Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9781278 Progress in Solid State Chemistry 2005 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
The electroplating techniques for metal aggregates and films deposition commonly use an electric current to reduce metal ions in solution, but are restricted to conducting substrate. This new electrochemical technique permits coating of insulating or conducting substrates with metals having controlled aggregate size and growth speed. The basis of our approach is the progressive outward growth of the metal from an electrode in contact with the substrate, with the cell geometry chosen in such a way that the electron current providing the reduction passes through the growing deposit. The nanostructured deposit is composed of branched nanoaggregates from a quasi-continuous film to a more dendritic morphology dependant on current conditions. This approach has been used to elaborate tin electrodeposited thin films composed of a homogeneous distribution of nanoparticles on conducting or insulating substrates. In our works, when a non-continuous buffer gold coating is used, spontaneous mixing of tin atoms into AuSn nanoparticles takes place even at room temperature forming a nanostructured fractal film, if the substrate is conducting or insulating. Without a gold buffer layer, the deposit is composed of large pure tin micro-crystals with a large size distribution, less adapted to tin oxide nanoparticle formation. Indeed, from these tin metal deposits, the final goal is to elaborate functional nanostructured tin oxide films by oxidation for gas sensor applications.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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