Abstract
Nanoporosity in silicon results in interface-dominated mechanics, fluidics, and photonics that are often superior to the ones of the bulk material. However, their active control, for example, by electronic stimuli, is challenging due to the absence of intrinsic piezoelectricity in the base material. Here, for large-scale nanoporous silicon cantilevers wetted by aqueous electrolytes, electrosorption-induced mechanical stress generation of up to 600 kPa that is reversible and adjustable at will by potential variations of ≈1 V is shown. Laser cantilever bending experiments in combination with in operando voltammetry and step coulombmetry allow this large electro-actuation to be traced to the concerted action of 100 billions of parallel nanopores per square centimeter cross-section and determination of the capacitive charge-stress coupling parameter upon ion adsorption and desorption as well as the intimately related stress actuation dynamics for perchloric and isotonic saline solutions. A comparison with planar silicon surfaces reveals mechanistic insights on the observed electrocapillarity (Hellmann-Feynman interactions) with respect to the importance of oxide formation and wall roughness on the single-nanopore scale. The observation of robust electrochemo-mechanical actuation in a mainstream semiconductor with wafer-scale, self-organized nanoporosity opens up novel opportunities for on-chip integrated stress generation and actuorics at exceptionally low operationvoltages.
Highlights
The datasets presented here belong to an investigation of electrochemical actuation of porous silicon immersed in different electrolytes
When a potential is applied to the porous silicon sample by a potentiostat, anions from the electrolyte solution accumulate on the internal surface of the porous silicon pore walls
A surface stress is enacted onto the porous silicon pore walls and a film stress develops in the porous silicon thin film as a whole
Summary
The datasets presented here belong to an investigation of electrochemical actuation of porous silicon immersed in different electrolytes. Address: Hamburg University of Technology, Institute for Materials and X-Ray Physics, 21073 Hamburg University of Hamburg, Centre for Hybrid Nanostructures CHyN, 22607 Hamburg, Germany
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