D. DellasegaSilvia Maria PietralungaA PezzoliValeria RussoL. NasiClaudia ContiMohammad J. VahidA. TagliaferriM. Passoni
Tungsten oxide nanowires have been synthesized by vacuum annealing in the range 500-710 °C from amorphous-like tungsten films, deposited on a Si(100) substrate by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) in the presence of a He background pressure. The oxygen required for the nanowires formation is already adsorbed in the W matrix before annealing, its amount depending on deposition parameters. Nanowire crystalline phase and stoichiometry depend on annealing temperature, ranging from W18O49-Magneli phase to monoclinic WO3. Sufficiently long annealing induces the formation of micrometer-long nanowires, up to 3.6 μm with an aspect ratio up to 90. Oxide nanowire growth appears to be triggered by the crystallization of the underlying amorphous W film, promoting their synthesis at low temperatures.
Yohei YomogidaMai NaganoHiromu HamasakiKaori HiraharaYasumitsu MiyataKazuhiro Yanagi
D. DellasegaG. MerloClaudia ContiC. E. BottaniM. Passoni
Gang GuBo ZhengWei‐Qiang HanSiegmar RothJie Liu
Lars BerggrenA. AzensGunnar A. Niklasson
Junichi NagaiTadatoshi KamimoriMamoru Mizuhashi