62 research outputs found
Three-Dimensional Valency Mapping in Ceria Nanocrystals
Using electron tomography combined with electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), we are able to map the valency of the Ce ions in CeO<sub>2â<i>x</i></sub> nanocrystals in three dimensions. Our results show a clear facet-dependent reduction shell at the surface of ceria nanoparticles; {111} surface facets show a low surface reduction, whereas at {001} surface facets, the cerium ions are more likely to be reduced over a larger surface shell. Our generic tomographic technique allows a full 3D data cube to be reconstructed, containing an EELS spectrum in each voxel. This possibility enables a three-dimensional investigation of a plethora of material-specific physical properties such as valency, chemical composition, oxygen coordination, or bond lengths, triggering the synthesis of nanomaterials with improved properties
Do Binary Supracrystals Enhance the Crystal Stability?
We
study the oxygen thermal stability of two binary systems. The
larger particles are magnetic amorphous Co (7.2 nm) or Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> (7.5 nm) nanocrystals, whereas the smaller ones (3.7
nm) are Au nanocrystals. The nanocrystal ordering as well as the choice
of the magnetic nanoparticles very much influence the stability of
the binary system. A perfect crystalline structure is obtained with
the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>/Au binary supracrystals. For the Co/Au
binary system, oxidation of Co results in the chemical transformation
from Co to CoO, where the size of the amorphous Co nanoparticles increases
from 7.2 to 9.8 nm in diameter. During the volume expansion of the
Co nanoparticles, Au nanoparticles within the binary assemblies coalesce
and are at the origin of the instability of the binary nanoparticle
supracrystals. On the other hand, for the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>/Au binary system, the oxidation of Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> to
Îł-Fe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> does not lead to a size change
of the nanoparticles, which maintains the stability of the binary
nanoparticle supracrystals. A similar behavior is observed for an
AlB<sub>2</sub>-type CoâAg binary system: The crystalline structure
is maintained, whereas in disordered assemblies, coalescence of Ag
nanocrystals is observed
Atomic Structure of Quantum Gold Nanowires: Quantification of the Lattice Strain
Theoretical studies exist to compute the atomic arrangement in gold nanowires and the influence on their electronic behavior with decreasing diameter. Experimental studies, <i>e.g.</i>, by transmission electron microscopy, on chemically synthesized ultrafine wires are however lacking owing to the unavailability of suitable protocols for sample preparation and the stability of the wires under electron beam irradiation. In this work, we present an atomic scale structural investigation on quantum single crystalline gold nanowires of 2 nm diameter, chemically prepared on a carbon film grid. Using low dose aberration-corrected high resolution (S)TEM, we observe an inhomogeneous strain distribution in the crystal, largely concentrated at the twin boundaries and the surface along with the presence of facets and surface steps leading to a noncircular cross section of the wires. These structural aspects are critical inputs needed to determine their unique electronic character and their potential as a suitable catalyst material. Furthermore, electron-beam-induced structural changes at the atomic scale, having implications on their mechanical behavior and their suitability as interconnects, are discussed
Atomic Structure of Quantum Gold Nanowires: Quantification of the Lattice Strain
