Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future March 29, 2008 STEM ED UMass.

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Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future March 29, 2008 STEM ED UMass

Transcript of Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future March 29, 2008 STEM ED UMass.

Page 1: Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future March 29, 2008 STEM ED UMass.

Nanotechnology:Past, Present, and Future

March 29, 2008

STEM ED UMass

Page 2: Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future March 29, 2008 STEM ED UMass.

Introduction to Nanotechnology:What, Why and How

UMass Amherst Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center

bnl

manchester

Page 3: Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future March 29, 2008 STEM ED UMass.

Nanotechnology: What?

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Nanotechnology

Nanotechnology is the understanding and control of matter at dimensions of roughly 1 to 100 nanometers, where unique phenomena enable novel applications.

1 nanometer = 1 billionth of a meter= 1 x 10-9 m

nano.gov

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How small are nanostructures?

Single Hair

Width = 0.1 mm

= 100 micrometers

= 100,000 nanometers !

1 nanometer = one billionth (10-9) meter

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Smaller still

Hair

.

Red blood cell

6,000 nanometersDNA

3 nanometers

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From DOE

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A Few Nanostructures Made at UMass100 nm dots 70 nm nanowires 200 nm rings

12 nm pores 14 nm dots

13 nm rings 25 nm honeycomb14 nm nanowires

18 nm pores

150 nm holes

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"Nano"

• Nanoscale - at the 1-100 nm scale, roughly• Nanostructure - an object that has nanoscale

features• Nanoscience - the properties of nanostructures

and the underlying science• Nanotechnology - the techniques for making and

characterizing nanostructures and putting them to use

• Nanomanufacturing - methods for producing nanostructures in reliable and commercially viable ways

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Nanotechnology: Why?

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10 GB2001

20 GB2002

40 GB2004

80 GB2006

160 GB2007

Example: Advancement of the iPod

Hard driveMagnetic data storage

Uses nanotechnology!

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Magnetic Data StorageA computer hard drive stores your data magnetically

Disk

N S

direction of disk motion

“ Write”Head

0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 _ _

“ Bits” ofinformation

NS

“ Read”Head

Signalcurrent

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Scaling Down to the Nanoscale

Increases the amount of data stored on a fixed amount of “real estate” !

Now ~ 100 billion bits/in2, future target more than 1 trillion bits/in2

25 DVDs on a disk the size of a quarter, orall Library of Congress books on a 1 sq ft tile!

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Why do we want to make things at the nanoscale?

• To make better and new products: smaller, cheaper, faster and more effective. (Electronics, catalysts, water purification, solar cells, coatings, medical diagnostics & therapy, etc)

• To introduce completely new physical phenomena to science, technology. (Quantum behavior and other effects.)

(More on why later)

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Nanotechnology: How?

• How to make nanostructures?• How to characterize and test them?

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Making Nanostructures: Nanofabrication

• Top down versus bottom up methods

•Lithography•Deposition•Etching•Machining

•Chemical•Self-Assembly

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Nanostructuresmacroscale (3D) object

widthdepth

height

nanofilm, or nanolayer (2D)

nanowire,nanorod, ornanocylinder (1D)

nanoparticle,nanodot,quantum dot (0D)

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Nanofilms(making thin objects)

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A monolayer NANOFILM (single layer of molecules)

~1 nm thick Langmuir film

An example of a FILM: Oil on water

This is an example of SELF-ASSEMBLY

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Nanofilm byThermal Evaporation

Vaporization or sublimation of a heated material onto a substrate in a vacuum chamber

vacuum~10-7 torr

sample

source

film

vacuumpump

QCM

vapor

resistive, e-beam, rf or laserheat source

Pressure must be held low to prevent contamination!

Au, Cr, Al, Ag, Cu, SiO, others

There are many otherthin film manufacturingtechniques

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Nanofilm by Electroplating

VI

Cu2+ + 2e- –> Cu(0)

"reduction"

CuSO4 dissolved in water

Cu(0) –> Cu2+ + 2e-

"oxidation"

anodecathode

If using an inert Pt electrode:

2 H2O –> O2 + 4H+ + 4e-

WorkingElectrode(WE)

CounterElectrode(CE)

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Imaging NanostructuresAtomic Force Microscope (AFM)

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.

