Irving I. Liaw
University of Melbourne
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Featured researches published by Irving I. Liaw.
Organic Letters | 2010
Wallace W. H. Wong; Doojin Vak; Th. Birendra Singh; Shijie Ren; Chao Yan; David J. Jones; Irving I. Liaw; Robert N. Lamb; Andrew B. Holmes
A new class of self-assembling hexa-peri-hexbenzocoronene (HBC)-fullerene hybrid materials has been synthesized and characterized. Photoluminescence experiments indicate that energy transfer processes can be tuned in these donor-acceptor systems by varying the length and nature of the linker group. In preliminary device testing, ambipolar charge transport behavior is observed in organic field effect transistors, while single active component organic photovoltaic devices consisting of these materials achieved a maximum external quantum efficiency of 30%.
Faraday Discussions | 2010
Alex Wu; Kwun Lun Cho; Irving I. Liaw; Grainne Moran; Nigel Kirby; Robert N. Lamb
Two scales of roughness are imparted onto silicon surfaces by isotropically patterning micron sized pillars using photolithography followed by an additional nanoparticle coating. Contact angles of the patterned surfaces were observed to increase with the addition of the nanoparticle coating, several of which, exhibited superhydrophobic characteristics. Freeze fracture atomic force microscopy and in situ synchrotron SAXS were used to investigate the micro- and nano-wettability of these surfaces using aqueous liquids of varying surface tension. The results revealed that scaling different roughness morphologies result in unique wetting characteristics. It indicated that surfaces with micro, nano or dual scale roughness induced channels for the wetting liquid as per capillary action. With the reduction of liquid surface tension, nano-wetting behaviour differed between superhydrophobic and non-superhydrophobic dual-scale roughness surfaces. Micro-wetting behaviour, however, remained consistent. This suggests that micro- and nano-wetting are mutually exclusive, and that the order in which they occur is ultimately governed by the energy expenditure of the entire system.
Faraday Discussions | 2009
Derek Y. C. Chan; Md. Hemayet Uddin; Kwun Lun Cho; Irving I. Liaw; Robert N. Lamb; Geoffrey W. Stevens; Franz Grieser; Raymond R. Dagastine
We used atomic force microscopy to study dynamic forces between a rigid silica sphere (radius approximately 45 microm) and a silica nano-particle super-hydrophobic surface (SNP-SHS) in aqueous electrolyte, in the presence and absence of surfactant. Characterization of the SNP-SHS surface in air showed a surface roughness of up to two microns. When in contact with an aqueous phase, the SNP-SHS traps large, soft and stable air pockets in the surface interstices. The inherent roughness of the SNP-SHS together with the trapped air pockets are responsible for the superior hydrophobic properties of SNP-SHS such as high equilibrium contact angle (> 140 degrees) of water sessile drops on these surfaces and low hydrodynamic friction as observed in force measurements. We also observed that added surfactants adsorbed at the surface of air pockets magnified hydrodynamic interactions involving the SNP-SHS. The dynamic forces between the same silica sphere and a laterally smooth mica surface showed that the fitted Navier slip lengths using the Reynolds lubrication model were an order of magnitude larger than the length scale of the sphere surface roughness. The surface roughness and the lateral heterogeneity of the SNP-SHS hindered attempts to characterize the dynamic response using the Reynolds lubrication model even when augmented with a Navier slip boundary.
Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2012
Jacky K. L. Cho; Lauren A. Palmer; Alex Wu; Irving I. Liaw; David Cookson; Robert N. Lamb
Superhydrophobic surfaces were fabricated through a nanoparticle sol-gel process in the presence of a mono-disperse latex particle. By varying precursor nanoparticle size, surfaces of varying degrees of nanoroughness but controlled macro-roughness were produced, all of which exhibited superhydrophobic properties (θwater >160°, sliding angle <10°). These were immersed in water and studied in situ using synchrotron small angle X-ray scattering where the percentage interface under wetting (in contact with liquid) was directly quantified and found to agree well with traditional Cassie equations. Wetting studies in sodium dodecyl sulphate solutions of decreasing surface tension highlighting surfaces of increased hierarchical roughness (pseudo-fractal dimension ~2.5) contained significant quantity of entrapped air even at fluid surface tensions down to 37 mN m–1.
Nanotechnology | 2010
Jules Gardener; Irving I. Liaw; Gabriel Aeppli; Ian W. Boyd; Richard J. Chater; Tim Jones; David S. McPhail; Gopinathan Sankar; A. Marshall Stoneham; Marcin Sikora; Geoff Thornton; Sandrine Heutz
We report a new method for introducing metal atoms into silicon wafers, using negligible thermal budget. Molecular thin films are irradiated with ultra-violet light releasing metal species into the semiconductor substrate. Secondary ion mass spectrometry and x-ray absorption spectroscopy show that Mn is incorporated into Si as an interstitial dopant. We propose that our method can form the basis of a generic low-cost, low-temperature technology that could lead to the creation of ordered dopant arrays.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2010
Kwun Lun Cho; Irving I. Liaw; Alex Wu; Robert N. Lamb
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Kwun Lun Cho; Alex Wu; Irving I. Liaw; David Cookson; Robert N. Lamb
Applied Surface Science | 2007
M. Liu; Lin-Lin Zhu; G. He; Zhongping Wang; J.X. Wu; J.-Y. Zhang; Irving I. Liaw; Q. Fang; Ian W. Boyd
Thin Solid Films | 2011
Xiaofei Duan; Irving I. Liaw; Nguyen H. Tran; Robert N. Lamb
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2011
Jules Gardener; Irving I. Liaw; Gabriel Aeppli; Ian W. Boyd; Steven G. Fiddy; Geoffrey Hyett; Tim Jones; S. Lauzurica; Robert G. Palgrave; Ivan P. Parkin; Gopinathan Sankar; Marcin Sikora; A. M. Stoneham; Geoff Thornton; Sandrine Heutz