Ion beams can be used to permanently bend and re-align nanowires after growth. We have irradiated ZnO nanowires with energetic ions, achieving bending and alignment in different directions. Not only the bending of single nanowires is studied in detail, but also the simultaneous alignment of large ensembles of ZnO nanowires. Computer simulations reveal how the bending is initiated by ion beam induced damage. Detailed structural characterization identifies dislocations to relax stresses and make the bending and alignment permanent, even surviving annealing procedures.
We experimentally demonstrate dramatically enhanced light-matter interaction for molecules placed inside the nanometer scale gap of a plasmonic waveguide. We observe spontaneous emission rate enhancements of up to about 60 times due to strong optical localization in two dimensions. This rate enhancement is a nonresonant nature of the plasmonic waveguide under study overcoming the fundamental bandwidth limitation of conventional devices. Moreover, we show that about 85% of molecular emission couples into the waveguide highlighting the dominance of the nanoscale optical mode in competing with quenching processes. Such optics at molecular length scales paves the way toward integrated on-chip photon source, rapid transfer of quantum information, and efficient light extraction for solid-state-lighting devices.
Gallium arsenide nanowires are grown on 100 GaAs substrates, adopting the epitaxial relation and thus growing with an angle around 35 degrees off the substrate surface. These straight nanowires are irradiated with different kinds of energetic ions. Depending on the ion species and energy, downwards or upwards bending of the nanowires is observed to increase with ion fluence. In the case of upwards bending, the nanowires can be aligned towards the ion beam direction at high fluences. Defect formation (vacancies and interstitials) within the implantation cascade is identified as the key mechanism for bending. Monte Carlo simulations of the implantation are presented to substantiate the results.
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