Abstract

Controlled alignment of nanomaterials over large length scales (>1 cm) presents a challenge in the utilization of low-cost solution processing techniques in emerging nanotechnologies. Here, we report on the lyotropic liquid crystalline behavior of transition-metal-doped zinc oxide nanowires and their facile alignment over large length scales under external fields. High aspect ratio Co- and Mn-doped ZnO nanowires were prepared by solvothermal synthesis with uniform incorporation of dopant ions into the ZnO wurtzite crystal lattice. The resulting nanowires exhibited characteristic paramagnetic behavior. Suspensions of surface-functionalized doped nanowires spontaneously formed stable homogeneous nematic liquid crystalline phases in organic solvent above a critical concentration. Large-area uniaxially aligned thin films of doped nanowires were obtained from the lyotropic phase by applying mechanical shear and, in the case of Co-doped nanowires, magnetic fields. Application of shear produced thin films in which the nanowire long axes were aligned parallel to the flow direction. Conversely, the nanowires were found to orient perpendicular to the direction of the applied magnetic fields. This indicates that the doped ZnO possesses magnetocrystalline anisotropy sufficient in magnitude to overcome the parallel alignment which would be predicted based solely on the anisotropic demagnetizing field associated with the high aspect ratio of the nanowires. We use a combination of magnetic property measurements and basic magnetostatics to provide a lower-bound estimate for the magnetocrystalline anisotropy.

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