Methods for manufacturing an insulated busbar
US-10685766-B2 · Jun 16, 2020 · US
US11499248B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11499248-B2 |
| Application number | US-201816491849-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Feb 9, 2018 |
| Priority date | Mar 15, 2017 |
| Publication date | Nov 15, 2022 |
| Grant date | Nov 15, 2022 |
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An electric field drives nanocrystals dispersed in solvents to assemble into ordered three-dimensional superlattices. A first electrode and a second electrode 214 are in the vessel. The electrodes face each other. A fluid containing charged nanocrystals fills the vessel between the electrodes. The electrodes are connected to a voltage supply which produces an electrical field between the electrodes. The nanocrystals will migrate toward one of the electrodes and accumulate on the electrode producing ordered nanocrystal accumulation that will provide a superlattice thin film, isolated superlattice islands, or coalesced superlattice islands.
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The invention claimed is: 1. A method of making nanocrystal superlattices, comprising the steps of: providing a reactor vessel, providing a first electrode in said vessel, providing a second electrode in said vessel, providing charged nanocrystals dispersed in a solvent in said vessel between said first electrode and said second electrode, and applying a voltage across said first electrode and said second electrode producing an electrical field between said first electrode and said second electrode causing said nanocrystals to migrate to said first electrode and accumulate on said first electrode producing the nanocrystal superlattice. 2. The method of making nanocrystal superlattices of claim 1 wherein said first electrode and said second electrode face each other. 3. The method of making nanocrystal superlattices of claim 1 wherein said nanocrystals are statically or intermittently charged. 4. The method of making nanocrystal superlattices of claim 1 wherein said step of applying a voltage across said first electrode and said second electrode comprises of applying a voltage across said first electrode and said second electrode with a choice of field strength, temperature, and time. 5. The method of making nanocrystal superlattices of claim 1 further comprising a post-processing step of heating to remove nanocrystal surface functionalization. 6. The method of making nanocrystal superlattices of claim 1 further comprising a post-processing step of sintering. 7. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said first electrode and said second electrode are made of the same material. 8. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said first electrode and said second electrode are made of different materials. 9. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said nanocrystals dispersed in a solvent are 1-dodecanethiol-capped silver nanocrystals dispersed in toluene. 10. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said nanocrystals dispersed in a solvent are oleic acid-capped nickel nanocrystals in hexane. 11. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said nanocrystals dispersed in a solvent are napthoic-capped nickel nanocrystals in chloroform. 12. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said electrical field between said first electrode and said second electrode causing said nanocrystals to migrate to said first electrode and accumulate on said first electrode produces conformal films nanocrystal superlattices. 13. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said electrical field between said first electrode and said second electrode causing said nanocrystals to migrate to said first electrode and accumulate on said first electrode produces islands of nanocrystal superlattices. 14. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 13 wherein said islands merge and form a multigrain thick nanocrystal superlattice film. 15. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said step of providing a first electrode in said vessel comprises providing a first electrode patterned with conductive and non-conductive regions and wherein said step of applying a voltage across said first electrode and said second electrode producing an electrical field between said first electrode and said second electrode causes said nanocrystals to migrate to said first electrode and accumulate on said conductive regions of said first electrode. 16. The method of making a nanocrystal superlattice of claim 1 wherein said step of providing a first electrode in said vessel comprises providing a first electrode with conductive pads and non-conductive regions and wherein said step of applying a voltage across said first electrode and said second electrode producing an electrical field between said first electrode and said second electrode causes said nanocrystals to migrate to said first electrode and accumulate on said conductive pads of said first electrode. 17. A method to separate a nanocrystal solution sample into separate portions, comprising the steps of: providing a reactor vessel, providing a first electrode in said vessel, providing a second electrode in said vessel, providing charged nanocrystals dispersed in a solvent in said vessel between said first electrode and said second electrode, applying a voltage across said first electrode and said second electrode producing an electrical field between said first electrode and said second electrode causing said nanocrystals to migrate to said first electrode and producing a nanocrystal accumulate on said first electrode removing said first electrode with said nanocrystal accumulate from the solution with the voltage on, and redispersing said nanocrystal accumulate on said first electrode by dipping said nanocrystal accumulate on said first electrode into a carrier fluid to create a separate portion. 18. The method to separate a nanocrystal solution sample into separate portions of claim 17 , wherein said electrical field is the smallest feasible electric field, and wherein said smallest feasible electric field is used to create portions with larger average nanocrystal sizes and wherein the process is repeating with said smallest feasible electric field and then with increased electric fields to create additional portions each with smaller average nanocrystal size.
using solutions · CPC title
being chalcogenide semiconductor materials not being oxides, e.g. ternary compounds · CPC title
being conductive materials · CPC title
being non-crystalline insulating materials, e.g. glass or polymers · CPC title
using electric fields, e.g. electrolysis · CPC title
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