Wafer-Scale Fabrication of Hierarchically Porous Silicon and Silica by Active Nanoparticle-Assisted Chemical Etching and Pseudomorphic Thermal Oxidation.
Stella GriesManuel BrinkerBerit Zeller-PlumhoffDagmar RingsTobias KrekelerElena LongoImke GrevingPatrick HuberPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2023)
Many biological materials exhibit a multiscale porosity with small, mostly nanoscale pores as well as large, macroscopic capillaries to simultaneously achieve optimized mass transport capabilities and lightweight structures with large inner surfaces. Realizing such a hierarchical porosity in artificial materials necessitates often sophisticated and expensive top-down processing that limits scalability. Here, an approach that combines self-organized porosity based on metal-assisted chemical etching (MACE) with photolithographically induced macroporosity for the synthesis of single-crystalline silicon with a bimodal pore-size distribution is presented, i.e., hexagonally arranged cylindrical macropores with 1 µm diameter separated by walls that are traversed by pores 60 nm across. The MACE process is mainly guided by a metal-catalyzed reduction-oxidation reaction, where silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) serve as the catalyst. In this process, the AgNPs act as self-propelled particles that are constantly removing silicon along their trajectories. High-resolution X-ray imaging and electron tomography reveal a resulting large open porosity and inner surface for potential applications in high-performance energy storage, harvesting and conversion or for on-chip sensorics and actuorics. Finally, the hierarchically porous silicon membranes can be transformed structure-conserving by thermal oxidation into hierarchically porous amorphous silica, a material that could be of particular interest for opto-fluidic and (bio-)photonic applications due to its multiscale artificial vascularization.
Keyphrases
- silver nanoparticles
- high resolution
- room temperature
- tissue engineering
- metal organic framework
- hydrogen peroxide
- highly efficient
- electron transfer
- high speed
- visible light
- mass spectrometry
- depressive symptoms
- single cell
- ionic liquid
- electron microscopy
- high throughput
- minimally invasive
- squamous cell carcinoma
- genome wide
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- nitric oxide
- human health
- magnetic resonance
- radiation therapy
- diabetic rats
- lymph node
- gold nanoparticles
- drug induced
- tandem mass spectrometry
- optic nerve
- dna methylation
- early breast cancer
- rectal cancer
- energy transfer
- solar cells
- stress induced
- locally advanced