The present invention generally relates to the production of open pores in a variety of substrates. The invention particularly relates to the formation of high-aspect ratio wells (blind pores) and/or channels (through-pores) in surfaces of substrates using particles irradiated by a pulsed laser beam to cause the particles to penetrate the substrate, optionally aided by magnetic field gradients. These substrates containing open porosity can be infiltrated with materials for added functionality.
Nanoporous materials can be classified in part according to their pore size. According to IUPAC, microporous materials have pore diameters of 0.2-2 nm, mesoporous materials have pore diameters between 2 and 50 nm, and macroporous materials have pore diameters of 50-1000 nm. Nanoporous materials, particularly macroporous thin films, are widely used in technologies for chemical purification, size-dependent removal of contaminants, as separators in microstructured fuel cells and lithium-ion batteries, and as templates for the growth of nanowires or high-aspect ratio electrodes. One method to produce nanoporous substrates is by ion-track etching in polymer thin films by bombardment with heavy-element ions (Z>50) followed by controlled etching under alkali conditions. Other methods of producing nanoporous substrates include the anodization of aluminum substrates, self-organization of pores from cast polymer solutions under dissipative conditions, selective etching of self-assembled block copolymer films, and etching of defects introduced by nanoimprint lithography.
These conventional methods have several shortcomings. For example, ion-track etching processes generally require a high-energy ionization source such as a particle accelerator operating under carefully controlled temperatures to prevent substrate warping. In addition, there is a subsequent wet-etching process that must be performed offline, and can take several hours before the desired pore size is achieved. This limits the scalability of nanoporous membrane production with well-defined channels.
In view of these shortcomings, there is a need for methods to produce nanoporous materials, preferably under ambient conditions and temperatures without a wet chemical etching process.
The present invention provides methods suitable for producing nanoporous substrates comprising open, high-aspect ratio channels, and products formed thereby.
According to one aspect of the invention, a method is provided that includes depositing a particle on a substrate and irradiating the particle with a pulsed laser beam to cause an increase in local temperature of a portion of the substrate contacted by and adjacent to the particle, enabling the particle to penetrate and migrate through the substrate to form a pore.
According to another aspect of the invention, a product is provided that is produced by a method comprising the steps described above.
Other aspects of the invention include a method as described above wherein the method includes applying a magnetic field gradient to a magnetic particle as the particle is irradiated with the pulsed laser beam in order to promote the movement of the particle within the substrate or to direct the movement of the particle within the substrate, and/or includes filling the pore with a material that provides a functional capability independent of the properties of the substrate.
Technical effects of the methods described above preferably include the ability to produce nanoporous substrates without the necessity of a wet chemical etching process. Such methods may optionally be implemented as high-yield continuous processes performed at ambient temperatures.
Other aspects and advantages of this invention will be further appreciated from the following detailed description.
Disclosed herein are processes for producing spatially controlled porosity in substrates without the need for wet chemical etching. The processes involve irradiating light-absorbing particles, preferably nanoparticles, on at least one surface of a substrate with a pulsed laser beam (i.e., laser beam pulses or laser pulses) that causes particles to penetrate the surface and move at least partially through the substrate and thereby form open pores in the substrate surface. Specifically, pulsed laser irradiation increases the temperature of the particles, which serve as localized heat sources that can cause a transient phase transition in the substrate proximal to each of the particles. This phase transition is sufficient to allow the particles to penetrate and move through the substrate to form open pores, either completely through the substrate to form what are referred to herein as “through-pores” or “channels,” or arrested partially through the substrate to form what are referred to herein as “blind pores” or “wells.” Optionally, the movement of the particles may be promoted or directed (guided) with a magnetic field gradient.
A laser source 16 located above the substrate 10 is used to selectively direct laser pulses 18 onto the substrate surface and the nanoparticles 14 thereon. Preferably, the laser source 16 is a pulsed laser system that can operate at nano-, pico-, and/or femtosecond frequencies with wavelengths between 300 and 1200 nm.
