98%
921
2 minutes
20
Wearable plasmonic devices combine the advantages of high flexibility, ultrathinness, light weight, and excellent integration with the optical benefits mediated by plasmon-enhanced electric fields. However, two obstacles severely hinder further developments and applications of a wearable plasmonic device. One is the lack of efficient approach to obtaining devices with robust antimotion-interference property, i.e., the devices can work independently on the morphology changes of their working structures caused by arbitrary wearing conditions. The other issue is to seek a facile and high-throughput fabrication method to satisfy the financial requirement of industrialization. In order to overcome these two challenges, a functional flexible film of nanowire cluster is developed, which can be easily fabricated by taking the advantages of both conventional electrochemical and sputtering methods. Such flexible plasmonic films can be made into wearable devices that work independently on shape changes induced by various wearing conditions (such as bending, twisting and stretching). Furthermore, due to plasmonic advantages of color controlling and high sensitivity to environment changes, the flexible film of nanowire cluster can be used to fabricate wearable items (such as bracelet, clothes, bag, or even commercial markers), with the ability of wireless visualization for humidity sensing.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.201700109 | DOI Listing |
Small
August 2025
MOE Key Laboratory of Cluster Science, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT), Beijing, 100081, P. R. China.
1D subnanomaterials (SNMs), encompassing nanowires and nanobelts with a diameter or thickness approximate to the size of a single unit cell, possess the inherent functionality of inorganic materials, polymer-analogue properties, intrinsic order, and multilevel interactions. These distinctive characteristics establish 1D SNMs as highly processable building blocks, offering significant advantages for the fabrication of advanced materials, including polarization materials, organogels, photothermal conversion devices, fluorescent materials, stimuli-responsive platforms, and catalysis. This paper summarizes assembly methods, including self-assembly, wet-spinning, electrospinning, directional coating, freezing-casting and Langmuir-Blodgett technique, which facilitate the integration of 1D SNMs into free-standing fibers, films, and 3D assemblies without polymeric additives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Nano
August 2025
Institute for Carbon-Based Thin Film Electronics, Peking University, Shanxi (ICTFE-PKU), Taiyuan 030012, China.
The synthesis of transition metal carbides with precise control over their dimension, morphology, and crystallinity at a subnanometer scale presents a significant challenge. Addressing this, a kinetics-controlled confined flash Joule heating method has been developed, characterized by superfast heating (>2000 K ms) and cooling (>30 K ms) rates, enabling the millisecond-scale production of subnanometer molybdenum carbide nanowires. These one-dimensional structures are synthesized through a carbothermic reduction of encapsulated polymolybdate cluster arrays, a process that eschews the need for solvents, catalysts, or special gases, utilizing single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) as both thermal conductors and structural templates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Protoc
July 2025
Engineering Research Center of Advanced Rare Earth Materials, Department of Chemistry, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China.
Atomic-level manufacturing enables the bottom-up fabrication of nanomaterials with tailored structures and properties. Clusters with atomic precise structures can be used as superatom building blocks to construct superstructures with exceptional properties beyond their individual properties. However, the programmable and large-scale synthesis of cluster assemblies remains challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
July 2025
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602.
Members of the tungsten-containing oxidoreductase (WOR) family, which contain a tungstopyranopterin (Tuco) cofactor, are typically either monomeric (WorL) or heterodimeric (WorLS). These enzymes oxidize aldehydes to the corresponding acids while reducing the redox protein ferredoxin. They have been structurally characterized mainly using WORs from hyperthermophilic archaea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
July 2025
Engineering Research Center of Advanced Rare Earth Materials, Department of Chemistry, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China.
Photochromic materials are promising in optical information storage, nonlinear optics, nonemissive displays, smart windows, etc. Photochromic transition metal oxides have significant advantages in stability and cost but are limited by poor processability. Herein, tungsten oxide sub-1 nm nanowires (TOSNWs) with a diameter of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF