Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) is a method of choice for the growth of highly conformal thin films with accurately controlled thickness on planar and nanostructured surfaces. These advantages make it pivotal for emerging nanotechnology applications. This review sheds light on the current developments on the ALD of vanadium oxide, which, with proper postdeposition treatment yields a variety of functional and smart oxide phases. The application of vanadium oxide coatings in electrochemical energy storage, microelectronics and smart windows are emphasized.
CNT–TiO2 core–shell nanostructured coatings were made using a hybrid CVD/ALD process. The evaluation of these films as photoanodes for the photoelectrochemical water splitting reaction reveals a clear benefit from the involvement of CNTs.
Solar energy harvesting
is an essential component for a clean and
sustainable future energy supply. Hereby, solar–thermal energy
conversion is of a significant importance, and the role of absorbing
layers is pivotal. Nanoscale design of thermally responsive absorbing
nanocomposite coatings is addressed in this study with the objective
to tailor the light absorption behavior. While carbon nanotubes (CNTs)
act as perfect black absorbers, vanadium dioxide (VO2)
shows a semiconductor-to-metal transition (SMT) at 67 °C with
an abrupt change in the optical properties. Combining the properties
of these two nanometric building blocks is investigated as an approach
to design smart black nanocomposite films. The CNTs feature either
an upward or a downward thermal emissivity switching across the SMT
depending on the morphology of the overgrown VO2 nanolayer.
Decorated CNTs with VO2 nanoparticles feature an enhancement
of the thermal emissivity above the SMT, whereas VO2-covered
CNTs feature a decrease of thermal emissivity when they turn metallic
above the SMT. The results were successfully explained by a theoretical
model based on effective media approximations. By means of this model,
the percolation threshold for the VO2 inclusions was identified.
VO2 inclusions below this threshold are mostly confined
in small domains, and near/mid-infrared light absorption dominates
in the metallic phase as a consequence of the localized surface plasmons’
excitation. Above the percolation threshold, VO2 inclusions
form large continuous domains that are more reflective in the metallic
phase. The percolation threshold is the result of surface-energy-driven
dewetting that can be influenced by the implemented thermal treatment.
The developed VO2–CNT nanocomposite films hold appealing
properties for the design of smart absorbers for solar energy harvesting
and thermal management as well as photothermal actuators.
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