Thermal annealing is essential for achieving ultrasmall
size ferromagnetic
properties in next-generation high performance nanocomposite magnetic
materials. However, during the annealing process, growth and agglomeration
of nanoparticles normally occurs, which destroys the narrow size distributions.
Thus, the materials become less suitable for application in high-density
magnetic recording. The mechanism of nanoparticle growth and sintering
has been difficult to determine because of the lack of suitable in situ tools to probe subnanometer changes at the local
level. Here we report a study using high-resolution scanning transmission
electron microscopy (STEM) coupled with an in situ thermal annealing stage of surfactant-free, monodispersed superparamagnetic
PtFe (cubic) alloy nanoparticles (≈2 nm in diameter) stabilized
in or on a KCl matrix. Ex situ experiments confirmed that annealing
produces PtFe (tetragonal) ordered intermetallic nanoparticles with
a mean diameter of 5 nm, and the in situ study revealed that the mechanism
of nanoparticle growth is dominated by particle–particle coalescence,
although Ostwald ripening is also implicated in a few regions. In
addition, to determine the time dependent evolution of the size distribution
of an ensemble of over 400 nanoparticles, analysis of the in situ
data also allows tracking of individual nanoparticles, distinguishing
coalescence from Ostwald ripening, nanoparticle by nanoparticle. This
approach has provided valuable insights into changes in crystal structure
and sintering that occur during the thermal annealing of Pt–Fe
nanoparticles