Publication | Closed Access
In-Fiber Semiconductor Filament Arrays
67
Citations
26
References
2008
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringOrdered ArrayNanostructured PolymerBiofabricationSoft MatterOptical PropertiesMicrofluidicsScaling ProcessBiophysicsMaterials SciencePhotonicsElectrical EngineeringNanofluidicsFiber OpticMultimaterial FiberMicrofabricationSelf-assemblyPolymer ScienceApplied PhysicsCylindrical ShellPolymer Self-assembly
We report a novel physical phenomenon in which a cylindrical shell undergoing a scaling process evolves into an ordered array of filaments upon reaching a characteristic thickness. We observe that the tendency to breakup is related to the material viscosity in a manner reminiscent of capillary instability. However, unlike the classical breakup of a fluid cylinder into droplets, the structural evolution in our system occurs exclusively in the cross sectional plane while uniformity is maintained in the axial direction. We propose a fluid front instability mechanism to account for the observed phenomena. The fleeting evolution of fluid breakup from a thin film to a filament array is captured in the frozen state by a thermal drawing process which results in extended lengths of solid sub-100 nm filaments encapsulated within a polymer fiber. Hundreds of glassy semiconductor filament arrays are precisely oriented within a polymer fiber matrix making electrical connections trivial. This approach offers unique opportunities for fabrication of nanometer scale devices of unprecedented lengths allowing simplified access and connectivity.
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