Structural coloration has attracted great interest from scientists and engineers in recent years, owing to fascination with various brilliant examples displayed in nature as well as to promising applications of bio-inspired functional photonic structures and materials. Much research has been done to reveal and emulate the physical mechanisms that underlie the structural colors found in nature. In this article, we review the fundamental physics of many natural structural colors displayed by living organisms as well as their bio-inspired artificial counterparts, with emphasis on their connections, tunability strategies, and proposed applications, which aim to maximize the technological benefits one could derive from these photonic nanostructures. WIREs Nanomed Nanobiotechnol 2016, 8:758-775. doi: 10.1002/wnan.1396 For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs website.
We present the first Raman scattering measurements on nanoparticulate vanadium dioxide (VO(2)), as well as the first observations of the temperature-induced phase transition in individual VO(2) nanoparticles (NPs). We compare the Raman response of two VO(2) NPs and a companion VO(2) film undergoing their monoclinic-tetragonal-monoclinic transformations and offer qualitative explanations for the large observed differences in hysteresis width. While bulk crystals and contiguous films contain numerous nucleation sites, individual NPs likely harbor only a few, which may make it possible to correlate detectable defects (e.g., grain boundaries and dislocations) with the "ease" of switching phases, as quantified by the width of the thermal hysteresis.
We demonstrate here the first focused electron-beam-induced deposition (EBID) of nanostructures using a liquid precursor. We have deposited sub-50 nm platinum (Pt) wires and dots from a dilute, aqueous solution of chloroplatinic acid. Existing EBID processes rely on the electron-beam stimulated decomposition of gaseous precursors; as a result, the deposits are highly contaminated (up to 75 at. % carbon or 60 at. % phosphorus for Pt processes). In contrast, we show that deposition of platinum by electron-beam reduction of platinum ions from solution leads to high-purity deposits (approximately 10 at. % chlorine contamination) at rates at least ten times higher than those obtained with other platinum precursors. Liquid-phase EBID offers a new route to deterministic, three-dimensional, nanometer-scale structures composed of multiple materials without complex multistep processing. Thus, it may prove important for prototyping and low-volume production of nanoscale devices and for repair and modification of nanoscale masks and templates used in high-volume production.
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