"Optical Lever" for Profilometry

cantilever

laser

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.

"Optical Lever" for Profilometry

cantilever

laser

Long light path and a short cantilever gives large amplification

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Ato

mic

For

ce M

icro

scop

eA

tom

ic F

orce

Mic

rosc

ope

AFM Cantilever Chip AFM Instrument Head

Laser Beam Path Cantilever Deflection

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Image of Nickel AtomsSTM

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Lithography(controlling width and depth)

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Lithography

MarkTuominen

MarkTuominen

MarkTuominen

(Using a stencil or mask)

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Photolithography for Deposition

substrate

process recipe

spin on resist

resist

expose

mask (reticle)

develop

deposit

liftoffnarrow line

apply spin bake

spin coating

exposed unexposed

"scission"

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Lithography

IBMCopperWiringOn aComputerChip

PatternedSeveral Times

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Electron-Beam Lithography

Silicon crystal

Polymer film

Electron Beam

Nanoscopic Mask !

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Self-Assembled Nanostructuresand

Lithography Based on Self-Assembly

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Self Assembly

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Diatoms

priweb.org

sinancanan.net

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Gecko feet

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Abalone

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NANOFABRICATION BY SELF ASSEMBLY

Block “A” Block “B”

10% A 30% A 50% A 70% A 90% A

~10 nm

Ordered Phases

PMMA PS

Scale set by molecular size

Diblock Copolymers

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CORE CONCEPT FOR NANOFABRICATION Deposition

Template

EtchingMask

NanoporousMembrane

Remove polymerblock within cylinders(expose and develop)

Versatile, self-assembling, nanoscale lithographic system

(physical orelectrochemical)

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Application examples:Nanoelectronics

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Computer

Microprocessor"Heart of the computer"

Does the "thinking"

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Making Small SmallerAn Example: Electronics-Microprocessors

ibm.commacroscale

microscale

nanoscale

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Electronics Keep On Getting BetterMoore's "Law": Number of Transistors per Microprocessor Chip

intel.com

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Hard Disk Drives - a home for bits

Hitachi

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Improving Magnetic Data Storage Technology

• The UMass Amherst Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing is working to improve this technology

Granular Media

PerpendicularWrite Head

Soft Magnetic UnderLayer (SUL)

coil

Y. Sonobe, et al., JMMM (2006)

1 bit

• CHM Goal: Make "perfect" mediausing self-assembled nano-templates• Also, making new designs for storage

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

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nanoporous template

nanowires in a diblockcopolymer template

Electrodeposited Nanowires in aNanoporous Polymer Template (Mask)

1x1012 wires/in2

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Benefit: Sun is an unlimited source of electronic energy.

Solar Cells

Konarka

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Electric Solar CellsMade from single-crystal silicon wafers (conventionally)

cross-sectional view

n-type silicon

p-type silicon

+

-

Sunlight

Voltage “load”

+

-

Current

The load can be a lamp, an electric motor, a CD player, a toaster, etc

wires

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Nanostructured Solar Cells

+

-

Sunlight

Voltage “load”

CurrentMore interface area - More power!

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Nanotechnology R&D is interdisciplinary and impacts many applications

• Physics• Chemistry• Biology• Materials Science• Polymer Science• Electrical Engineering• Chemical Engineering• Mechanical Engineering• Medicine• And others

• Electronics• Materials• Health/Biotech• Chemical• Environmental• Energy• Aerospace• Automotive• Security• Forest products• And others

Page 50: Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future March 29, 2008 STEM ED UMass.

My Advice to Students:

• Pursue your interests• Ask questions• Be clever• Do!

Thanks for visiting UMass and learning about nanotechnology!

Re: Your future

Page 51: Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future March 29, 2008 STEM ED UMass.

Thanks from the UMass team!

Thanks learning about nanotechnology!