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1.
Adv Mater ; : e2404493, 2024 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38718355

ABSTRACT

Optical waveguides fabricated in single crystals offer crucial passive/active optical components for photonic integrated circuits. Single crystals possess inherent advantages over their amorphous counterpart, such as lower optical losses in visible-to-mid-infrared band, larger peak emission cross-section, higher doping concentration. However, the writing of Type-I positive refractive index modified waveguides in single crystals using femtosecond laser technology presents significant challenges. Herein, this work introduces a novel femtosecond laser direct writing technique that combines slit-shaping with an immersion oil objective to fabricate low-loss Type-I waveguides in single crystals. This approach allows for precise control of waveguide shape, size, mode-field, and refractive index distribution, with a spatial resolution as high as 700 nm and a high positive refractive index variation on the order of 10-2, introducing new degrees of freedom to design and fabricate passive/active optical waveguide devices. As a proof-of-concept, this work successfully produces a 7 mm-long circular-shaped gain waveguide (≈10 µm in diameter) in an Er3+-doped YAG single crystal, exhibiting a propagation loss as low as 0.23 dB cm-1, a net gain of ≈3 dB and a polarization-insensitive character. The newly-developed technique is theoretically applicable to arbitrary single crystals, holding promising potential for various applications in integrated optics, optical communication, and photonic quantum circuits.

2.
Small ; : e2400499, 2024 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38644330

ABSTRACT

Sculpting silicon at the micro and nano scales has been game-changing to mold bulk silicon properties and expand, in turn, applications of silicon beyond electronics, namely, in photonics, sensing, medicine, and mechanics, to cite a few. Voltage- and metal-assisted chemical etching (ECE and MaCE, respectively) of silicon in acidic electrolytes have emerged over other micro and nanostructuring technologies thanks to their unique etching features. ECE and MaCE have enabled the fabrication of novel structures and devices not achievable otherwise, complementing those feasible with the deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) technology, the gold standard in silicon machining. Here, a comprehensive review of ECE and MaCE for silicon micro and nano machining is provided. The chemistry and physics ruling the dissolution of silicon are dissected and similarities and differences between ECE and MaCE are discussed showing that they are the two sides of the same coin. The processes governing the anisotropic etching of designed silicon micro and nanostructures are analyzed, and the modulation of etching profile over depth is discussed. The preparation of micro- and nanostructures with tailored optical, mechanical, and thermo(electrical) properties is then addressed, and their applications in photonics, (bio)sensing, (nano)medicine, and micromechanical systems are surveyed. Eventually, ECE and MaCE are benchmarked against DRIE, and future perspectives are highlighted.

3.
Adv Mater ; 36(24): e2309365, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38268140

ABSTRACT

Miniaturized solid state capacitors leveraging migration of unipolar ions in a single polyelectrolyte layer sandwiched between metal electrodes, namely, polyelectrolyte capacitors (PECs), have been recently reported with areal capacitance up to 100-200 nF mm-2. Nonetheless, application of PECs in consumer and industrial electronics has been hindered so far by their small operational frequency range, up to a few kHz, due to the resistive behavior (phase angle >-45°) of PECs in the range kHz-to-MHz. Here, it is reported on multilayer polyelectrolyte capacitors (mPECs) that leverage as dielectric an ambipolar nanometer-thick (down to 10 nm) stack of anionic and cationic polyelectrolytes assembled layer-by-layer between metal electrodes to eliminate the resistive behavior at frequencies from kHz to MHz. This significantly extends the operational range of mPECs over PECs. mPECs with areal capacitance as high as 25 nF mm-2 at 20 Hz and full capacitive behavior from 100 mHz to 10 MHz are demonstrated using different assembling conditions and anionic/cationic polyelectrolyte pairs. The mPECs reliably operate over time for >300 million cycles, at different biasing voltages up to 3 V, and temperatures up to 80 °C, showing a reversible capacitive behavior without significant hysteresis. Application of mPECs in flexible electronics, also operating at high frequency, is envisaged.

