Abstract

One-dimensional photonic crystals (rugate filters) constructed from porous silicon were modified by the chemical hydrosilylation of terminal alkenes (decyl, 10-carboxydecyl, and 10-hydroxydecyl) in the presence of a concentration gradient of diazonium salt initiators. The concentration gradient was generated by vertically orienting the Si wafer containing the porous Si layer in an alkene solution and then introducing the diazonium salt at the bottom edge of the wafer. Slow diffusion of the salt led to a varying density of grafted alkene across the surface of the porous layer. The modified surfaces were end-capped with methyl groups by electrochemical grafting to impart improved stability and greater hydrophobicity. The surface modified with 10-carboxydecyl species was ionized by deprotonation of the carboxy groups to increase the hydrophilicity of this porous silicon surface. The pore-wall modification gradients were characterized using attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). The more hydrophilic portion of the gradient changes color when water infiltrates the porous nanostructure because of a shift in the stop band of the photonic crystal. The more hydrophobic portion of the gradient excludes water, although mixtures of water and ethanol will infiltrate this region, depending on the concentration of ethanol in the mixture. A simple visual sensor for small quantities of ethanol in water, capable of detecting ethanol concentrations of between 0 and 8% with a resolution of 1% is demonstrated.

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