IUCrJ (May 2014)

Evolution of atomic structure during nanoparticle formation

  • Christoffer Tyrsted,
  • Nina Lock,
  • Kirsten M. Ø. Jensen,
  • Mogens Christensen,
  • Espen D. Bøjesen,
  • Hermann Emerich,
  • Gavin Vaughan,
  • Simon J. L. Billinge,
  • Bo B. Iversen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1107/S2052252514006538
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 3
pp. 165 – 171

Abstract

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Understanding the mechanism of nanoparticle formation during synthesis is a key prerequisite for the rational design and engineering of desirable materials properties, yet remains elusive due to the difficulty of studying structures at the nanoscale under real conditions. Here, the first comprehensive structural description of the formation of a nanoparticle, yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ), all the way from its ionic constituents in solution to the final crystal, is presented. The transformation is a complicated multi-step sequence of atomic reorganizations as the material follows the reaction pathway towards the equilibrium product. Prior to nanoparticle nucleation, reagents reorganize into polymeric species whose structure is incompatible with the final product. Instead of direct nucleation of clusters into the final product lattice, a highly disordered intermediate precipitate forms with a local bonding environment similar to the product yet lacking the correct topology. During maturation, bond reforming occurs by nucleation and growth of distinct domains within the amorphous intermediary. The present study moves beyond kinetic modeling by providing detailed real-time structural insight, and it is demonstrated that YSZ nanoparticle formation and growth is a more complex chemical process than accounted for in conventional models. This level of mechanistic understanding of the nanoparticle formation is the first step towards more rational control over nanoparticle synthesis through control of both solution precursors and reaction intermediaries.

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