4.
Opt Lett ; 49(1): 33-36, 2024 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38134145

ABSTRACT

High-gain materials and high-quality structures are the two main conditions that determine the amplification performance of optical waveguides. However, it has been hard to balance each other, to date. In this work, we demonstrate breakthroughs in both glass optical gain and optical waveguide structures. We propose a secondary melting dehydration technique that prepares high-quality Er3+-Yb3+ co-doped phosphate glass with low absorption loss. Additionally, we propose a femtosecond laser direct-writing technique that allows controlling the cross section, size, and mode field of waveguides written in glass with high accuracy, leveraging submicron-resolution multi-scan direct-writing optical waveguide technology, which is beneficial for reducing insertion loss. As a proof of concept demonstration, we designed and fabricated two kinds of waveguides, namely, LP01- and LP11-mode waveguides in the Er3+-Yb3+ co-doped phosphate glass, enabling insertion loss as low as 0.9 dB for a waveguide length of 2 mm. Remarkably, we successfully achieved an optical amplification for both the waveguides with a net gain of >7 dB and a net-gain coefficient of >3.5 dB/mm, which is approximately one order of magnitude larger than that in the Er3+-Yb3+ co-doped phosphate glass fabricated by the traditional melt-quenching method. This will open new avenues toward the development of integrated photonic chips.

5.
Animals (Basel) ; 13(16)2023 Aug 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37627343

ABSTRACT

Canine disc-associated cervical spondylomyelopathy (DA-CSM) is a form of caudal CSM, characterized by the compression of the spinal cord and nerve roots due to an intervertebral disc protrusion. It is more frequent in large canine breeds. A variety of surgical techniques has been proposed for DA-CSM. The aim of the study was to evaluate the outcomes of a cervical distraction-stabilization technique using an intervertebral anchored fusion device (C-LOX) combined with a locking compression plate (LCP plate) for the treatment of DA-CSM in dogs, based on clinical and radiographical follow-up data. Thirteen dogs affected by DA-CSM were included in the study. After the surgical procedure, an improvement in neurological status was documented in 9/13 cases. This cervical distraction-stabilization technique seems to be a valuable surgical alternative to treat this canine pathology.

6.
Small ; 19(38): e2302274, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37222612

ABSTRACT

Molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) have recently emerged as robust and versatile artificial receptors. MIP synthesis is carried out in liquid phase and optimized on planar surfaces. Application of MIPs to nanostructured materials is challenging due to diffusion-limited transport of monomers within the nanomaterial recesses, especially when the aspect ratio is >10. Here, the room temperature vapor-phase synthesis of MIPs in nanostructured materials is reported. The vapor phase synthesis leverages a >1000-fold increase in the diffusion coefficient of monomers in vapor phase, compared to liquid phase, to relax diffusion-limited transport and enable the controlled synthesis of MIPs also in nanostructures with high aspect ratio. As proof-of-concept application, pyrrole is used as the functional monomer thanks to its large exploitation in MIP preparation; nanostructured porous silicon oxide (PSiO2 ) is chosen to assess the vapor-phase deposition of PPy-based MIP in nanostructures with aspect ratio >100; human hemoglobin (HHb) is selected as the target molecule for the preparation of a MIP-based PSiO2 optical sensor. High sensitivity and selectivity, low detection limit, high stability and reusability are achieved in label-free optical detection of HHb, also in human plasma and artificial serum. The proposed vapor-phase synthesis of MIPs is immediately transferable to other nanomaterials, transducers, and proteins.

7.
Opt Express ; 31(4): 5812-5819, 2023 Feb 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36823853

ABSTRACT

Inscription of fiber-compatible active waveguides in high-gain glass, followed by direct interconnection with few-mode fibers, is one of the most promising solutions for all-optical mode-division multiplexing. In this work, based on the femtosecond laser writing technique, we propose a general fabrication scheme for inscribing high-order mode waveguides in glass, by carefully tailoring the cross-section of the waveguides to match the mode intensity distribution via an improved multi-scan approach. Specifically, we design and fabricate two kinds of waveguides, namely, LP01-mode waveguide and LP11-mode waveguide in a highly Er3+-doped phosphate glass, enabling the insertion loss of the waveguides to be as low as 1.88 dB, and the mode extraction factor of the LP11-mode waveguide up to ∼24 dB. Importantly, we have successfully achieved optical amplification of the waveguides, with an on-off gain as high as 3.52 dB. This novel high-order mode waveguide amplifier has broad application prospects in monolithic on-chip integrated photonic light sources and optical interconnection with few-mode fiber and/or silicon-based waveguide.

