Investigation of Ag-TiO2 Interfacial Reaction
of Highly Stable Ag Nanowire Transparent Conductive Film with Conformal
TiO2 Coating by Atomic Layer Deposition
The
atomic layer deposition (ALD) technique is applied to coat Ag nanowires
(NWs) with a highly uniform and conformal TiO2 layer to
improve the stability and sustainability of Ag NW transparent conductive
films (TCFs) at high temperatures. The TiO2 layer can be
directly deposited on Ag NWs with a surface polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP)
coat that acts a bed for TiO2 seeding in the ALD process.
The ALD TiO2 layer significantly enhances the thermal stability
at least 100 fold when aged between 200–400 °C and also
provides an extra function of violet-blue light filtration for Ag
NW TCFs. Investigation into the interaction between TiO2 and Ag reveals that the conformal TiO2 shell could effectively
prevent Ag from 1D-to-3D ripening. However, Ag could penetrate the
conformal TiO2 shell and form nanocrystals on the TiO2 shell surface when it is aged at 400 °C. According to
experimental data and thermodynamic evaluation, the Ag penetration
leads to an interlayer composed of mixed Ag–Ag2O-amorphous
carbon phases and TiO2–x at the
Ag–TiO2 interface, which is thought to be caused
by extremely high vapor pressure of Ag at the Ag–TiO2 interface at a higher temperature (e.g., 400 °C).