It is also within the scope of the invention that processes of the type described above may be performed to form either wells or channels in a substrate. Pore widths or diameters can be tuned as a function of particle size, laser pulse energy and power density, and also by the thermophysical properties of the substrate including coefficient of thermal expansion and heat deflection temperature. Processes of the type described above are capable of forming pores having a wide range of diameters, for example, average diameters between 0.05 and 5.0 μm, and more preferably between 50 and 100 nm. Although examples illustrated in the drawings and described herein represent the pores 12 as being formed along relatively linear paths and in a direction normal to the surface of the substrate 10 on which the nanoparticles 14 were deposited, it is within the scope of the invention that pores may be nonlinear and/or at various angles relative to surfaces of the substrate 10. For example, high aspect-ratio pores can be produced in a direction normal to a given surface of the substrate 10 by axially aligning the laser source 16 and magnetic field source 20 in a direction normal to the surface such that the nanoparticles 14 are driven through the substrate 10 along a common axis shared by the laser pulses 18 and the magnetic field gradient. Alternatively, the pores 12 may be produced at various angles by aligning the laser pulses 18 and magnetic field source 20 at an angle other than normal to the surface or by axially offsetting the laser pulses 18 and magnetic field source 20 relative to each other in a direction perpendicular to a normal to the surface. A nonlinear pore may be formed, for example, by using an offset alignment of the laser pulses 18 and the magnetic field gradient and/or varying the strength of the magnetic field gradient or moving the magnetic field source 20 relative to the laser pulses 18 as the nanoparticle 14 forming the nonlinear pore travels along a path through the substrate 10. Specifically, offsetting the alignment of the laser pulses 18 and the magnetic field gradient such that they are not aligned along a common axis may cause the nanoparticle 14 to move through the substrate 10 in a nonlinear path. For example,
The process represented in
Such processes can be used to selectively form high aspect-ratio pores in a variety of two- and three-dimensional substrates. For example, the processes are applicable to various substrate materials including but not limited to thermoplastic and ceramic substrates. It should also be appreciated that the processes are applicable to substrates having various structures including but not limited to nonporous substrates, monolithic substrates, non-woven thin films, planar or faceted substrates, or nonplanar or curved substrates. Specific nonlimiting examples include thermoplastic web substrates, thermoplastic sheets, silicate (glass), alumina and aluminosilicate substrates, silicon nitride and silicon carbide, cermets, and various metal-oxides and dichalcogenides. Particularly suitable substrates are believed to have a thickness of between 1 and 10 mil (about 25 and 250 μm).
Nanoparticles suitable for use in the process described above may be formed of various materials, preferably a light-absorbing material with appreciable extinction in the near-ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths. Nonlimiting examples include metals, metal oxides and chalcogenides, carbides, carbon black, pnictides including nitrides, or combinations thereof. If the process includes the use of magnetic field gradients, the nanoparticles preferably comprise a magnetizable material, for example, a ferromagnetic metal such as iron, cobalt, nickel, etc. or their oxides, with a measurable magnetic moment that can enable response to the magnetic field gradients. In order to achieve both the desired light-absorbing and magnetic characteristics described above, the nanoparticles may be composites including more than one material. For example, the nanoparticles could include a core formed of a magnetizable material and an exterior coating thereon formed of light-absorbing material. Although the processes are described herein in reference to nanoparticles, it should be understood that the processes are not limited to using any particular size of particles. Nanoparticles are defined herein as particles having sizes (diameters or maximum dimension) of less than one micrometer, preferably having sizes of 100 nm or less.
In addition to the above, open pores created by processes as described herein can be impregnated with functional materials to perform a variety of functions. This enables one to develop nanoporous substrates for applications beyond separations and filtration. For example, the pores may be filled to generate customized “smart films” with additional capabilities such as, but not limited to, sensing or actuating functions that are independent of the substrate's properties. A nonlimiting example includes thin films with established barrier properties that are impregnated with sensors that can detect volatile analytes, for example, using changes in optical response for a device-free readout. Specific nonlimiting examples include thin films configured for monitoring volatile organic compounds related to food or beverage spoilage (e.g., ethylene, diamines, sulfides, and diacetyl), toxic or combustible gases in closed environments (e.g., CO, H2, CH4, SO2, NO2) or volatile compounds produced in exhaled breath that can be used as biomarkers for early detection of stress or disease (e.g., NO, aldehydes, ketones).
Other nonlimiting examples of functional materials for sensors in substrates include materials capable of changing their optical properties when complexed with a specific analyte, including volatile organics, fumigants (e.g., methyl bromide), herbicides, and pesticides, persistent organic pollutants (e.g., dioxins, polyhaloaromatics, PFOA), controlled substances (narcotics), high-energy compounds and accelerants used in explosives or incendiary devices (e.g., nitroaromatics, ketones, alcohol, ethers), heavy-metal ions, radioactive elements, and disease biomarkers. In such examples, microporous nanopowders and/or synthetic reporter molecules that are sensitive to local changes in their chemical microenvironment can be used to detect the adsorption of analytes based on simple optical signatures. In certain embodiments, the functional material may have a chromogenic response to an analyte (e.g., vapochromic and solvatochromic dyes). In another embodiment, the functional material may produce a change in photoemission in response to an analyte (fluorescence, luminescence, resonant light scattering).