8.
Small ; 19(15): e2206100, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36703509

ABSTRACT

Rapid progress in the synthesis and fundamental understanding of 1D and 2D materials have solicited the incorporation of these nanomaterials into sensor architectures, especially field effect transistors (FETs), for the monitoring of gas and vapor in environmental, food quality, and healthcare applications. Yet, several challenges have remained unaddressed toward the fabrication of 1D and 2D FET gas sensors for real-field applications, which are related to properties, synthesis, and integration of 1D and 2D materials into the transistor architecture. This review paper encompasses the whole assortment of 1D-i.e., metal oxide semiconductors (MOXs), silicon nanowires (SiNWs), carbon nanotubes (CNTs)-and 2D-i.e., graphene, transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD), phosphorene-materials used in FET gas sensors, critically dissecting how the material synthesis, surface functionalization, and transistor fabrication impact on electrical versus sensing properties of these devices. Eventually, pros and cons of 1D and 2D FETs for gas and vapor sensing applications are discussed, pointing out weakness and highlighting future directions.

9.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 9(22): e2202062, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35618637

ABSTRACT

Here, the authors report on the manufacturing and in vivo assessment of a bioresorbable nanostructured pH sensor. The sensor consists of a micrometer-thick porous silica membrane conformably coated layer-by-layer with a nanometer-thick multilayer stack of two polyelectrolytes labeled with a pH-insensitive fluorophore. The sensor fluorescence changes linearly with the pH value in the range 4 to 7.5 upon swelling/shrinking of the polymer multilayer and enables performing real-time measurements of the pH level with high stability, reproducibility, and accuracy, over 100 h of continuous operation. In vivo studies carried out implanting the sensor in the subcutis on the back of mice confirm real-time monitoring of the local pH level through skin. Full degradation of the pH sensor occurs in one week from implant in the animal model, and its biocompatibility after 2 months is confirmed by histological and fluorescence analyses. The proposed approach can be extended to the detection of other (bio)markers in vivo by engineering the functionality of one (at least) of the polyelectrolytes with suitable receptors, thus paving the way to implantable bioresorbable chemical sensors.


Subject(s)
Absorbable Implants , Nanostructures , Animals , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mice , Polyelectrolytes , Reproducibility of Results
10.
Nanoscale Horiz ; 7(4): 425-436, 2022 03 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35244124

ABSTRACT

Nanoparticle-polymer composites hold promise in enabling material functionalities that are difficult to achieve otherwise, yet are hampered to date by the scarce control and tunability of the nanoparticle collective properties on the polymer surface, especially for polymer foams featuring a complex three-dimensional pore network. Here we report on the controlled and conformal in situ coating of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) foams with silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) with surface coverage finely tunable over a large range, from 0 to 75%, via the one-step room temperature reduction of AgF directly on the PDMS surface. This enables the design of AgNP electrical networks on the PDMS foam surface with piezo-resistive properties tunable up to a factor of 1000. We leveraged the control of the piezoresistive properties of the AgNP electrical network formed on PDMS foams to fabricate flexible and wearable pressure sensors with sensitivity of 0.41 kPa-1, an operation range >120 kPa, and a detection limit of 25 Pa. As a proof-of-concept application in wearable biomedical electronics, we successfully used the sensors to monitor the real-time radial artery pulse wave on the human wrist of a young male with high resolution.


