vacancies. In the present work, the ferroelectric performance of atomic layer deposited Hf0.5Zr0.5O2 (HZO) prepared between TaN electrodes that are processed under conditions to induce variable biaxial stresses is evaluated. The post-processing stress states of the HZO films reveal no dependence on the as-deposited stress of the adjacent TaN electrodes. All HZO films maintain tensile biaxial stress following processing, the magnitude of which is not observed to strongly influence the polarization response. Subsequent composition measurements of stress-varied TaN electrodes reveal changes in stoichiometry related to the different preparation conditions. HZO films in contact with Ta-rich TaN electrodes exhibit higher remanent polarizations and increased ferroelectric phase fractions compared to those in contact with N-rich TaN electrodes. HZO films in contact with Ta-rich TaN electrodes also have higher oxygen vacancy concentrations, indicating that a chemical interaction between the TaN and HZO layers ultimately impacts the ferroelectric orthorhombic phase stability and polarization performance. The results of this work demonstrate a necessity to carefully consider the role of electrode processing and chemistry on performance of ferroelectric hafnia films.
Optical tags provide a way to quickly and unambiguously identify valuable assets. Current tag fluorophore options lack the tunability to allow combined methods of encoding in a single material. Herein we report a design strategy to encode multilayer complexity in a family of heterometallic rare-earth metal–organic frameworks based on highly connected nonanuclear clusters. To impart both intricacy and security, a synergistic approach was implemented resulting in both overt (visible) and covert (near-infrared, NIR) properties, with concomitant multi-emissive spectra and tunable luminescence lifetimes. Tag authentication is validated with a variety of orthogonal detection methodologies. Importantly, the effect induced by subtle compositional changes on intermetallic energy transfer, and thus on the resulting photophysical properties, is demonstrated. This strategy can be widely implemented to create a large library of highly complex, difficult-to-counterfeit optical tags.
Physical vapor deposition of organic explosives enables growth of polycrystalline films with a unique microstructure and morphology compared to the bulk material. This study demonstrates the ability to control crystal orientation and porosity in pentaerythritol tetranitrate films by varying the interfacial energy between the substrate and the vapor-deposited explosive. Variation in density, porosity, surface roughness, and optical properties is achieved in the explosive film, with significant implications for initiation sensitivity and detonation performance of the explosive material. Various surface science techniques, including angle-resolved X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and multiliquid contact angle analysis, are utilized to characterize interfacial characteristics between the substrate and explosive film. Optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy of pentaerythritol tetranitrate surfaces and fracture cross sections illustrate the difference in morphology evolution and the microstructure achieved through surface energy modification. X-ray diffraction studies with the Tilt-A-Whirl three-dimensional pole figure rendering and texture analysis software suite reveal that high surface energy substrates result in a preferred (110) out-of-plane orientation of pentaerythritol tetranitrate crystallites and denser films. Low surface energy substrates create more randomly textured pentaerythritol tetranitrate and lead to nanoscale porosity and lower density films. This work furthers the scientific basis for interfacial engineering of polycrystalline organic explosive films through control of surface energy, enabling future study of dynamic and reactive detonative phenomena at the microscale. Results of this study also have potential applications to active pharmaceutical ingredients, stimuli-responsive polymer films, organic thin film transistors, and other areas.
Germanium–antimony–telluride has emerged as a nonvolatile phase change memory material due to the large resistivity contrast between amorphous and crystalline states, rapid crystallization, and cyclic endurance. Improving thermal phase stability, however, has necessitated further alloying with optional addition of a quaternary species (e.g., C). In this work, the thermal transport implications of this additional species are investigated using frequency-domain thermoreflectance in combination with structural characterization derived from x-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. Specifically, the room temperature thermal conductivity and heat capacity of (Ge2Sb2Te5)1–xCx are reported as a function of carbon concentration (x ≤ 0:12) and anneal temperature (T ≤ 350 °C) with results assessed in reference to the measured phase, structure, and electronic resistivity. Phase stability imparted by the carbon comes with comparatively low thermal penalty as materials exhibiting similar levels of crystallinity have comparable thermal conductivity despite the addition of carbon. The additional thermal stability provided by the carbon does, however, necessitate higher anneal temperatures to achieve similar levels of structural order.