Side-to-Side Cold Welding for Controllable Nanogap Formation from "dumbbell" Ultrathin Gold Nanorods

Gaole Dai, Binjun Wang, Shang Xu, Yang Lu*, Yajing Shen*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Cold welding has been regarded as a promising bottom-up nanofabrication technique because of its ability to join metallic nanostructures at room temperature with low applied stress and without introducing damage. Usually, the cold welding process can be done instantaneously for ultrathin nanowires (diameter <10 nm) in “head-to-head” joining. Here, we demonstrate that “dumbbell” shaped ultrathin gold nanorods can be cold welded in the “side-to-side” mode in a highly controllable manner and can form an extremely small nanogap via a relatively slow welding process (up to tens of minutes, allowing various functional applications). By combining in situ high-resolution transmission electron microscopic analysis and molecular dynamic simulations, we further reveal the underlying mechanism for this “side-to-side” welding process as being dominated by atom kinetics instead of thermodynamics, which provides critical insights into three-dimensional nanosystem integration as well as the building of functional nanodevices.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)13506-13511
JournalACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Volume8
Issue number21
Online published13 May 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2016

Research Keywords

  • cold welding
  • gold nanorod
  • in situ TEM
  • nanogap
  • ultrathin nanowire

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