Another potential application includes substrates comprising functional materials that contain microporous and mesoporous nanoparticles, including but not limited to zeolites, mesoporous silica and aluminosilicates, metal-organic and covalent-organic frameworks, and various species of gels. Similar to as discussed above in reference to the nanopores, the porous nanoparticles of said functional materials can be pre-loaded with sensor materials or catalysts to support chromatic transitions in response to analyte adsorption.
Another potential application includes thin-film circuits for flexible electronic devices. Such embodiments may include functional materials that support useful electronic or photonic properties. For example, a thin-film circuit could be formed to include through-pores (channels) filled with conductive or semiconductive materials, or a precursor that can be annealed into a conductive or semiconductive material.
Processes for filling the open pores include, but are not limited to, vacuum infiltration processes driven by a pressure gradient across the substrate, and application of liquid dispersions or slurries that exploit native or modified surface energies and wetting properties of the pores.
Nonlimiting embodiments of the invention will now be described in reference to experimental investigations leading up to the invention.
Thin films comprising an array of channels therein were produced with a process including the steps represented in
In certain investigations, aqueous suspensions of the MGNCs (dav=100 nm) were produced having concentrations of 10 to 80 μg MGNCs per milliliter suspension. The suspensions were applied with a rod coater onto 2-mil polyethylene terephthalate (PET) substrates (ca. 50 μm thickness). Prior to deposition of the suspension, thin film substrates were treated with an oxygen plasma to promote desired wetting characteristics. The suspension-coated substrates were dried leaving a dispersed MGNC coating thereon, ranging from 3 to 20 particles/μm2.
In certain investigations, substrates were mounted over a NeFeB magnet with a measured field strength of 2.6 kG at the substrate surface, and a field gradient of 4.5 kG/cm. A stationary Q-switched Nd-YAG laser (wavelength 1064 nm, pulse duration 5 ns) operating at 5 Hz was focused into 2- or 3-mm spots on each of the substrates. About 50 to 200 laser pulses per spot (10 to 40 seconds laser irradiation time) were delivered for complete channel formation. The entire process is typically performed within a working range of about 3.2 to 5.4 mJ/pulse and power densities between 1.2 and 1.9 MW/mm2.
To establish the feasibility of using certain aspects of the invention as part of a continuous process, an investigation was conducted in which a process comprising the steps represented in
Referring to
Referring to
The above-noted process was also performed on other types of substrates. For example,
PVDF has lower melting and glass transition temperatures (Tm and Tg) than PET and a higher coefficient of thermal expansion, resulting in pores with larger entrance apertures (about 0.4 to 1.7 μm) but tapered channels resulting in narrower exit apertures. PFTE and glass have much higher Tm and Tg values than PET, but nanosized open pores can still be generated with minimum substrate deformation. It should therefore be appreciated that PET, PVDF, PTFE, and glass membranes were used for demonstrative purposes, and such use is not intended to be limiting. Properties of these substrates are listed in Table 1.
It should be appreciated that the laser conditions used in these investigations could be modified to achieve high aspect-ratio wells or channels of desired dimensions for various substrates. For example, it has been observed that 50 to 150 pulses are sufficient to form complete channels through 50-μm PET membranes, whereas approximately 200 pulses was observed to produce a similar result in a glass substrate. The laser conditions and nanoparticles can also be tuned to controllably produce high aspect-ratio pores of different widths.
While the invention has been described in terms of specific or particular embodiments and investigations, it should be apparent that alternatives could be adopted by one skilled in the art. For example, the system for performing the processes and its components could differ in appearance and construction from the embodiments described herein and shown in the drawings, functions of certain components of the system could be performed by components of different construction but capable of a similar (though not necessarily equivalent) function, process parameters such as laser power, laser durations, number of laser pulses, and particle sizes could be modified, and appropriate materials could be substituted for those noted. In addition, the invention encompasses additional or alternative embodiments in which one or more features or aspects of different disclosed embodiments may be combined. Accordingly, it should be understood that the invention is not necessarily limited to any embodiment described herein or illustrated in the drawings. It should also be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed above are for the purpose of describing the disclosed embodiments and investigations, and do not necessarily serve as limitations to the scope of the invention. Therefore, the scope of the invention is to be limited only by the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/336,553, filed May 13, 2016, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62336553 | May 2016 | US |