Figure 1 Calculated reflectance of Si nanostructures. Calculated (a) period- (i.e., distance between Selleck NVP-BGJ398 adjacent nanostructures) and (b) height-dependent reflectance of Si nanostructures as a function of wavelength when the height and period were fixed at 300 nm, respectively. (c) Calculated average reflectance as functions of period and height
of the Si nanostructures in a wavelength range of 300 to 1,100 nm. The bottom diameter to period LY2874455 solubility dmso ratio and the top diameter to period ratio of the Si nanostructures used in the simulation were assumed as 0.8 and 0.15, respectively. Fabrication of Si nanostructures Figure 2a shows a schematic illustration of the process steps to fabricate antireflective nanostructures on a Si substrate by inductively coupled plasma (ICP) etching using spin-coated Ag nanoparticles as the etch mask. The spin-coating process was performed at 5,000 rpm for 20 s, and the sintering process was carried out at 250°C on a hotplate for 5 min in order to transform
the as-coated Ag ink layer into nano-scale Ag etch masks. During the sintering process, the solvent-based Ag ink, which consisted of soluble Ag clusters containing Ag atoms of 10 wt.%, randomly agglomerated to reach an energetically stable state [7, 8, 15]. For this reason, the sintering temperature was carefully chosen. It is worth noting that the temperature and process time to make Ag nanoparticles is much lower and shorter, respectively,
than the previously reported method in which metal nanoparticles were formed through Geneticin in vitro thermal dewetting of evaporated thin metal film [7, 11, 12, 15]. The Ag ink ratio in a mixture of Ag ink and isopropanol was adjusted to produce differently distributed Ag nanoparticles because their distribution predominantly determines the distribution of the resulting nanostructures, which strongly affects their antireflection properties [6–8, 12]. Figure 2b shows the top-view field-emission scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM, S-4700, Hitachi, Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) images of the randomly distributed Ag nanoparticles formed on the Si substrate for PDK4 various Ag ink ratios. As the Ag ink ratio was decreased, the size and the distance between adjacent Ag nanoparticles became smaller and closer, respectively, as can be seen in Figure 2b. The fractional surface coverage of Ag nanoparticles on Si substrate also decreased from 54.2% to 40.3% when Ag ink ratio was decreased from 50% to 25%. This can be attributed to the reduced quantity of Ag atoms in the spin-coated Ag ink due to dilution. We calculated the average distance between adjacent Ag nanoparticles, which in turn affect the distance between adjacent Si nanostructures, using a free-ware image processing program (ImageJ 1.42q, NIH).