nanowirelike
Nanowirelike refers to materials that form elongated, high aspect-ratio nanostructures whose surface geometry and dimensions resemble those of nanowires. The term commonly applies to structures with diameters on the order of tens of nanometers and lengths ranging from hundreds of nanometers to many micrometers. It also covers morphologies that closely mimic nanowires but may differ in crystallinity or internal architecture.
Morphology and crystallinity. Nanowirelike structures are typically elongated along one axis, with cross-sections that are circular
Synthesis. They are produced by a variety of methods, including vapor-phase growth such as chemical vapor deposition
Characterization and properties. Characterization relies on electron microscopy (SEM, TEM) and diffraction (XRD) to assess morphology
Applications and relation to nanowires. Nanowirelike structures are explored for nanoelectronics, sensors, photodetectors, energy storage, and