Li Jingang, Zheng Yuebing
Materials Science & Engineering Program, Texas Materials Institute, and Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712, United States.
Acc Mater Res. 2021 May 28;2(5):352-363. doi: 10.1021/accountsmr.1c00033. Epub 2021 Apr 2.
Nanofabrication is one of the core techniques in rapidly evolving nanoscience and nanotechnology. Conventional top-down nanofabrication approaches such as photolithography and electron beam lithography can produce high-resolution nanostructures in a robust way. However, these methods usually involve multistep processing and sophisticated instruments and have difficulty in fabricating three-dimensional complex structures of multiple materials and reconfigurability. Recently, bottom-up techniques have emerged as promising alternatives to fabricating nanostructures via the assembly of individual building blocks. In comparison to top-down lithographical methods, bottom-up assembly features the on-demand construction of superstructures with controllable configurations at single-particle resolution. The size, shape, and composition of chemically synthesized building blocks can also be precisely tailored down to the atomic scale to fabricate multimaterial architectural structures of high flexibility. Many techniques have been reported to assemble individual nanoparticles into complex structures, such as self-assembly, DNA nanotechnology, patchy colloids, and optically controlled assembly. Among them, the optically controlled assembly has the advantages of remote control, site-specific manipulation of single components, applicability to a wide range of building blocks, and arbitrary configurations of the assembled structures. In this Account, we provide a concise review of our contributions to the optical assembly of architectural materials and structures using discrete nanoparticles as the building blocks. By exploiting entropically favorable optothermal conversion and controlling optothermal-matter interactions, we have developed optothermal assembly techniques to manipulate and assemble individual nanoparticles. Our techniques can be operated both in solution and on solid substrates. First, we discuss the opto-thermoelectric assembly (OTA) of colloidal particles into superstructures by coordinating thermophoresis and interparticle depletion bonding in the solution. Localized laser heating generates a temperature gradient field, where the thermal migration of ions creates a thermoelectric field to trap charged particles. The depletion of ion species at the gap between closely positioned particles under optical heating provides strong interparticle bonding to stabilize colloidal superstructures with precisely controlled configurations and interparticle distances. Second, we discuss bubble-pen lithography (BPL) for the rapid printing of nanoparticles using an optothermal microbubble. The long-range convection flow induced by the optothermal bubble drags the colloidal particles to the substrate with a high velocity. BPL represents a general method for printing all kinds of building blocks into desired patterns in a high-resolution and high-throughput way. Third, we present the optothermally-gated photon nudging (OPN) technique, which manipulates and assembles particles on a solid substrate. Our solid-phase optical control of particles synergizes the modulation of particle-substrate interactions by optothermal effects and photon nudging of the particles by optical scattering forces. Operated on the solid surfaces without liquid media, OPN can avoid the undesired Brownian motion of nanoparticles in solutions to manipulate individual particles with high accuracy. In addition, the assembled structures can be actively reassembled into new configurations for the fabrication of tunable functional devices. Next, we discuss applications of the optothermally assembled nanostructures in surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, color displays, biomolecule sensing, and fundamental research. Finally, we conclude this Account with our perspectives on the challenges, opportunities, and future directions in the development and application of optothermal assembly.
纳米制造是快速发展的纳米科学和纳米技术的核心技术之一。传统的自上而下的纳米制造方法,如光刻和电子束光刻,可以以稳健的方式生产高分辨率的纳米结构。然而,这些方法通常涉及多步处理和复杂的仪器,并且在制造多种材料的三维复杂结构和可重构性方面存在困难。最近,自下而上的技术已成为通过单个构建块的组装来制造纳米结构的有前途的替代方法。与自上而下的光刻方法相比,自下而上的组装具有在单粒子分辨率下按需构建具有可控配置的超结构的特点。化学合成的构建块的尺寸、形状和组成也可以精确地定制到原子尺度,以制造具有高灵活性的多材料建筑结构。已经报道了许多将单个纳米粒子组装成复杂结构的技术,例如自组装、DNA纳米技术、补丁胶体和光控组装。其中,光控组装具有远程控制、单组分的位点特异性操纵、适用于广泛的构建块以及组装结构的任意配置等优点。在本综述中,我们简要回顾了我们使用离散纳米粒子作为构建块对建筑材料和结构的光学组装所做的贡献。通过利用熵有利的光热转换和控制光热-物质相互作用,我们开发了光热组装技术来操纵和组装单个纳米粒子。我们的技术可以在溶液和固体基板上操作。首先,我们讨论通过在溶液中协调热泳和粒子间耗尽键合将胶体粒子光热电组装(OTA)成超结构。局部激光加热产生温度梯度场,其中离子的热迁移产生热电场以捕获带电粒子。在光学加热下,紧密定位的粒子之间的间隙处离子种类的耗尽提供了强大的粒子间键合,以稳定具有精确控制的配置和粒子间距离的胶体超结构。其次,我们讨论使用光热微泡快速打印纳米粒子的气泡笔光刻(BPL)。光热气泡引起的长程对流将胶体粒子高速拖到基板上。BPL代表了一种以高分辨率和高通量方式将各种构建块打印成所需图案的通用方法。第三,我们介绍光热门控光子微推(OPN)技术,该技术在固体基板上操纵和组装粒子。我们对粒子的固相光学控制通过光热效应协同调制粒子-基板相互作用,并通过光散射力对粒子进行光子微推。在没有液体介质的固体表面上操作,OPN可以避免溶液中纳米粒子不希望的布朗运动,以高精度操纵单个粒子。此外,组装结构可以被主动重新组装成新的配置,以制造可调谐功能器件。接下来,我们讨论光热组装纳米结构在表面增强拉曼光谱、彩色显示、生物分子传感和基础研究中的应用。最后,我们以对光热组装开发和应用中的挑战、机遇和未来方向的看法来结束本综述。