0000000000033814
AUTHOR
Ilmar Kink
Analysis of static friction and elastic forces in a nanowire bent on a flat surface: A comparative study
ZnO nanowires bent to a complex shape and held in place by static friction force from supporting flat surface are investigated experimentally and theoretically. The complex shapes are obtained by bending the nanowires inside a scanning electron microscope with a sharp tip attached to a nanopositioner. Several methods previously described in the literature are applied along with author's original method to calculate the distributed friction force and stored elastic energy in the nanowires from the bending profile. This comparative study evidences the importance of the usage of appropriate models for accurate analysis of the nanowires profile. It is demonstrated that incomplete models can lea…
Modeling of kinetic and static friction between an elastically bent nanowire and a flat surface
Friction forces for a nanowire (NW) elastically bent on flat substrate were investigated both theoretically and experimentally. Models based on elastic beam theory were proposed considering balance of external, frictional, and elastic forces along the NW. The distributed friction force was determined for two cases: (i) the NW was uniformly dragged at its midpoint and bent by kinetic friction forces and (ii) the NW was held in a bent state by static friction forces. The first case considers a uniform distribution of kinetic friction along the NW and enables the measurement of the friction force from the elastically deformed NW profile. The second case exploits the interplay between static fr…
Elasticity and yield strength of pentagonal silver nanowires: In situ bending tests
This paper reports in situ mechanical characterization of silver nanowires (Ag NWs) inside a scanning electron microscope using a cantilevered beam bending technique. Measurements consisted in controlled bending of a cantilevered NW by the tip of an atomic force microscope glued to the force sensor. Relatively high degree of elasticity followed by either plastic deformation or fracture was observed in bending experiments. Experimental data were numerically fitted into the model based on the elastic beam theory and values of Young modulus and yield strength were extracted. Measurements were performed on twenty Ag NWs with diameters from 76 nm to 211 nm. Average Young modulus and yield streng…
Phase and structural transformations in annealed copper coatings in relation to oxide whisker growth
Abstract We describe structural and phase transformation in copper coatings made of microparticles during heating and annealing in air in the temperature range up to 400 °C. Such thermal treatment is accompanied by intensive CuO nanowhisker growth on the coating surface and the formation of the layered oxide phases (Cu 2 O and CuO) in the coating interior. X-ray diffraction and focused ion beam (FIB) are employed to characterize the multilayer structure of annealed copper coatings. Formation of volumetric defects such as voids and cracks in the coating is demonstrated.
Electron beam induced growth of silver nanowhiskers
Abstract In this paper we report an electron beam induced rapid (up to several tens of nm/s) growth of silver nanowhiskers from silver nanowire networks coated with TiO 2 by sol–gel method. Different growth conditions are tested and it is demonstrated that growth is optimal for samples with the film thickness in the range 50–200 nm and previously annealed at 400 °C for 5–10 min. Growth mechanism is attributed to cooperative effect of several factors including diffusion of Ag into TiO 2 matrix during annealing, electromigration of Ag atoms caused by strong electric field, and presence of mechanical stresses at interfaces enhanced by thermal expansions due to local heating under e-beam illumi…
Real-time measurements of sliding friction and elastic properties of ZnO nanowires inside a scanning electron microscope
Abstract A real-time nanomanipulation technique inside a scanning electron microscope (SEM) has been used to investigate the elastic and frictional (tribological) properties of zinc oxide nanowires (NWs). A NW was translated over a surface of an oxidised silicon wafer using a nanomanipulator with a glued atomic-force microscopic tip. The shape of the NW elastically deformed during the translation was used to determine the distributed kinetic friction force. The same NW was then positioned half-suspended on edges of trenches cut by a focused ion beam through a silicon wafer. In order to measure Young’s modulus, the NW was bent by pushing it at the free end with the tip, and the interaction f…
Manipulation of nanoparticles of different shapes inside a scanning electron microscope
In this work polyhedron-like gold and sphere-like silver nanoparticles (NPs) were manipulated on an oxidized Si substrate to study the dependence of the static friction and the contact area on the particle geometry. Measurements were performed inside a scanning electron microscope (SEM) that was equipped with a high-precision XYZ-nanomanipulator. To register the occurring forces a quartz tuning fork (QTF) with a glued sharp probe was used. Contact areas and static friction forces were calculated by using different models and compared with the experimentally measured force. The effect of NP morphology on the nanoscale friction is discussed.
Some aspects of formation and tribological properties of silver nanodumbbells.
In this paper, metal nanodumbbells (NDs) formed by laser-induced melting of Ag nanowires (NWs) on an oxidized silicon substrate and their tribological properties are investigated. The mechanism of ND formation is proposed and illustrated with finite element method simulations. Tribological measurements consist in controllable real-time manipulation of NDs inside a scanning electron microscope (SEM) with simultaneous force registration. The geometry of NDs enables to distinguish between different types of motion, i.e. rolling, sliding and rotation. Real contact areas are calculated from the traces left after the displacement of NDs and compared to the contact areas predicted by the contact m…
Real-time manipulation of ZnO nanowires on a flat surface employed for tribological measurements: Experimental methods and modeling
Elastic and tribological properties of zinc oxide nanowires (NWs) on Si wafer and highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) are experimentally investigated and theoretically interpreted. Measurements are performed inside a scanning electron microscope (SEM) using real-time manipulation technique that enables two possible ways of data registration: “external” force registration with quartz tuning fork (QTF) based sensor and “internal” force registration utilizing in situ observed elastic deformation of NWs. Young modulus is determined by loading half-suspended NW at its free end and then employed for the following tribological experiments. Maximal static friction force is estimated when NW i…
The effect of substrate roughness on the static friction of CuO nanowires
Abstract The dependence of static friction on surface roughness was measured for copper oxide nanowires on silicon wafers coated with amorphous silicon. The surface roughness of the substrate was varied to different extent by the chemical etching of the substrates. For friction measurements, the nanowires (NWs) were pushed by an atomic-force microscope (AFM) tip at one end of the NW until complete displacement of the NW was achieved. The elastic bending profile of a NW during this manipulation process was used to calculate the ultimate static friction force. A strong dependence of static friction on surface roughness was demonstrated. The real contact area and interfacial shear strength wer…
Tribological Aspects of In Situ Manipulation of Nanostructures Inside Scanning Electron Microscope
This chapter is dedicated to manipulation of nanostructures inside a scanning electron (SEM) microscope employed for real-time tribological measurements. Different approaches to force registration and calculation of static and kinetic friction are described. Application of the considered methodology to Au and Ag nanoparticles, as well as ZnO and CuO nanowires, is demonstrated. Advantages and limitations of the methodology in comparison to traditional AFM-based manipulation techniques are discussed.
Real-time manipulation of gold nanoparticles inside a scanning electron microscope
Abstract The forces needed to overcome static friction and move 150 nm diameter Au nanoparticles on an oxidized Si substrate were measured in Normal and Shear oscillation modes inside a scanning electron microscope (SEM) in real time. The experimental setup consisted of a quartz tuning fork (QTF) mounted onto a high-precision 3D nanomanipulator used with a glued silicon or tungsten tip as a force sensor. Static friction was found to range from tens of nN to several hundred nN. Large variations in static friction values were related to differences in particle shape. Kinetic friction tended to be close to the detection limit and in most cases did not exceed several nN. The influence of therma…