The well-known vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) mechanism results in high-purity, single-crystalline wires with few defects and controllable diameters, and is the method of choice for the growth of nanowires for a vast array of nanoelectronic devices. It is of utmost importance, therefore, to understand how such wires interact with metallic interconnects–an understanding which relies on comprehensive knowledge of the initial growth process, in which a crystalline wire is ejected from a metallic particle. Though ubiquitous, even in the case of single elemental nanowires the VLS mechanism is complicated by competing processes at multiple heterogeneous interfaces, and despite decades of study, there are still aspects of the mechanism which are not wel...
<i>In situ</i> atomic-scale transmission electron microscopy (TEM) can provide critical information ...
A liquid droplet sitting on top of a pillar is crucially important for semiconductor nanowire growth...
Nanometer-sized liquid droplets formed at temperatures below the bulk melting point become supercool...
The well-known vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) mechanism results in high-purity, single-crystalline wires w...
This project was motivated by an in situ heating experiment in the transmission electron microscope ...
In situ observations during vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) growth of semiconductor nanowires in the chambe...
We report the growth mechanism of metal oxide nanostructures synthesized by electron beam evaporatio...
The vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) mechanism enables the bottom-up, or additive, growth of semiconductor n...
In this work, I first demonstrate the synthesis of ternary III-V alloy (e.g., InPSb) nanowires via s...
Controlled growth of oxide nanowires is an emerging research field with many applications in, for ex...
Semiconductor nanowires are promising material systems for coming-of-age nanotechnology. The usage o...
We use real-time observations of the growth of copper-catalyzed silicon nanowires to determine the n...
Quasi 1-dimensional nanostructures of indium- and tin- oxide are presently produced in several unusu...
A critical component in the successful application of Si nanowire in electronic and optical devices ...
A review and expansion of the fundamental processes of the vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) growth mechanism...
<i>In situ</i> atomic-scale transmission electron microscopy (TEM) can provide critical information ...
A liquid droplet sitting on top of a pillar is crucially important for semiconductor nanowire growth...
Nanometer-sized liquid droplets formed at temperatures below the bulk melting point become supercool...
The well-known vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) mechanism results in high-purity, single-crystalline wires w...
This project was motivated by an in situ heating experiment in the transmission electron microscope ...
In situ observations during vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) growth of semiconductor nanowires in the chambe...
We report the growth mechanism of metal oxide nanostructures synthesized by electron beam evaporatio...
The vapor–liquid–solid (VLS) mechanism enables the bottom-up, or additive, growth of semiconductor n...
In this work, I first demonstrate the synthesis of ternary III-V alloy (e.g., InPSb) nanowires via s...
Controlled growth of oxide nanowires is an emerging research field with many applications in, for ex...
Semiconductor nanowires are promising material systems for coming-of-age nanotechnology. The usage o...
We use real-time observations of the growth of copper-catalyzed silicon nanowires to determine the n...
Quasi 1-dimensional nanostructures of indium- and tin- oxide are presently produced in several unusu...
A critical component in the successful application of Si nanowire in electronic and optical devices ...
A review and expansion of the fundamental processes of the vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) growth mechanism...
<i>In situ</i> atomic-scale transmission electron microscopy (TEM) can provide critical information ...
A liquid droplet sitting on top of a pillar is crucially important for semiconductor nanowire growth...
Nanometer-sized liquid droplets formed at temperatures below the bulk melting point become supercool...