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Tunable Photoluminescence via Thermally Evaporated ZnS Ultra Thin Films
Pages 46-50
Yoshifumi Urakawa and Karen K. Gleason

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/2369-3355.2014.01.01.5

Published: 25 June 2014

 

Abstract: ZnS thin films have been deposited by thermal evaporation at various deposition rates. By controlling the deposition rate, the position of the maximum in the photoluminescence spectra could be easily tuned from 2.9 to 2.0 eV, which produced a corresponding change in the emission color. The optical and morphological characteristics of the ZnS thin films were measured. The photoluminescence spectra had broad peaks, suggesting a distribution of ZnS nanocrystallites dimensions. Nanocrystallites dimensions were in the range of 1 nm to 3 nm via TEM analyses. The changes in optical properties were potentially attributable to the lattice defects of ZnS crystals, including Schottky defects and the substation of sulfur atoms by oxygen atoms. The color of the resulting light emission was obtained by controlling the deposition rate of ZnS.

Keywords: Zinc Sulfide, Thermal Evaporation, Thin Film, Photoluminescence, Lattice Defect.

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Wear-Resistant Nanostructured Sol-Gel Coatings for Functional Applications
Pages 100-108
Nadja Felde, Luisa Coriand, Angela Duparré and Andreas Tünnermann

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/2369-3355.2016.03.03.1

Published: 21 December 2016

 

Abstract: Improvement of the wear resistance of functional surfaces is crucial in order to facilitate a variety of practical applications, such as self-cleaning or anti-fogging. This especially holds for functional surface nanostructures, whose tops can easily get worn off when exposed to even low abrasion forces. Thus, our work addresses the enhancement of the wear resistance of such fine-scale structures. We present an efficient manufacturing procedure for generating long-term durable surfaces with simultaneously tailored wetting behavior and high optical quality. Our approach is based on a sol-gel coating that consists of an alumina layer with specific nanoroughness yielding the function-relevant surface structure, and a protective thin smooth silica film providing the mechanical robustness without influencing that functional structure. The roughness of the alumina layer can be systematically adjusted, thus enabling us to achieve desired wetting effects all the way up to superhydrophilicity and, after application of an additional thin hydrophobic top coat, to superhydrophobicity. To demonstrate the enhanced robustness of these coatings we perform abrasive wear tests and investigate the impact of abrasion cycles on the wetting effects and optical properties of the coatings. Furthermore, the durability of the structures is directly revealed by advanced roughness characterization procedures based on Atomic Force Microscopy followed by power spectral density function (PSD) analysis.

Keywords: Durable thin film coating, Surface roughness, Wetting, Superhydrophobic surface, Superhydrophilic surface, Optical coating, Scatter losses.

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