
'Materials Magic' Simplifies Crystal-Making Process
Rutgers materials scientists have devised a novel and easy technique
to make thin, crystal-like materials for electronic devices. The
technique may offer a decided improvement over today's tedious and
exacting method of growing crystals with an additional benefit of
producing materials in sizes and shapes not now possible.
The researchers coax thousands of microscopic grains of individual crystals to assemble into tightly packed layers. The resulting orderly array of particles mimics the performance of traditionally fabricated crystalline wafers, without the time and expense of growing crystals in a molten mixture or solution, then slicing them into thin layers.
"Since we make these materials with techniques drawn from ceramic fabrication, there is potential to synthesize them economically and in large size and quantity," said Richard Riman, professor of ceramic and materials engineering.
Riman and his colleagues conducted their research with lead zirconate titanate, or PZT, which is used in motion sensors, electrical capacitors and even for vibration damping in high-performance skis and tennis racquets. PZT has proven almost impossible to fabricate as a single crystal. A number of new applications in sensing, imaging and energy storage appear possible if the material can be fabricated in a variety of sizes and shapes with the highly ordered atomic structure of crystals.
The Rutgers-led team created PZT particles using chemical processes, forming cubes of uniform shape and size between two and three microns on a side (almost 50 times smaller than a grain of table salt). The team then made a slurry of PZT cubes in an alcohol and mineral oil mixture and placed droplets of the slurry on a water surface. Various forces, including the water's surface tension, caused the cubes to "self-assemble" into a densely packed single layer. The scientists then transferred the array of cubes onto a glass tube or microscope slide, resulting in a thin layer of crystal-like PZT.
While additional work will be needed to make the fabrication process practical for large-scale production, the research suggests it will be possible to make materials with unique shapes and properties.






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