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Correlating Nanostructure, Optical and Electronic Properties of Nanogranular Silver Layers during Polymer-Template-Assisted Sputter Deposition

Authors :
Gensch, Marc
Schwartzkopf, Matthias
Ohm, Wiebke
Brett, Calvin
Pandit, Pallavi
Varalil, Sarathlal Koyiloth
Biessmann, Lorenz
Kreuzer, Lucas P.
Drewes, Jonas
Polonskyi, Oleksandr
Strunskus, Thomas
Faupel, Franz
Stierle, Andreas
Mueller-Buschbaum, Peter
Roth, Stephan V.
Gensch, Marc
Schwartzkopf, Matthias
Ohm, Wiebke
Brett, Calvin
Pandit, Pallavi
Varalil, Sarathlal Koyiloth
Biessmann, Lorenz
Kreuzer, Lucas P.
Drewes, Jonas
Polonskyi, Oleksandr
Strunskus, Thomas
Faupel, Franz
Stierle, Andreas
Mueller-Buschbaum, Peter
Roth, Stephan V.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Tailoring the optical and electronic properties of nanostructured polymer-metal composites demonstrates great potential for efficient fabrication of modern organic optical and electronic devices such as flexible sensors, transistors, diodes, or photovoltaics. Self-assembled polymer metal nanocomposites offer an excellent perspective for creating hierarchical nanostructures on macroscopic scales by simple bottom-up processes. We investigate the growth processes of nanogranular silver (Ag) layers on diblock copolymer thin film templates during sputter deposition. The Ag growth is strongly driven by self-assembly and selective wetting on the lamella structure of polystyrene-block-poly (methyl methacrylate). We correlate the emerging nanoscale morphologies with collective optical and electronic properties and quantify the difference in Ag growth on the corresponding homopolymer thin films. Thus, we are able to determine the influence of the respective polymer template and observe substrate effects on the Ag cluster percolation threshold, which affects the insulator-to-metal transition (IMT). Optical spectroscopy in the UV-vis regime reveals localized surface plasmon resonance for the metal polymer composite. Their maximum absorption is observed around the IMT due to the subsequent long-range electron conduction in percolated nanogranular Ag layers. Using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, we identify the oxidation of Ag at the acrylate side chains as an essential influencing factor driving the selective wetting behavior in the early growth stages. The results of polymer-templated cluster growth are corroborated by atomic force microscopy and field emission scanning electron microscopy.<br />QC 20190912

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234957650
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021.acsami.9b08594