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Nanoscale three-dimensional fabrication based on mechanically guided assembly.

Junseong AhnJi-Hwan HaYongrok JeongYoung JungJungrak ChoiJimin GuSoon Hyoung HwangMingu KangJiwoo KoSeokjoo ChoHyeonseok HanKyungnam KangJaeho ParkSohee JeonJun-Ho JeongInkyu Park
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
The growing demand for complex three-dimensional (3D) micro-/nanostructures has inspired the development of the corresponding manufacturing techniques. Among these techniques, 3D fabrication based on mechanically guided assembly offers the advantages of broad material compatibility, high designability, and structural reversibility under strain but is not applicable for nanoscale device printing because of the bottleneck at nanofabrication and design technique. Herein, a configuration-designable nanoscale 3D fabrication is suggested through a robust nanotransfer methodology and design of substrate's mechanical characteristics. Covalent bonding-based two-dimensional nanotransfer allowing for nanostructure printing on elastomer substrates is used to address fabrication problems, while the feasibility of configuration design through the modulation of substrate's mechanical characteristics is examined using analytical calculations and numerical simulations, allowing printing of various 3D nanostructures. The printed nanostructures exhibit strain-independent electrical properties and are therefore used to fabricate stretchable H 2 and NO 2 sensors with high performances stable under external strains of 30%.
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