Subject(s)
Metal Nanoparticles , Silver , Dimethylpolysiloxanes , Electronics , Humans , Male , Monitoring, Physiologic
11.
ACS Sens ; 5(9): 2894-2902, 2020 09 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32786379

ABSTRACT

Micro- and nanofabrication offer remarkable opportunities for the preparation of label-free biosensors exploiting optical resonances to improve sensitivity and reduce detection limit once specificity is imparted through surface biofunctionalization. Nonetheless, both surface roughness, peculiar of fabrication processes, and bioassay roughness, resulting from uneven molecular coverage of the sensing surfaces, produce light scattering and, in turn, deterioration of biosensing capabilities, especially in resonant cavities where light travels forth and back thousands to million times. Here, we present a quantitative theoretical analysis about the impact of fabrication and bioassay surface roughness on the performance of optical biosensors exploiting silicon-based, vertical one-dimensional (1D) photonic crystal resonant cavities, also taking noise sources into account. One-dimensional photonic crystal resonant cavities with different architectures and quality factors ranging from 102 to 106 are considered. The analysis points out that whereas sensitivity and linearity of the biosensors are not affected by the roughness level, either due to fabrication or bioassay, the limit of detection can be significantly degraded by both of them, depending on the quality factor of the cavity and noise level of the measurement system. The paper provides important insights into performance versus design, fabrication, and readout of biosensors based on resonant 1D photonic crystal cavities for real-setting operation.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , Optics and Photonics , Biological Assay , Photons , Silicon
12.
Adv Funct Mater ; 30(4)2020 Jan 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32377177

ABSTRACT

Optical lenses are among the oldest technological innovations (3000 years ago) and they have enabled a multitude of applications in healthcare and in our daily lives. The primary function of optical lenses has changed little over time; they serve mainly as a light-collection (e.g. reflected, transmitted, diffracted) element, and the wavelength and/or intensity of the collected light is usually manipulated by coupling with various external optical filter elements or coatings. This generally results in losses associated with multiple interfacial reflections, and increases the complexity of design and construction. In this work we introduce a change in this paradigm, by integrating both light-shaping and image magnification into a single lens element using a moldless procedure that takes advantage of the physical and optical properties of mesoporous silicon (PSi) photonic crystal nanostructures. Casting of a liquid poly(dimethyl) siloxane (PDMS) pre-polymer solution onto a PSi film generates a droplet with contact angle that is readily controlled by the silicon nanostructure, and adhesion of the cured polymer to the PSi photonic crystal allows preparation of lightweight (10 mg) freestanding lenses (4.7 mm focal length) with an embedded optical component (e.g. optical rugate filter, resonant cavity, distributed Bragg reflector). Our fabrication process shows excellent reliability (yield 95%) and low cost and we expect our lens to have implications in a wide range of applications. As a proof-of-concept, using a single monolithic lens/filter element we demonstrate: fluorescence imaging of isolated human cancer cells with rejection of the blue excitation light, through a lens that is self-adhered to a commercial smartphone; shaping the emission spectrum of a white light emitting diode (LED) to tune the color from red through blue; and selection of a narrow wavelength band (bandwidth 5 nm) from a fluorescent molecular probe.

13.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 7(4): 1902872, 2020 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32099766

ABSTRACT

Over the last decade, scientists have dreamed about the development of a bioresorbable technology that exploits a new class of electrical, optical, and sensing components able to operate in physiological conditions for a prescribed time and then disappear, being made of materials that fully dissolve in vivo with biologically benign byproducts upon external stimulation. The final goal is to engineer these components into transient implantable systems that directly interact with organs, tissues, and biofluids in real-time, retrieve clinical parameters, and provide therapeutic actions tailored to the disease and patient clinical evolution, and then biodegrade without the need for device-retrieving surgery that may cause tissue lesion or infection. Here, the major results achieved in bioresorbable technology are critically reviewed, with a bottom-up approach that starts from a rational analysis of dissolution chemistry and kinetics, and biocompatibility of bioresorbable materials, then moves to in vivo performance and stability of electrical and optical bioresorbable components, and eventually focuses on the integration of such components into bioresorbable systems for clinically relevant applications. Finally, the technology readiness levels (TRLs) achieved for the different bioresorbable devices and systems are assessed, hence the open challenges are analyzed and future directions for advancing the technology are envisaged.

