TiO2 ALD Coating of Amorphous TiO2 Nanotube Layers: Inhibition of the Structural and Morphological Changes Due to Water Annealing
Abstract
The present work presents a strategy to stabilize amorphous anodic self-organized TiO2
nanotube layers against morphological changes and crystallization upon extensive water
soaking. The growth of needle-like nanoparticles was observed on the outer and inner
walls of amorphous nanotube layers after extensive water soakings, in line with the
literature on water annealing. In contrary, when TiO2 nanotube layers uniformly coated by
thin TiO2 using atomic layer deposition (ALD) were soaked in water, the growth rates of
needle-like nanoparticles were substantially reduced.We investigated the soaking effects
of ALD TiO2 coatings with different thicknesses and deposition temperatures. Sufficiently
thick TiO2 coatings (8.4 nm) deposited at different ALD process temperatures efficiently
hamper the reactions between water and F ions, maintain the amorphous state, and
preserve the original tubular morphology. This work demonstrates the possibility of
having robust amorphous 1D TiO2 nanotube layers that are very stable in water. This
is very practical for diverse biomedical applications that are accompanied by extensive
contact with an aqueous environment.
Keywords
TiO2, nanotubes, atomic layer deposition, coating, water annealingPersistent identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/11012/184655Document type
Peer reviewedDocument version
Final PDFSource
Frontiers in Chemistry. 2019, vol. 7, issue 1, p. 1-12.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fchem.2019.00038/full