Nano Module 4
Nano Module 4
The length scale corresponds to the regime of quantum confinement ranges from 1
to 25 nm for typical semiconductor groups of IV, III-V and II-VI. In which the spatial
extent of the electronic wave function is comparable with the particle size.
Weak confinement :
The particle radius is larger than the radius of the electron hole pair. But the
range of the motion of the exciton is limited causing a blue shift in the
absorption spectrum
rp > re,h
Strong confinement:
When the radius of the particle is smaller than the orbital radius of the
electron hole pair, the motion of the electron hole pair becomes
independent and the exciton does not exist. The hole and the electron have
their own energy levels.
rp < r e,h
Quantum confinement in semiconductors
If the electron and hole are constrained further, then the semiconductor's
properties change. This effect is a form of quantum confinement, and it is a
key feature in many emerging electronic structures.
Quantum well infrared photodetectors are also based on quantum wells, and are
used for infrared imaging.
Structure Quantum confinement Number of free
dimensions
Quantum wire
Quantum wire 2 1
Quantum wires, which confine electrons or holes in two spatial dimensions and
allow free propagation in the third.
The advantages of making wires from carbon nanotubes include their high
electrical conductivity (due to a high mobility), light weight, small diameter, low
chemical reactivity, and high tensile strength.
Structure Quantum confinement Number of free
dimensions
Quantum dot 3 0
Quantum dots
A quantum dot is a semiconductor whose excitons are confined in all three spatial
dimensions. As a result, they have properties that are between those of bulk
semiconductors and those of discrete molecules.
The larger the dot, the redder (lower energy) its fluorescence spectrum.
Conversely, smaller dots emit bluer (higher energy) light. The coloration is directly
related to the energy levels of the quantum dot.
Properties of nanoparticles or specialty of nanotechnology
Why so special?
Ex.
• In ceramics, electrical conductivity increases with decrease nanoparticle
size
• In metals, electrical conductivity decreases with decrease in nanoparticle
size
• In semiconductor, electrical conductivity of nanomaterials improves at nano
scale. For eg. Graphene, Si nano wire, CNT
Magnetic Properties
• Nano material are more magnetic than bulk material
• Even non magnetic solids are found to show magnetic properties
when reduced to nano level
Ex.
• Sodium, Potassium which are paramagnetic at the bulk level become
ferromagnetic at the nano level
• Iron, Nickel, Cobalt which are ferromagnetic at the bulk level become
super paramagnetic at the nano level
Structural Properties
• In nanomaterials, surface to volume ratio is very large
• Many atoms (more than half) are at the interfaces. Force of attraction
between surfaces is very strong
• Surface properties such as energy levels, electronic structure and
reactivity can be quite different from interior states
• This may lead to different surface morphology, change in crystal
structure etc.
Mechanical Properties
• At nano scale, strength of metals enhances
• The mechanical properties like hardness, elasticity, adhesion, friction
improve as the material size is reduced to nano scale
• Lubrication improves at the nano scale
• Ductility of nanomaterials may be high at high temperatures
• Carbon nanomaterials such as graphene, fullerenes, carbon nanotubes
show better mechanical properties than metals
Applications of Nanomaterials
• Electronics industry
• Medicine
• Food processing
• Automobiles
• Paint technology
• computer technology
• Robotics
• Nanoprobes and sensors
• Field emitting devices
• Space technology
Production Techniques
Nano scale
Particles
Top Down Approach
• Top down approach is a
physical process
• In this approach, a large scale
object is progressively reduced
in dimensions
• It consist of ultra fine micro
machining of materials using
lithography, epitaxy and
etching
• This method is time consuming
and relatively costly
Bottom Up Approach
• This is a chemical process
• In bottom up approach, different
materials and devices are
constructed from molecular
components on their own which do
not require any external agent to
assemble them
• They chemically assemble
themselves by recognising the
molecules of their own type
• This approach starts by collection
and combination of atoms and
molecules to build complex
structures
Methods to Synthesize Nanomaterials
Advantages
• SEM can produce highly magnified image of
resolution between 10 Å to 100 Å
Disadvantages:
• SEM can produce image of surface only few nano
meter deep
• The sample should conductive in nature
otherwise a thin coating of conducting material is
SEM Layout Diagram applied on the sample before analysis
Transmission Electron Microscopy
TEM is an extremely useful tool for material
characterization. The resolution of TEM is
about 0.2 nm
Disadvantages:
• TEM systems is large and very expensive
• Samples are need to electron transparent and special preparations
Beata Turoňová et al. In situ structural analysis of SARS-CoV-2 spike reveals flexibility mediated by
three hinges Science , published on 18 August 2020
https://cen.acs.org/articles/98/i37/Cryo-electron-microscopy-reaches-resolution.html
Tunnel Effect
• Classically a particle with energy E<Vo can not
penetrate a barrier and it must rebound from the
barrier
Uses:
1. Surface Roughness
3. Size determination
Application: Tunneling Microscopy
Due to the quantum effect of “barrier x Metal
penetration,” the electron density of a tip
material extends beyond its surface:
STM images
http://www.quantum-physics.polytechnique.fr/en/
LT-STM
In the above slide, the material is applied with negative potential and the tip is
applied with positive potential. Hence the electron tunnels from the electron
cloud of the material to the tip surfaces.