Issue 22, 2014

Metallic nanowire networks: effects of thermal annealing on electrical resistance

Abstract

Metallic nanowire networks have huge potential in devices requiring transparent electrodes. This article describes how the electrical resistance of metal nanowire networks evolve under thermal annealing. Understanding the behavior of such films is crucial for the optimization of transparent electrodes which find many applications. An in-depth investigation of silver nanowire networks under different annealing conditions provides a case study demonstrating that several mechanisms, namely local sintering and desorption of organic residues, are responsible for the reduction of the systems electrical resistance. Optimization of the annealing led to specimens with transmittance of 90% (at 550 nm) and sheet resistance of 9.5 Ω sq−1. Quantized steps in resistance were observed and a model is proposed which provides good agreement with the experimental results. In terms of thermal behavior, we demonstrate that there is a maximum thermal budget that these electrodes can tolerate due to spheroidization of the nanowires. This budget is determined by two main factors: the thermal loading and the wire diameter. This result enables the fabrication and optimization of transparent metal nanowire electrodes for solar cells, organic electronics and flexible displays.

Graphical abstract: Metallic nanowire networks: effects of thermal annealing on electrical resistance

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Jul 2014
Accepted
17 Sep 2014
First published
19 Sep 2014

Nanoscale, 2014,6, 13535-13543

Author version available

Metallic nanowire networks: effects of thermal annealing on electrical resistance

D. P. Langley, M. Lagrange, G. Giusti, C. Jiménez, Y. Bréchet, N. D. Nguyen and D. Bellet, Nanoscale, 2014, 6, 13535 DOI: 10.1039/C4NR04151H

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