Richard S.
Schäufele
ab,
Miguel
Vazquez-Pufleau
a and
Juan J.
Vilatela
*a
aIMDEA Materials, Madrid, 28049, Spain. E-mail: juanjose.vilatela@imdea.org; Tel: +34 915493422
bDepartment of Applied Physics, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Cantoblanco, 28049, Madrid, Spain
First published on 20th August 2020
Assembling nanostructured building blocks into network materials unlocks macroscopic properties inaccessible with monolithic solids, notably toughness and tolerance to electrochemical alloying. A method is reported for large-scale, continuous synthesis of silicon nanowires (SiNWs) suspended in the gas phase and their direct assembly into macroscopic sheets. Performing gas-phase growth of SiNWs through floating catalyst chemical vapor deposition using an aerosol of gold nanoparticles eliminates the need for substrates, increasing the growth rate by a factor of 500, reaching 1.4 μm s−1 and leading to very long SiNWs. The combined high aspect ratio (>210) and large concentration of SiNWs in the gas-phase (1.5 × 107 cm−3) enable the formation of macroscopic solids solely composed of percolated SiNWs, such as free-standing sheets and continuous metre-long SiNW tapes. Sheet samples of small diameter SiNWs (<25 nm) combine extraordinary flexibility in bending, tensile ductility around 3%, and over 50-fold higher toughness than Si-based anodes (fracture energy 0.18 ± 0.1 J g−1). This synthesis and assembly process should be applicable to virtually any one-dimensional inorganic nanomaterial producible by thermochemical methods.
New conceptsWe present a new universal route to produce continuous sheets of inorganic nanowires directly assembled through their growth suspended in a gas stream, with textile-like properties and an order-of-magnitude higher toughness than monolithic analogues. Drawing on evidence that chemical vapour deposition can be conducted with catalyst aerosols, the manuscript demonstrates the synthesis of silicon nanowires (SiNWs) floating in the gas phase, at high particle concentration and unprecedented fast growth rate, enabling the direct formation of percolating networks and fabrication of continuous macroscopic solids solely composed of SiNWs. Their network structure of bundled nanowires makes them flexible in bending and tolerant to knotting, similar to fabrics and in stark contrast with monolithic ceramics. Deformation through network reorganisation and nanowire stress transfer in shear lead to high tensile toughness, with exceptionally high fracture energy compared to regular Si materials, and similar to sheets of high-performance nanocarbons or boron nitride nanotubes. The synthesis method should be applicable to virtually any one-dimensional inorganic nanomaterial producible by thermochemical methods. Moreover, controlling percolation through aspect ratio and concentration in the gas phase gives access to novel network materials ranging from transparent conductors to dense fibres using the same process; with an inherent toughness attractive for mechanically augmented devices. |
A fascinating prospect is the development of a generic route to assemble 1D inorganic nanostructures into continuous networks forming free-standing macroscopic materials. Considering that most inorganic 1D nanostructures can be synthesized by substrate-based chemical vapor deposition (CVD),13 it is promising to eliminate the substrate by using an aerosol of catalyst nanoparticles floating in a gas stream14 to grow nanowires in the gas phase and perform their assembly into macroscopic networks in one stage. In this work, we demonstrate large-scale, continuous synthesis of SiNWs in the gas-phase by floating catalyst chemical vapour deposition (FCCVD) and direct assembly into macroscopic structures resembling tough fabrics or sheets. When composed of small diameter SiNWs, the sheets are flexible, can be knotted, and undergo mechanical deformation as a textile, absorbing on average 0.18 J g−1 under tensile deformation, more than an order of magnitude above monolithic Si wafers used in optoelectronics or Si microparticle battery electrodes.
We have found a wide window of reaction conditions leading to the successful growth of SiNWs, but optimum sample quality in terms of crystallinity, reduced content of self-nucleated Si nanoparticles and low tapering is currently obtained by conducting the reaction at 650 °C, using silane at a concentration of 1.0% in a mixture of N2 and H2 as carrier gases. A typical sample produced under these conditions has over 95 vol% of SiNW, with around 1 vol% Au residual catalyst. The SiNWs are long, straight and mono-crystalline (diamond structure), with their main axis parallel to 〈110〉. Examples of electron micrographs are shown in Fig. 2. We determined the distributions of SiNW diameter and aspect ratio by image analysis of electron micrographs (Fig. 2 and Fig. S3, ESI†). They show an average diameter of Φ = 20.0 ± 5.5 nm and an aspect ratio of s = 214.3 ± 63.8. There is no observed correlation between nanowire aspect ratio and diameter; it then follows that thicker nanowires tend to be longer (reaching up to 13 μm) (Fig. S4, ESI†). This suggests that the availability of SiH4 is not the reaction rate-limiting step and that growth rate depends on the catalyst particle size. To avoid overestimating the length in case electron micrograph analysis is biased towards thicker SiNWs, the average length can be calculated from the product of average diameter and average aspect ratio, which results in L = 4.3 ± 2.3 μm.
