Tailoring physical and chemical properties at the nanoscale by assembling nanoparticles currently paves the way for new functional materials. Obtaining the desired macroscopic properties is usually determined by a perfect control of the contact between nanoparticles. Therefore, the physics and chemistry of nanocontacts are one of the central issues for the design of the nanocomposites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRevealing defects and inhomogeneities of physical and chemical properties beneath a surface or an interface with in-depth nanometric resolution plays a pivotal role for a high degree of reliability in nanomanufacturing processes and in materials science more generally. (1, 2) Nanoscale noncontact depth profiling of mechanical and optical properties of transparent sub-micrometric low-k material film exhibiting inhomogeneities is here achieved by picosecond acoustics interferometry. On the basis of the optical detection through the time-resolved Brillouin scattering of the propagation of a picosecond acoustic pulse, depth profiles of acoustical velocity and optical refractive index are measured simultaneously with spatial resolution of tens of nanometers.
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