| Literature DB >> 26934833 |
Ignacio G Gonzalez-Martinez1,2, Thomas Gemming1, Rafael Mendes1, Alicja Bachmatiuk1,3,4, Viktor Bezugly2, Jens Kunstmann2,5, Jürgen Eckert6, Gianaurelio Cuniberti2, Mark H Rümmeli1,3,4.
Abstract
The catalyst-assisted nucleation and growth mechanisms for many kinds of nanowires and nanotubes are pretty well understood. At times, though, 1D nanostructures form without a catalyst and the argued growth modes have inconsistencies. One such example is the catalyst-free growth of aluminium borate nanowires. Here we develop an in-situ catalyst-free room temperature growth route for aluminium nanowires using the electron beam in a transmission electron microscope. We provide strong experimental evidence that supports a formation process that can be viewed as a phase transition in which the generation of free-volume induced by the electron beam irradiation enhances the atomic mobility within the precursor material. The enhanced atomic mobility and specific features of the crystal structure of Al5BO9 drive the atomic rearrangement that results in the large scale formation of highly crystalline aluminium borate nanowires. The whole formation process can be completed within fractions of a second. Our developed growth mechanism might also be extended to describe the catalyst-free formation of other nanowires.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26934833 PMCID: PMC4776144 DOI: 10.1038/srep22524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Single step formation.
(A) The smooth precursor remains stable when the beam is spread out. (B) The precursor transforms near instantly as one diminishes the beam waist once the reaction current density threshold is reached. Typically, the transformation occurs when the diameter of the beam waist is slightly larger than that of the precursor specimen under investigation. After the reaction a large number of NWs stick out of the precursor pointing in all directions, in addition, there is a sizeable volume loss in the precursor. (C) The yield and aspect ratio of the NWs from a single precursor can be maximized by speeding up the reduction of the beam waist and turning the beam down to a nanometer probe. In these cases the details of the transformation happen too fast to be tracked by the naked eye.
Figure 2Amorphous to crystalline phase transition.
(A) Prior to nucleation the precursor remains amorphous as can be seen from the featureless diffraction pattern in the inset. The region of the diffraction pattern encircled in yellow originates from the features highlighted in the image below (Selected Area Electron Diffraction, or SAED), providing a visual view of the amorphous character of the precursor. (B) A multitude of bright spots appear in the diffraction pattern after the NWs have been nucleated. The SAED study reveals crystalline NWs are responsible for the selected set of diffraction spots once the amorphous-crystalline phase transition has been completed.
Figure 3Extended growth of supported NW growth and progressive precursor thinning.
(A) The length of the supported NWs shown grows visibly as the total condensed irradiation (red circle) increases. (B) After 30 seconds of condensed irradiation the precursor appears considerably compact. Nevertheless, areas of lighter contrast can already be seen near the edges. (C) After 210 seconds of condensed irradiation the precursor is extensively eroded indicating a substantial part of its material has been lost due to the action of the condensed beam. A dense matt of NWs extends all through the precursor forming an urchin-like structure.
Figure 4Crystalline NW structure and growth direction.
The crystalline structure of the NW is clearly discernible in the high resolution TEM image on the right. The NW axis lies along the [100] direction as determined from the indexed FFT pattern in the top left corner (the [200] and [100] directions are parallel). A schematic drawing of the unit cell has been superimposed on the image to emphasize the parallelism between the NW’s growth direction and the octahedral chains that form its backbone.
Figure 5The NW formation process.
The formation process of a group of NWs is illustrated in a sequence of screenshots taken from movie S1. (A) Initial state. The precursor is stable an amorphous when the beam is well spread. The dashed yellow line separates a region of dark contrast (left) from a thinner section of lighter contrast (right). (B) Ionization. As the current density increases there is a larger amount of atoms being ionized and displaced due to interactions with the impinging electrons. Inonized atoms are more reactive and mobile setting the stage for atomic rearrangement. A small degree of material desorption is stimulated by the beam (thinner region of lighter contrast extends). (C) Free volume generation. The newly created radicals react within the precursor. Larger amounts of species that can escape the specimen such as O+, O2 and B2O2 are generated. Note how the curvature of the precursor’s edge is further indented indicating a considerable degree of volume loss. (D) Rearrangement. Small regions of the specimen start to crystallize as the specimens atoms rearrange into a more stable configuration. Those regions have a slightly darker contrast (areas inside the dashed line boxes) indicating that the atoms have acquired a more closed-packed configuration. The elemental blocks that form the crystalline structure of the Al5BO9 NWs start to assemble in different islets. (E) Nucleation. The octahedral chains that form the backbone (and the groups that interlink them) are fully assembled in those regions that previously appeared as dim shadows. The shadows have now turned into recognizable NWs as the backbone chains grow (The NW pointed at by the yellow arrow formed from the shadow in the yellow dashed-line box). (F) Short pieces of backbone are assembled and stacked in various “islets”. There are “attractive” forces at the ends of the chains due to the close-packed structure of the octahedral groups. More and more octahedral groups and backbone sections are brought together. (G) A long NW results from the alignment and bridging of multiple shorter backbone sections.