A key aspect of the reaction enabling the formation of macroscopic networks of SiNWs lies in the simultaneous achievement of a very fast growth rate and high throughput. For a typical residence time of 8 s, a high estimate calculated from gas velocity through the reactor hot zone, the average growth rate can reach 1400 nm s−1, which is orders of magnitude higher than conventional gold-catalysed substrate growth of SiNWs, typically at around 2–15 nm s−1 (Fig. S1, ESI†). Similar enhancements in growth rate compared to substrate-based processes have been observed in CNTs7 and GaAs NWs14 grown by FCCVD, and thus seem to be a generic feature of this synthesis mode. We attribute them to faster kinetics for precursor transport in floating catalyst conditions resulting from a much larger separation between NWs, which avoids reactant depletion zones, and the fact that both the precursors and the catalyst can diffuse simultaneously. But very importantly, the growth of long, highly crystalline SiNWs reported here is achieved at high 1D nanoparticle concentration in the reactor. Based on throughput determined from direct measurement of sheet sample mass, we estimate a typical nanowire number concentration of 1.5 × 107 cm−3 in the gas phase.
The combined high aspect ratio and high concentration in the reactor favour the aggregation of SiNWs through the formation of entanglements and contact between SiNWs, thus enabling collection into mechanically robust macroscopic ensembles. A useful process descriptor can be derived from the general theory of particle networks: a continuous (percolating) particle network forms above a critical volume concentration (vp), determined by the particle excluded volume and thus related to its aspect ratio (s) as vp ≈ 0.5/s.21 Drawing from this simple relation, we use the product of aspect ratio and particle volume concentration in the reactor (vs) as a figure of merit to describe the probability for 1D objects produced in the gas-phase to form continuous networks. Expressed in terms of particle diameter (Φ), length (L) and number concentration (n) it leads to vs = 0.25πΦnL2. This simple “aerogelation parameter” captures, for example, the importance of increasing concentration and length simultaneously. In Table 1, we compare the values of vs for various processes of gas-phase synthesis of nanomaterials leading to different macroscopic formats. The synthesis conditions used in this work give a value of 4.3 × 10−6. This is orders of magnitude higher than the existing methods for gas-phase synthesis of thin films of 1D nanomaterials, such as CNT transparent conductors (6.3 × 10−9)17 or GaAsNW networks for optoelectronics (4 × 10−8),14 purposely kept very dilute to control optical absorption and maintain transparency. The present values of vs are however, currently lower than processes for the in situ formation of fibres, either of CNTs grown by FCCVD (2.5 × 10−2)16 or of BNNTs produced by plasma-assisted methods (5.3 × 10−2).20 Under synthesis conditions explored so far, we visually observed macroscopic aggregates of SiNWs in the gas phase at the exit of the reactor (Fig. S2, ESI†), but they are discontinuous. Nevertheless, current values of vs are sufficient to produce integrated engineering materials exclusively made up of SiNWs, such as sheets, and determine their macroscopic properties, as discussed below.
Nanomaterial type | Particle number concentration (# cm−3) | Average aspect ratio | Aerogelation parameter | Throughput (g per day) | Ensemble format |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SiNW (this work) | 1.5 × 107 | 214 | 4.3 × 10−6 | 0.2 | Sheets |
CNT16 | 1.1 × 109 | 33000 | 2.5 × 10−2 | 2.33 | Fibres |
CNT17 | 5 × 105 | 4000 | 6.3 × 10−9 | ≈4.8 × 10−6 | Thin film |
GaAs14 | 1 × 106 | 20 | 4 × 10−8 | ≈0.024 | Thin film |
BNNT18,19 | ≈7.8 × 108 | 31 | 1.6 × 10−7 | ≈0.48 | Powder |
BNNT20 | 4.2 × 1010 | 5000 | 5.3 × 10−2 | 840 | Fibres |
Free-standing macroscopic samples can be easily produced by collecting the SiNWs on a filter during gas-phase synthesis, and then manually removing the sample from the filter. They resemble thin fabrics in terms of their overall toughness during handling. As a result of their network structure of building blocks with a diameter much smaller than the sample thickness, as in a regular textile fabric, they have large flexibility in bending. In Fig. 3a, we show a strip of SiNW sheet with an overhand knot, equivalent to withstanding deformations at a radius of curvature of below 0.8 mm. As a further indication of mechanical robustness, centimetre-long samples as thin as 3 μm are free-standing.
