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Bioinspired Structural Colors Fabricated with ZnO Quasi-Ordered Nanostructures.

Geon Hwee KimTaechang AnGeunbae Lim
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2017)
Despite their advantages in different applications, structural colors are difficult to use because of the inability to change a structural color once it is implemented, as well as their high fabrication costs; implementing multiple structural colors simultaneously on one substrate is a challenge as well. In this study, structural colors were reproduced using quasi-ordered scattering to mitigate these issues. To this end, a ZnO flower-like structure having unimodal distributions of size and spacing was fabricated by ZnO hydrothermal growth. This fabricated nanostructure has a thickness on the order of 103 nm and a diameter on the order of 102 nm. The thickness and diameter increase in proportion with the synthesis time (thickness growth rate = 43 nm/min, diameter growth rate = 20 nm/min). The shape of the nanostructure can be easily tuned by simply adjusting the synthesis and etching times. This method combines the advantages of top-down and bottom-up synthetic approaches in that the structural color can be continuously modified once fabricated.
Keyphrases
  • photodynamic therapy
  • optical coherence tomography
  • room temperature
  • quantum dots
  • light emitting
  • optic nerve
  • risk assessment