14.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(46): 43731-43740, 2019 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31644268

ABSTRACT

Gold nanoparticle layers (AuNPLs) enable the coupling of morphological, optical, and electrical properties of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) with tailored and specific surface topography, making them exploitable in many bioapplications (e.g., biosensing, drug delivery, and photothermal therapy). Herein, we report the formation of AuNPLs on porous silicon (PSi) interferometers and distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs) for (bio)sensing applications via layer-by-layer (LbL) nanoassembling of a positively charged polyelectrolyte, namely, poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH), and negatively charged citrate-capped AuNPs. Decoration of PSi interferometers with AuNPLs enhances the Fabry-Pérot fringe contrast due to increased surface reflectivity, resulting in an augmented sensitivity for both bulk and surface refractive index sensing, namely, about 4.5-fold using NaCl aqueous solutions to infiltrate the pores and 2.6-fold for unspecific bovine serum albumin (BSA) adsorption on the pore surface, respectively. Sensitivity enhancing, about 2.5-fold, is also confirmed for affinity and selective biosensing of streptavidin using a biotinylated polymer, namely, negatively charged poly(methacrylic acid) (b-PMAA). Further, decoration of PSi DBR with AuNPLs envisages building up a hybrid photonic/plasmonic optical sensing platform. Both photonic (DBR stop-band) and plasmonic (localized surface plasmon resonance, LSPR) peaks of the hybrid structure are sensitive to changes of bulk (using glucose aqueous solutions) and surface (due to BSA unspecific adsorption) refractive index. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report about the formation of AuNPLs via LbL nanoassembly on PSi for (i) the enhancing of the interferometric performance in (bio)sensing applications and (ii) the building up of hybrid photonic/plasmonic platforms for sensing and perspective biosensing applications.


Subject(s)
Gold/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Serum Albumin, Bovine/analysis , Silicon/chemistry , Streptavidin/chemistry , Surface Plasmon Resonance , Interferometry , Porosity
15.
Front Chem ; 6: 582, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30560118

ABSTRACT

The anodic dissolution of silicon in acidic electrolytes is a well-known technology enabling the silicon machining to be accurately controlled down to the micrometer scale in low-doped n-type silicon electrodes. Attempts to scale down this technology to the submicrometer scale has shown to be challenging, though it premises to enable the fabrication of meso and nano structures/systems that would greatly impact the fields of biosensors and nanomedicine. In this work, we report on the electrochemical etching at high anodic voltages (up to 40 V) of two-dimensional regular arrays of millions pores per square centimeter (up to 30 × 106 cm-2) with sub-micrometric diameter (down to ~860 nm), high depth (up to ~40 µm), and high aspect-ratio (up to ~45) using low-doped n-type silicon electrodes (resistivity 3-8 Ω cm). The use of high anodic voltages, which are over one order of magnitude higher than that commonly used in electrochemical etching of silicon, tremendously improves hole focusing at the pore tips during the etching and enables, in turn, the control of electrochemical etching of submicrometer-sized pores when spatial period reduces below 2 µm. A theoretical model allows experimental results to be interpreted in terms of an electric-field-enhanced focusing of holes at the tip apex of the pores at high anodic voltages, with respect to the pore base, which leads to a smaller curvature radius of the tip apex and enables, in turn, the etching of pore tips to be preferentially sustained over time and space.

16.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 5256, 2018 12 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30531860

ABSTRACT

Nanostructured materials premise to revolutionize the label-free biosensing of analytes for clinical applications, leveraging the deeper interaction between materials and analytes with comparable size. However, when the characteristic dimension of the materials reduces to the nanoscale, the surface functionalization for the binding of bioreceptors becomes a complex issue that can affect the performance of label-free biosensors. Here we report on an effective and robust route for surface biofunctionalization of nanostructured materials based on the layer-by-layer (LbL) electrostatic nano-assembly of oppositely-charged polyelectrolytes, which are engineered with bioreceptors to enable label-free detection of target analytes. LbL biofunctionalization is demonstrated using nanostructured porous silicon (PSi) interferometers for affinity detection of streptavidin in saliva, through LbL nano-assembly of a bi-layer of positively-charged poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH) and negatively-charged biotinylated poly(methacrylic acid) (b-PMAA). High sensitivity in streptavidin detection is achieved, with high selectivity and stability, down to a detection limit of 600 fM.

