We report the synthesis of highly flexible and mechanically robust hybrid silica nanowires (NWs) which can be used as novel building blocks to construct superhydrophobic functional materials with three-dimensional macroporous networks. The hybrid silica NWs, with an average diameter of 80 nm and tunable length of up to 12 μm, are prepared by anisotropic deposition of the hydrolyzed tetraethylorthosilicate in water/n-pentanol emulsions. A mechanistic investigation reveals that the trimethoxy(octadecyl)silane introduced to the water-oil interface in the synthesis plays key roles in stabilizing the water droplets to sub-100 nm and also growing a layer of octadecyl groups on the NW surface. This work opens a solution-based route for the one-pot preparation of monodisperse, hydrophobic silica NWs and represents an important step toward the bottom-up construction of 3D superhydrophobic materials and macroporous membranes.
Graphene nanodots (GNDs) are one of the most attractive graphene nanostructures due to their tunable optoelectronic properties. Fabricated by polystyrene‐nanosphere lithography, uniformly sized graphene nanodots array (GNDA) is constructed as an ultraviolet photodetector (PD) with ZnO nanofilm spin coated on it. The size of GNDA can be well controlled from 45 to 20 nm varying the etching time. It is revealed in the study that the photoelectric properties of ZnO/GNDA PD are highly GNDA size‐dependent. The highest responsivity (R) and external quantum efficiency of ZnO/GNDA (20 nm) PD are 22.55 mA W−1 and 9.32%, almost twofold of that of ZnO PD. Both ZnO/GNDA (20 nm) PD and ZnO/GNDA (30 nm) PD exhibit much faster response speed under on/off switching light and have shorter rise/decay time compared with ZnO PD. However, as the size of GNDA increase to 45 nm, the PD appears poor performance. The size‐dependent phenomenon can be explained by the energy band alignments in ZnO/GNDA hybrids. These efforts reveal the enhancement of GNDs on traditional photodetectors with tunable optoelectronic properties and hold great potential to pave a new way to explore the various remarkable photodetection performances by controlling the size of the nanostructures.
We report the synthesis of highly flexible and mechanically robust hybrid silica nanowires (NWs) which can be used as novel building blocks to construct superhydrophobic functional materials with three‐dimensional macroporous networks. The hybrid silica NWs, with an average diameter of 80 nm and tunable length of up to 12 μm, are prepared by anisotropic deposition of the hydrolyzed tetraethylorthosilicate in water/n‐pentanol emulsions. A mechanistic investigation reveals that the trimethoxy(octadecyl)silane introduced to the water‐oil interface in the synthesis plays key roles in stabilizing the water droplets to sub‐100 nm and also growing a layer of octadecyl groups on the NW surface. This work opens a solution‐based route for the one‐pot preparation of monodisperse, hydrophobic silica NWs and represents an important step toward the bottom‐up construction of 3D superhydrophobic materials and macroporous membranes.
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