Theoretical studies exist to compute the atomic arrangement in gold nanowires and the influence on their electronic behavior with decreasing diameter. Experimental studies, <i>e.g.</i>, by transmission electron microscopy, on chemically synthesized ultrafine wires are however lacking owing to the unavailability of suitable protocols for sample preparation and the stability of the wires under electron beam irradiation. In this work, we present an atomic scale structural investigation on quantum single crystalline gold nanowires of 2 nm diameter, chemically prepared on a carbon film grid. Using low dose aberration-corrected high resolution (S)TEM, we observe an inhomogeneous strain distribution in the crystal, largely concentrated at the twin boundaries and the surface along with the presence of facets and surface steps leading to a noncircular cross section of the wires. These structural aspects are critical inputs needed to determine their unique electronic character and their potential as a suitable catalyst material. Furthermore, electron-beam-induced structural changes at the atomic scale, having implications on their mechanical behavior and their suitability as interconnects, are discussed
Monitoring Galvanic Replacement Through Three-Dimensional Morphological and Chemical Mapping
Galvanic
replacement reactions on metal nanoparticles are often
used for the preparation of hollow nanostructures with tunable porosity
and chemical composition, leading to tailored optical and catalytic
properties. However, the precise interplay between the three-dimensional
(3D) morphology and chemical composition of nanostructures during
galvanic replacement is not always well understood as the 3D chemical
imaging of nanoscale materials is still challenging. It is especially
far from straightforward to obtain detailed information from the inside
of hollow nanostructures using electron microscopy techniques such
as SEM or TEM. We demonstrate here that a combination of state-of-the-art
EDX mapping with electron tomography results in the unambiguous determination
of both morphology transformation and elemental composition of nanostructures
in 3D, during galvanic replacement of Ag nanocubes. This work provides
direct and unambiguous experimental evidence toward understanding
the galvanic replacement reaction. In addition, the powerful approach
presented here can be applied to a wide range of nanoscale transformation
processes, which will undoubtedly guide the development of novel nanostructures
Crystal Structure of a Lightweight Borohydride from Submicrometer Crystallites by Precession Electron Diffraction
We demonstrate that precession electron diffraction at
low-dose
conditions can be successfully applied for structure analysis of extremely
electron-beam-sensitive materials. Using LiBH<sub>4</sub> as a test
material, complete structural information, including the location
of the H atoms, was obtained from submicrometer-sized crystallites.
This demonstrates for the first time that, where conventional transmission
electron microscopy techniques fail, quantitative precession electron
diffraction can provide structural information from submicrometer
particles of such extremely electron-beam-sensitive materials as complex
lightweight hydrides. We expect the precession electron diffraction
technique to be a useful tool for nanoscale investigations of thermally
unstable lightweight hydrogen-storage materials
Multiple Twinning As a Structure Directing Mechanism in Layered Rock-Salt-Type Oxides: NaMnO<sub>2</sub> Polymorphism, Redox Potentials, and Magnetism
New polymorphs of NaMnO<sub>2</sub> have been observed using transmission
electron microscopy and synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction. Coherent
twin planes confined to the (NaMnO<sub>2</sub>) layers, parallel to
the (101Ì
) crystallographic planes of the monoclinic layered
rock-salt-type α-NaMnO<sub>2</sub> (O3) structure, form quasi-periodic
modulated sequences, with the known α- and ÎČ-NaMnO<sub>2</sub> polymorphs as the two limiting cases. The energy difference
between the polymorphic forms, estimated using a DFT-based structure
relaxation, is on the scale of the typical thermal energies that results
in a high degree of stacking disorder in these compounds. The results
unveil the remarkable effect of the twin planes on both the magnetic
and electrochemical properties. The polymorphism drives the magnetic
ground state from a quasi-1D spin system for the geometrically frustrated
α-polymorph through a two-leg spin ladder for the intermediate
stacking sequence toward a quasi-2D magnet for the ÎČ-polymorph.