17.
ACS Sens ; 3(11): 2223-2231, 2018 11 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30380852

ABSTRACT

Aqueous solutions of alcohols are used in several applications, from pharmaceutics and biology, to chemical, biofuel, and food industries. Nonetheless, development of a simple, inexpensive, and portable sensing device for the quantification of water in water-ethanol mixtures remains a significant challenge. Photonic crystals (PhCs) operating at very high-order photonic bandgaps (PBGs) offer remarkable opportunities for the realization of chemical sensors with high sensitivity and low detection limit. However, high-order PhC structures have been mostly confined to mere theoretical speculations so far, their effective realization requiring microfabrication tools enabling the control of periodic refractive index modulations at the submicrometric scale with extremely high accuracy and precision. Here, we report both experimental and theoretical results on high-sensitivity chemical analysis using vertical, silicon/air 1D-PhCs with spatial period of 10 and 20 µm (namely, over 10 times the operation wavelength) featuring ultra-high-order PBGs in the near-infrared region (namely, up to 50th at 1.1 µm). Fabrication of high-order 1D-PhCs was carried out by electrochemical micromachining (ECM) of silicon, which allowed both surface roughness and deviation from vertical of etched structures to be controlled below 5 nm and 0.1%, respectively. Optical characterization of ECM-fabricated 1D-PhCs, which was performed by acquiring reflectivity spectra over the wavelength range 1-1.7 µm, highlighted the presence of ultra-high-order PBGs with minor optical losses (i.e., <1 dB in reflectivity) separated by deep reflectivity notches with high Q-factors (i.e., >6000), in good agreement with theoretical calculations. Remarkably, the use of high-order 1D-PhCs as refractometric transducers for the quantitative detection of traces of water in water-ethanol mixtures, allowed high sensitivity (namely, either 1000 nm/RIU or ∼0.4 nm/% of water), good detection limit (namely, 5 × 10-3 RIU or ∼10% water), and excellent resolution (namely, either 6 × 10-4 RIU or 1.6% of water) to be reliably achieved on a detection volume of about 168 fL.


Subject(s)
Ethanol/chemistry , Silicon/chemistry , Water/analysis , Calibration , Light , Limit of Detection , Microtechnology , Refractometry/instrumentation , Refractometry/methods , Silicon/radiation effects , Transducers , Water/chemistry
18.
ACS Nano ; 12(5): 4536-4544, 2018 05 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29727169

ABSTRACT

Silicon photonics would strongly benefit from monolithically integrated low-threshold silicon-based laser operating at room temperature, representing today the main challenge toward low-cost and power-efficient electronic-photonic integrated circuits. Here we demonstrate low-threshold lasing from fully transparent nanostructured porous silicon (PSi) monolithic microcavities (MCs) infiltrated with a polyfluorene derivative, namely, poly(9,9-di- n-octylfluorenyl-2,7-diyl) (PFO). The PFO-infiltrated PSiMCs support single-mode blue lasing at the resonance wavelength of 466 nm, with a line width of ∼1.3 nm and lasing threshold of 5 nJ (15 µJ/cm2), a value that is at the state of the art of PFO lasers. Furthermore, time-resolved photoluminescence shows a significant shortening (∼57%) of PFO emission lifetime in the PSiMCs, with respect to nonresonant PSi reference structures, confirming a dramatic variation of the radiative decay rate due to a Purcell effect. Our results, given also that blue lasing is a worst case for silicon photonics, are highly appealing for the development of low-cost, low-threshold silicon-based lasers with wavelengths tunable from visible to the near-infrared region by simple infiltration of suitable emitting polymers in monolithically integrated nanostructured PSiMCs.

