Alexander Sinitskii

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Alexander Sinitskii

Professor Inorganic Chemistry University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Contact

Address
HAH 604C
Lincoln NE 68588-0304
Phone
402-472-3543 On-campus 2-3543
Email
sinitskii@unl.edu
Website

Education

  • Ph.D., Moscow State University
  • M.S., Moscow State University
  • B.S., Moscow State University

Research Interests

Materials science, inorganic chemistry, synthesis of nanomaterials, self-assembly techniques, nanoscale device fabrication

Current Research

The group is working on the chemical design of novel functional materials for applications in electronics, photonics, sensors and energy storage. Such materials include graphene, carbon nanotubes, inorganic nanowires, colloidal particles, macroporous oxides and some others (Figure 1). Our strategy is to control the structure and composition of these materials at nanoscale to define their properties.

Figure 1. SEM images of different micro- and nanostructured materials with interesting properties. (a) A fragment of a monolayer graphene stripe with periodic holes. Scale bar is 1 μm. (b,c) Periodic silicon nanopillars. Scale bars are 500 nm. (d) Colloidal crystal composed by monodisperse polystyrene microspheres. Scale bar is 1 μm. (e) Side view image of a macroporous titania film. Scale bar is 2 μm.

One of the examples includes graphene-based nanostructures, such as nanoribbons and nanomeshes. Graphene, a two-dimensional material composed of carbon atoms packed in a honeycomb lattice, is attracting enormous interest due to its remarkable electronic, mechanical and thermal properties. Graphene has a great potential for electronics, but it cannot be directly used as a replacement for silicon in logic applications, because it has no bandgap. However, the bandgap can be opened if graphene is carved into nanostructures such as nanoribbons or nanomeshes (Figure 1a) with feature sizes less than 10 nm, which enables making graphene-based field-effect transistors with high on-off ratios. This is a vivid example of how controlling material’s structure at nanoscale defines its physical properties.

Another example is based on the self-assembly of monodisperse colloidal particles to form 2D and 3D arrays. When the structure of such an array is well-controlled, it gains a new property, the strong diffraction of light of certain wavelengths (Figure 1d). Such highly ordered assemblies of colloidal particles are known as colloidal crystals, and they are expected to find applications in optical technologies.

Figure 2. SEM images of different nanodevices. (a) Top view image of an electronic device consisting of a Si nanowire (horizontal) deposited on a Si/SiO2 substrate and contacted by four Au leads (diagonal). Scale bar is 1 μm. (b) Side view image of a nanoelectromechanical device where a multiwalled carbon nanotube bridging two Cr/Au electrodes is suspended at about 100 nm over the Si/SiO2 substrate. Scale bar is 200 nm. In both images the metallic contacts are shown in color for the sake of clarity.

In our work we use different materials characterization techniques, including scanning and transmission electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, UV-vis-IR spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and others. Also, we often use nanofabrication methods, such as photo- and electron beam lithography, focused ion beam, thermal evaporation, reactive ion etching, etc., to make nanoscale devices and test electrical and mechanical properties of nanomaterials; see examples in Figure 2.

For more information, please visit the Sinitskii Research Group Homepage.

Selected Publications

(1) A. Dimiev, D.V. Kosynkin, A. Sinitskii, A. Slesarev, Z. Sun, J.M. Tour. Layer-by-layer removal of graphene for device patterning. Science 331 (2011) 1168-1172.

(2) D.V. Kosynkin, W. Lu, A. Sinitskii, G. Pera, Z. Sun, J.M. Tour. Highly conductive graphene nanoribbons by longitudinal splitting of carbon nanotubes using potassium vapor. ACS Nano 5 (2011) 968-974.

(3) A. Sinitskii, J.M. Tour. Patterning graphene through the self-assembled templates: Toward periodic two-dimensional graphene nanostructures with semiconductor properties. Journal of the American Chemical Society 132 (2010) 14730-14732.

Complete list of publications