Yan Zheng, Zhang Fan, Liu Fei, Han Mengdi, Ou Dapeng, Liu Yuhao, Lin Qing, Guo Xuelin, Fu Haoran, Xie Zhaoqian, Gao Mingye, Huang Yuming, Kim JungHwan, Qiu Yitao, Nan Kewang, Kim Jeonghyun, Gutruf Philipp, Luo Hongying, Zhao An, Hwang Keh-Chih, Huang Yonggang, Zhang Yihui, Rogers John A
Department of Materials Science and Engineering and Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Center for Mechanics and Materials, Applied Mechanics Laboratory, Department of Engineering Mechanics, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, P.R. China.
Sci Adv. 2016 Sep 23;2(9):e1601014. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1601014. eCollection 2016 Sep.
Capabilities for assembly of three-dimensional (3D) micro/nanostructures in advanced materials have important implications across a broad range of application areas, reaching nearly every class of microsystem technology. Approaches that rely on the controlled, compressive buckling of 2D precursors are promising because of their demonstrated compatibility with the most sophisticated planar technologies, where materials include inorganic semiconductors, polymers, metals, and various heterogeneous combinations, spanning length scales from submicrometer to centimeter dimensions. We introduce a set of fabrication techniques and design concepts that bypass certain constraints set by the underlying physics and geometrical properties of the assembly processes associated with the original versions of these methods. In particular, the use of releasable, multilayer 2D precursors provides access to complex 3D topologies, including dense architectures with nested layouts, controlled points of entanglement, and other previously unobtainable layouts. Furthermore, the simultaneous, coordinated assembly of additional structures can enhance the structural stability and drive the motion of extended features in these systems. The resulting 3D mesostructures, demonstrated in a diverse set of more than 40 different examples with feature sizes from micrometers to centimeters, offer unique possibilities in device design. A 3D spiral inductor for near-field communication represents an example where these ideas enable enhanced quality () factors and broader working angles compared to those of conventional 2D counterparts.
先进材料中三维(3D)微纳结构的组装能力在广泛的应用领域具有重要意义,几乎涵盖了每一类微系统技术。依赖二维前驱体的可控压缩屈曲的方法很有前景,因为它们已证明与最复杂的平面技术兼容,这些技术中的材料包括无机半导体、聚合物、金属以及各种异质组合,长度尺度从亚微米到厘米。我们引入了一组制造技术和设计概念,绕过了与这些方法原始版本相关的组装过程的基础物理和几何特性所设定的某些限制。特别是,使用可释放的多层二维前驱体能够实现复杂的三维拓扑结构,包括具有嵌套布局、可控缠结点和其他以前无法获得的布局的密集架构。此外,同时协调组装其他结构可以增强结构稳定性并驱动这些系统中扩展特征的运动。在40多个不同示例中展示的所得三维介观结构,特征尺寸从微米到厘米不等,为器件设计提供了独特的可能性。用于近场通信的三维螺旋电感器就是一个例子,与传统二维同类器件相比,这些理念能够实现更高的品质因数和更宽的工作角度。