Advanced Characterization of Aerogel Films Deposited via Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly

abstract: A new nanoparticle deposition technique, Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly (AIDA), was extensively characterized for material structures and properties. Aerogel films can be deposited directly onto a substrate with AIDA without the long aging and drying steps in the sol-gel method. Electro...

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Other Authors: Carpenter, Joe Victor (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57320
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-573202020-06-02T03:01:27Z Advanced Characterization of Aerogel Films Deposited via Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly abstract: A new nanoparticle deposition technique, Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly (AIDA), was extensively characterized for material structures and properties. Aerogel films can be deposited directly onto a substrate with AIDA without the long aging and drying steps in the sol-gel method. Electron microscopy, pore size analysis, thermal conductivity, and optical measurements show the nanoparticle (NP) films to be similar to typical silica aerogel. Haze of nanoparticle films modeled as scattering sites correlates strongly with pore size distribution. Supporting evidence was obtained from particle sizes and aggregates using electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering. NP films showed interlayers of higher porosity and large aggregates formed by tensile film stress. To better understand film stress and NP adhesion, chemical bonding analyses were performed for samples annealed up to 900 °C. Analysis revealed that about 50% of the NP surfaces are functionalized by hydroxyl (-OH) groups, providing for hydrogen bonding. Ellipsometric porosimetry was used to further understand the mechanical properties by providing a measure of strain upon capillary pressure from filling pores. Upon annealing to 200 °C, the films lost water resulting in closer bonding of NPs and higher Young’s modulus. Upon further annealing up to 900 °C, the films lost hydroxyl bonds while gaining siloxane bonds, reducing Young’s modulus. The application of ellipsometric porosimetry to hydrophilic coatings brings into question the validity of pore size distribution calculations for materials that hold onto water molecules and result in generally smaller calculated pore sizes. Doped hydrogenated microcrystalline silicon was grown on crystalline silicon NPs, as a test case of an application for NP films to reduce parasitic absorption in silicon heterojunction solar cells. Parasitic absorption of blue light could be reduced because microcrystalline silicon has a mix of direct and indirect bandgap, giving lower blue absorption than amorphous silicon. Using Ultraviolet Raman spectroscopy, the crystallinity of films as thin as 13 nm was determined rapidly (in 1 minute) and non-destructively. A mono-layer of nanocrystals was applied as seeds for p-doped microcrystalline silicon growth and resulted in higher crystallinity films. Applications of the method could be explored for other nanocrystalline materials. Dissertation/Thesis Carpenter, Joe Victor (Author) Holman, Zachary C (Advisor) Bertoni, Mariana I (Committee member) Chan, Candace K (Committee member) Smith, David J (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Materials Science Nanoscience Nanotechnology Aerogel film Aerosol deposition Electron microscopy Ellipsometric porosimtry Haze modeling Spectroscopy eng 166 pages Doctoral Dissertation Materials Science and Engineering 2020 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57320 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Materials Science
Nanoscience
Nanotechnology
Aerogel film
Aerosol deposition
Electron microscopy
Ellipsometric porosimtry
Haze modeling
Spectroscopy
spellingShingle Materials Science
Nanoscience
Nanotechnology
Aerogel film
Aerosol deposition
Electron microscopy
Ellipsometric porosimtry
Haze modeling
Spectroscopy
Advanced Characterization of Aerogel Films Deposited via Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly
description abstract: A new nanoparticle deposition technique, Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly (AIDA), was extensively characterized for material structures and properties. Aerogel films can be deposited directly onto a substrate with AIDA without the long aging and drying steps in the sol-gel method. Electron microscopy, pore size analysis, thermal conductivity, and optical measurements show the nanoparticle (NP) films to be similar to typical silica aerogel. Haze of nanoparticle films modeled as scattering sites correlates strongly with pore size distribution. Supporting evidence was obtained from particle sizes and aggregates using electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering. NP films showed interlayers of higher porosity and large aggregates formed by tensile film stress. To better understand film stress and NP adhesion, chemical bonding analyses were performed for samples annealed up to 900 °C. Analysis revealed that about 50% of the NP surfaces are functionalized by hydroxyl (-OH) groups, providing for hydrogen bonding. Ellipsometric porosimetry was used to further understand the mechanical properties by providing a measure of strain upon capillary pressure from filling pores. Upon annealing to 200 °C, the films lost water resulting in closer bonding of NPs and higher Young’s modulus. Upon further annealing up to 900 °C, the films lost hydroxyl bonds while gaining siloxane bonds, reducing Young’s modulus. The application of ellipsometric porosimetry to hydrophilic coatings brings into question the validity of pore size distribution calculations for materials that hold onto water molecules and result in generally smaller calculated pore sizes. Doped hydrogenated microcrystalline silicon was grown on crystalline silicon NPs, as a test case of an application for NP films to reduce parasitic absorption in silicon heterojunction solar cells. Parasitic absorption of blue light could be reduced because microcrystalline silicon has a mix of direct and indirect bandgap, giving lower blue absorption than amorphous silicon. Using Ultraviolet Raman spectroscopy, the crystallinity of films as thin as 13 nm was determined rapidly (in 1 minute) and non-destructively. A mono-layer of nanocrystals was applied as seeds for p-doped microcrystalline silicon growth and resulted in higher crystallinity films. Applications of the method could be explored for other nanocrystalline materials. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Materials Science and Engineering 2020
author2 Carpenter, Joe Victor (Author)
author_facet Carpenter, Joe Victor (Author)
title Advanced Characterization of Aerogel Films Deposited via Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly
title_short Advanced Characterization of Aerogel Films Deposited via Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly
title_full Advanced Characterization of Aerogel Films Deposited via Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly
title_fullStr Advanced Characterization of Aerogel Films Deposited via Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly
title_full_unstemmed Advanced Characterization of Aerogel Films Deposited via Aerosol Impaction-Driven Assembly
title_sort advanced characterization of aerogel films deposited via aerosol impaction-driven assembly
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57320
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