A substantial increase of the equilibrium potential for Na deintercalation
upon increasing the concentration of the twin planes is calculated,
providing a possibility to tune the electrochemical potential of the
layered rock-salt ABO<sub>2</sub> cathodes by engineering the materials
with a controlled concentration of twins
Supracrystalline Colloidal Eggs: Epitaxial Growth and Freestanding Three-Dimensional Supracrystals in Nanoscaled Colloidosomes
The
concept of template-confined chemical reactions allows the synthesis
of complex molecules that would hardly be producible through conventional
method. This idea was developed to produce high quality nanocrystals
more than 20 years ago. However, template-mediated assembly of colloidal
nanocrystals is still at an elementary level, not only because of
the limited templates suitable for colloidal assemblies, but also
because of the poor control over the assembly of nanocrystals within
a confined space. Here, we report the design of a new system called âsupracrystalline
colloidal eggsâ formed by controlled assembly of nanocrystals
into complex colloidal supracrystals through superlattice-matched
epitaxial overgrowth along the existing colloidosomes. Then, with
this concept, we extend the supracrystalline growth to lattice-mismatched
binary nanocrystal superlattices, in order to reach anisotropic superlattice
growths, yielding freestanding binary nanocrystal supracrystals that
could not be produced previously
Atomic Structure of Defects in Anion-Deficient Perovskite-Based Ferrites with a Crystallographic Shear Structure
Crystallographic
shear (CS) planes provide a new structure-generation mechanism in
the anion-deficient perovskites containing lone-pair cations. Pb<sub>2</sub>Sr<sub>2</sub>Bi<sub>2</sub>Fe<sub>6</sub>O<sub>16</sub>,
a new <i>n</i> = 6 representative of the A<sub><i>n</i></sub>B<sub><i>n</i></sub>O<sub>3<i>n</i>â2</sub> homologous series of the perovskite-based ferrites with the CS structure,
has been synthesized using the solid-state technique. The structure
is built of perovskite blocks with a thickness of four FeO<sub>6</sub> octahedra spaced by double columns of FeO<sub>5</sub> edge-sharing
distorted tetragonal pyramids, forming 1/2[110](101)<sub>p</sub> CS
planes (space group <i>Pnma</i>, <i>a</i> = 5.6690(2)
Ă
, <i>b</i> = 3.9108(1) Ă
, <i>c</i> =
32.643(1) Ă
). Pb<sub>2</sub>Sr<sub>2</sub>Bi<sub>2</sub>Fe<sub>6</sub>O<sub>16</sub> features a wealth of microstructural phenomena
caused by the flexibility of the CS planes due to the variable ratio
and length of the constituting fragments with {101}<sub>p</sub> and
{001}<sub>p</sub> orientation. This leads to the formation of âwavesâ,
âhairpinsâ, âÎ-shapedâ defects,
and inclusions of the hitherto unknown layered anion-deficient perovskites
Bi<sub>2</sub>(Sr,Pb)ÂFe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>8.5</sub> and Bi<sub>3</sub>(Sr,Pb)ÂFe<sub>4</sub>O<sub>11.5</sub>. Using a combination of diffraction,
imaging, and spectroscopic transmission electron microscopy techniques
this complex microstructure was fully characterized, including direct
determination of positions, chemical composition, and coordination
number of individual atomic species. The complex defect structure
makes these perovskites particularly similar to the CS structures
in ReO<sub>3</sub>-type oxides. The flexibility of the CS planes appears
to be a specific feature of the Sr-based system, related to the geometric
match between the SrO perovskite layers and the {100}<sub>p</sub> segments
of the CS planes
The Li<sub>3</sub>Ru<sub><i>y</i></sub>Nb<sub>1â<i>y</i></sub>O<sub>4</sub> (0 †<i>y</i> †1) System: Structural Diversity and Li Insertion and Extraction Capabilities
Searching
for novel high-capacity electrode materials combining
cationic and anionic redox processes is an ever-growing activity within
the field of Li-ion batteries. In this respect, we report on the exploration
of the Li<sub>3</sub>Ru<sub><i>y</i></sub>Nb<sub>1â<i>y</i></sub>O<sub>4</sub> (0 †<i>y</i> â€
1) system with an O/M ratio of 4 to maximize the number of oxygen
lone pairs, responsible for the anionic redox. We show that this system
presents a very rich crystal chemistry with the existence of four
structural types, which derive from the rocksalt structure but differ
in their cationic arrangement, creating either zigzag, helical, jagged
chains or clusters. From an electrochemical standpoint, these compounds
are active on reduction via a classical cationic insertion process.
The oxidation process is more complex, because of the instability
of the delithiated phase. Our results promote the use of the rich
Li<sub>3</sub>MO<sub>4</sub> family as a viable platform for a better
understanding of the relationships between structure and anionic redox
activity
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