We have also performed tensile tests on rectangular sheets, with a focus on samples composed of SiNWs of a relatively small diameter of 20.0 ± 5.6 nm, and a length of 4.2 ± 2.3 μm, controlled through adjustment of the size distribution of Au catalyst particles and the precursor concentration (see Experimental section). Smaller NW diameters were purposely targeted to favour their compaction. By virtue of their smaller bending stiffness (scaling as Φ4), these SiNWs behave as flexible rods that can form domains of close NW contact (Fig. S5, ESI†), similar to bundles, increasing stress transfer in shear between them.22
Fig. 3b presents examples of specific stress against engineering strain (use of specific units avoids uncertainty with the determination of the cross-section, which is problematic in porous samples). The first aspect that stands out is their large ductility around 3%. This is far higher than the strain-to-break of monolithic inorganic materials, such as bulk silicon (<0.1%), for example. The sloping profile of the stress–strain curve is indicative of a network material with elasto-plastic tensile behaviour combining stress development through elastic deformation of the nanowires, entanglements and frictional stress from nanowire slippage. Indeed, the fracture surface is ragged, and resembles that of a textile or staple fibre fabric like cotton (Fig. 3c). The frictional stress developed during plastic deformation provides the material with high overall toughness, with an average density-normalized fracture energy of 0.18 ± 0.1 J g−1 and as high as 0.36 J g−1. This fracture energy is significantly above both bulk Si (0.014 J g−1) and regular Si microparticle battery anodes (0.003 J g−1),23 and comparable to recently-reported CNTs/Si composite battery anodes with nearly theoretical capacity and extended cyclability enabled by a fracture energy of 0.21 J g−1.23
Finally, we compared different materials with a network structure made up of nanoscale building blocks. Fig. 4 shows a plot of the density-normalized tensile fracture energy against the ratio of sample density over its theoretical bulk density. This representation enables visualisation of the build-up of toughness with increasing compaction of 1D elements in the network. At the low end are materials with ultra-low density such as SiO2 aerogels composed of a rigid cellular structure of thick nanofibres (>200 nm), which behave as foams that can withstand transverse compaction but have otherwise low tensile toughness, with a fracture energy of around 0.01 J g−1. When of a smaller diameter (<50 nm), 1D nanostructures can compact more easily and form larger interfacial areas of contact, thus forming tougher materials resembling fabrics that are capable of reaching higher tensile fracture energies of 0.1–1 J g−1. The SiNW sheet samples produced by FCCVD in this work are in this category, as well as sheets of BNNTs6 or of CNTs,27 often referred to as buckypapers. In these sheets, the 1D nanostructures are predominantly aligned along the main axis but randomly oriented in the plane. Increased density and load-bearing capacity requires a higher packing and alignment of building blocks in the longitudinal direction, as in aligned CNT fibres reaching tensile fracture energies of 10–100 J g−1.
Fig. 4 Tensile fracture energy and density ratio of SiNW sheets and other porous materials with network structures. Tensile fracture energy builds up from contact between elements in the network and is related to their compaction. Large diameter building blocks are rigid and lead to brittle foams,24–26 small diameter building blocks enable packing into sheets with moderate properties,6,27 and when highly aligned into high-performance fibres.11 |
Producing macroscopic ensembles of SiNWs that cover the range from foams to aligned fibres should be within reach, if SiNW diameter and length are controlled during growth in the gas phase. Combining this control with the possibility to translate the present FCCVD method to the enormous library of 1D nanomaterials that can be synthesized through conventional CVD unlocks a strategy to produce a myriad of new macroscopic engineering materials from 1D nanobuilding blocks. The inherent toughness of network structures makes them particularly attractive for energy storage28 and conversion applications,29 especially those relying on integration into complex shapes for use in mechanically-augmented devices, such as in wearable electronics30,31 and energy-storing structural composites.32
Another interesting aspect of the direct conversion of gas precursors to fully integrated solids is the elimination of processing steps requiring handling of the nanomaterials in powder form. As powders, nanomaterials are generally more prone to individualisation, often requiring special safety handling measures.33 Although in most envisaged applications, nanowires are contained by some form of encapsulation, toughness resulting from strong interparticle forces and entanglements inherently minimises exposure to individualised particles during mechanical manipulation. Nevertheless, a precautionary approach should be applied to SiNWs, even in light of in vivo studies indicating early rapid SiNW clearance after being intratracheally instilled in rats34 and promising applications when interfaced with living cells.35
The product of aspect ratio and volumetric concentration (vs) is introduced as a descriptor to guide improvements towards the fabrication of high-performance materials made up of 1D nanostructures. Large increases in the aspect ratio may be attainable by temperature-gradient control36 or using alternative Si precursors,37 previously shown to produce SiNWs of 1–20 mm grown on substrates. Related gas-phase synthesis processes for ultrahigh aspect ratio CNTs8,16 or large throughput in plasma-based growth of BNNTs,20 suggest promising avenues for the simultaneous improvement of both aspect ratio and volumetric concentration. Increases in SiNW length and reaction conversion will also translate into a large cost drop from the corresponding reduction of Au concentration in the final material. Sheets of SiNWs of small diameter, long SiNWs resemble textiles and with orders of magnitude higher toughness than ceramic materials and Si microparticle electrodes. This augurs high capacity retention as lithium ion battery electrodes, for example.
SiNWs and residual Au nanoparticles were calculated from image analysis of SEM micrographs using brightness, contrast and shape differences to produce areal maps of filtered composition.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Experimental methods, comparison of SiNW growth rates for this work and substrate-based processess in the literature, evidence of macroscopic SiNW aggregates within the gas phase, example of an SEM micrograph for measuring SiNW diameters as well as data on aspect ratio, versus, SiNW diameter and average length calculation, evidence of bundling, details on the preparation of SiNW sheets and of mechanical data used for comparison, and a video showing continuous fabrication of SiNW sheets. See DOI: 10.1039/d0mh00777c |
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