Project overview
Almost the whole of modern technology and life is underpinned by methods for depositing and shaping materials. For instance the transistors which power our mobile phones, tablets, etc. consist of areas of silicon whose dimensions are now of the order of only tens of atoms across. Whilst current materials deposition technologies are truly impressive, there is still a need for more innovative, better and reduced cost methods for depositing technologically important materials in order to increase energy efficiency, improve their functional properties and break through into potential new markets. This is particularly true when we consider materials beyond the narrow range of those used in electronics and telecoms. A clear example of this is in the field of thermoelectric materials which can already be used in devices such as refrigerators, but more importantly in generating electricity directly from waste heat. Fundamental science has shown that if we could produce such materials in the form of dense parallel arrays of ultrathin wires that are each only 10-100 atoms across, the efficiency of these devices would be massively enhanced. However, the technology to achieve the necessary high quality materials at this size scale does not currently exist. In the field of computer memory, materials whose electrical resistances can be altered by rapid heating and cooling, so called phase change materials, are being developed The key barriers to the wide spread application of these materials are their relatively high switching energy and reliability of many billions of switching cycles. These could be overcome if a materials deposition technique existed which allowed us to deposit smaller elements than can currently be achieved. Finally the materials that are used in heat, i.e. infrared, sensing cameras could have a much wider range of applications, e.g. in home security and short range communications between smart appliances, if the cost of depositing them wasn't so high. This project will directly address these challenges, by building upon our recent breakthroughs in using electrodeposition, in which an electrical current causes the deposition of a material, from unusual, 'weakly-coordinating' solvents, to develop methods for depositing high quality materials for advanced applications in the fields of thermoelectric devices, phase change memory and infrared sensors and cameras.
Staff
Lead researchers
Other researchers
Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups
Research outputs
Yasir Noori & Cornelis De Groot,
2020, Journal of Computational Electronics, 19(3), 1203-1214
Type: article
Liam Mcdonnell, Jacob Viner, Pasqual Rivera , Xiaodong Xu & David C. Smith,
2020, 2D Materials, 7(4)
Type: article
Shibin Thomas, Danielle E. Smith, Victoria Greenacre, Yasir Noori, Andrew L. Hector, Cornelis De Groot, Gillian Reid & Philip N. Bartlett,
2020, Journal of the Electrochemical Society, 167(10)
Type: article
Katarina Cicvarić, Lingcong Meng, Daniel W. Newbrook, Ruomeng Huang, Sheng Ye, Wenjian Zhang, Andrew L. Hector, Gillian Reid, Philip N. Bartlett & C.H. Kees De Groot,
2020, ACS Omega, 5(24), 14679-14688
Type: article
Gilles, Ernest Heinrich Karl Moehl, Philip N. Bartlett & Andrew L. Hector,
2020, Langmuir, 36(16), 4432-4438
Type: article
Victoria Greenacre, Rhys, Paul King, William Levason & Gillian Reid,
2019, Dalton Transactions, 48(45), 17097-17105
DOI: 10.1039/C9DT03683K
Type: article
Daniel W Newbrook , Ruomeng Huang, Stephen P. Richards, Shivank Sharma, Gillian Reid, Andrew L. Hector & Cornelis De Groot,
2019, Journal of Physics: Energy
Type: article