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Dewetting-Assisted Patterning: A Lithography-Free Route to Synthesize Black and Colored Silicon.

Amin FarhadiTheresa BartschmidGilles Remi Bourret
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
We report the use of thermal dewetting to structure gold-based catalytic etching masks for metal-assisted chemical etching (MACE). The approach involves low-temperature dewetting of metal films to generate metal holey meshes with tunable morphologies. Combined with MACE, dewetting-assisted patterning is a simple, benchtop route to synthesize Si nanotubes, Si nanowalls, and Si nanowires with defined dimensions and optical properties. The approach is compatible with the synthesis of both black and colored nanostructured silicon substrates. In particular, we report the lithography-free fabrication of silicon nanowires with diameters down to 40 nm that support leaky wave-guiding modes, giving rise to vibrant colors. Additionally, micrometer-sized areas with tunable film composition and thickness were patterned via shadow masking. After dewetting and MACE, such patterned metal films produced regions with distinct nanostructured silicon morphologies and colors. To-date, the fabrication of colored silicon has relied on complicated nanoscale patterning processes. Dewetting-assisted patterning provides a simpler alternative that eliminates this requirement. Finally, the simple transfer of resonant SiNWs into ethanolic solutions with well-defined light absorption properties is reported. Such solution-dispersible SiNWs could open new avenues for the fabrication of ultrathin optoelectronic devices with enhanced and tunable light absorption.
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