19.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 10(16): 13877-13885, 2018 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29614215

ABSTRACT

Low-cost piezoresistive strain/pressure sensors with large working range, at the same time able to reliably detect ultralow strain (≤0.1%) and pressure (≤1 Pa), are one of the challenges that have still to be overcome for flexible piezoresistive materials toward personalized health-monitoring applications. In this work, we report on unprecedented, simultaneous detection of ultrasmall strain (0.1%, i.e., 10 µm displacement over 10 mm) and subtle pressure (20 Pa, i.e., a force of only 2 mN over an area of 1 cm2) in compression mode, coupled with a large working range (i.e., up to 60% for strain-6 mm in displacement-and 50 kPa for pressure) using piezoresistive, flexible three-dimensional (3D) macroporous polydimethylsiloxane (pPDMS) foams decorated with pristine multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNTs). pPDMS/CNT foams with pore size up to 500 µm (i.e., twice the size of those of commonly used foams, at least) and porosity of 77%, decorated with a nanostructured surface network of CNTs at densities ranging from 7.5 to 37 mg/cm3 are prepared using a low-cost and scalable process, through replica molding of sacrificial sugar templates and subsequent drop-casting of CNT ink. A thorough characterization shows that piezoresistive properties of the foams can be finely tuned by controlling the CNT density and reach an optimum at a CNT density of 25 mg/cm3, for which a maximum change of the material resistivity (e.g., ρ0/ρ50 = 4 at 50% strain) is achieved under compression. Further static and dynamic characterization of the pPDMS/CNT foams with 25 mg/cm3 of CNTs highlights that detection limits for strain and pressure are 0.03% (3 µm displacement over 10 mm) and 6 Pa (0.6 mN over an area of 1 cm2), respectively; moreover, good stability and limited hysteresis are apparent by cycling the foams with 255 compression-release cycles over the strain range of 0-60%, at different strain rates up to 10 mm/min. Our results on piezoresistive, flexible pPDMS/CNT foams pave the way toward breakthrough applications for personalized health care, though not limited to these, which have not been fully addressed to date with flexible strain/stress sensors.

20.
ACS Sens ; 3(3): 595-605, 2018 03 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29299931

ABSTRACT

Herein, we provide the first experimental evidence on the use of electrical double layer (EDL)-induced accumulation of charged ions (using both Na+ and K+ ions in water as the model) onto a negatively charged nanostructured surface (e.g., thermally growth SiO2)-Ion Surface Accumulation, ISA-as a means of improving performance of nanostructured porous silicon (PSi) interferometers for optical refractometric applications. Nanostructured PSi interferometers are very promising optical platforms for refractive index sensing due to PSi huge specific surface (hundreds of m2 per gram) and low preparation cost (less than $0.01 per 8 in. silicon wafer), though they have shown poor resolution ( R) and detection limit (DL) (on the order of 10-4-10-5 RIU) compared to other plasmonic and photonic platforms ( R and DL on the order of 10-7-10-8 RIU). This can be ascribed to both low sensitivity and high noise floor of PSi interferometers when bulk refractive index variation of the solution infiltrating the nanopores either approaches or is below 10-4 RIU. Electrical double layer-induced ion surface accumulation (EDL-ISA) on oxidized PSi interferometers allows the interferometer output signal (spectral interferogram) to be impressively amplified at bulk refractive index variation below 10-4 RIU, increasing, in turn, sensitivity up to 2 orders of magnitude and allowing reliable measurement of refractive index variations to be carried out with both DL and R of 10-7 RIU. This represents a 250-fold-improvement (at least) with respect to the state-of-the-art literature on PSi refractometers and pushes PSi interferometer performance to that of state-of-the-art ultrasensitive photonics/plasmonics refractive index platforms.


Subject(s)
Electrons , Nanostructures/chemistry , Silicon/chemistry , Sodium Chloride/chemistry , Ions/chemistry , Particle Size , Porosity , Surface Properties
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