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Soft Matter

Where physics meets chemistry meets biology for fundamental soft matter research.




Paper

Soft Matter, 2009, 5, 3469 - 3474, DOI: 10.1039/b904635f


Mechanical self-assembly fabrication of gears

Jie Yin, Eyal Bar-Kochba and Xi Chen


Self-assembled buckling of thin film/substrate systems has attracted increasing attention for fabricating ordered micro- and nanostructures. However, most studies have been limited to a planar substrate. We employ the spontaneous buckling patterns on curved substrates to fabricate several types of quasi-two-dimensional (quasi-2D) and three-dimensional (3D) gear-like microcomponents. The substrate curvature can be positive or negative, and the proposed technique does not require extra external guidance or a prepatterned template. The gear features, including the number and amplitude of the teeth, can be manipulated by controlling the geometry and material properties of the film/substrate system. A theoretical model is established to predict the buckled profiles, which is validated by numerical simulation and experiment. A variety of gear morphologies, including 3D bevel and helical gears (which are difficult to fabricate using the conventional photolithography/etching technique), are obtained to further demonstrate the potential of the mechanical self-assembly approach.

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