2 research outputs found
Naturally Occurring Allotropes of Carbon
Carbon is one of
the most important chemical elements, forming
a wide range of important allotropes, ranging from diamond over graphite
to nanostructural materials such as graphene, fullerenes, and carbon
nanotubes (CNTs). Especially these nanomaterials play an important
role in technology and are commonly formed in laborious synthetic
processes that often are of high energy demand. Recently, fullerenes
and their building blocks (buckybowls) have been found in natural
fossil materials formed under geological conditions. The question
arises of how diverse nature can be in forming different types of
natural allotropes of carbon. This is investigated here, using modern
analytical methods such as ultrahigh-resolution mass spectrometry
and transmission electron microscopy, which facilitate a detailed
understanding of the diversity of natural carbon allotropes. Large
fullerenes, fullertubes, graphene sheets, and double- and multiwalled
CNTs together with single-walled CNTs were detected in natural heavy
fossil materials while theoretical calculations on the B3LYP/6-31G(d)
level of theory using the ORCA software package support the findings
Formation Mechanism of Silver Nanoparticles Stabilized in Glassy Matrices
In any given matrix control over the final particle size
distribution
requires a constitutive understanding of the mechanisms and kinetics
of the particle evolution. In this contribution we report on the formation
mechanism of silver nanoparticles embedded in a soda-lime silicate
glass matrix. For the silver ion-exchanged glass it is shown that
at temperatures below 410 °C only molecular clusters (diameter
<1 nm) are forming which are most likely silver dimers. These clusters
grow to nanoparticles (diameter >1 nm) by annealing above this
threshold
temperature of 410 °C. It is evidenced that the growth and thus
the final silver nanoparticle size are determined by matrix-assisted
reduction mechanisms. As a consequence, particle growth proceeds after
the initial formation of stable clusters by addition of silver monomers
which diffuse from the glass matrix. This is in contrast to the widely
accepted concept of particle growth in metal–glass systems,
in which it is assumed that the nanoparticle formation is predominantly
governed by Ostwald ripening processes