1 research outputs found
γ‑Iron Phase Stabilized at Room Temperature by Thermally Processed Graphene Oxide
Stabilizing nanoparticles on surfaces,
such as graphene, is a growing
field of research. Thereby, iron particle stabilization on carbon
materials is attractive and finds applications in charge-storage devices,
catalysis, and others. In this work, we describe the discovery of
iron nanoparticles with the face-centered cubic structure that was
postulated not to exist at ambient conditions. In bulk, the γ-iron
phase is formed only above 917 °C, and transforms back to the
thermodynamically favored α-phase upon cooling. Here, with X-ray
diffraction and Mössbauer spectroscopy we unambiguously demonstrate
the unexpected room-temperature stability of the γ-phase of
iron in the form of the austenitic nanoparticles with low carbon content
from 0.60% through 0.93%. The nanoparticles have controllable diameter
range from 30 nm through 200 nm. They are stabilized by a layer of
Fe/C solid solution on the surface, serving as the buffer controlling
carbon content in the core, and by a few-layer graphene as an outermost
shell