| Literature DB >> 28470842 |
Nabeel Ahmad1,2, Guillaume Wang1, Jaysen Nelayah1, Christian Ricolleau1, Damien Alloyeau1.
Abstract
Liquid-cell transmission electron microscopy (LCTEM) has opened up a new way to study chemical reactions at the interface between solids and liquids. However, understanding the effects of the electron beam in the liquid cell has been clearly identified as one of the most important challenges to assess correctly and quantitatively LCTEM data. Here we show that the electron beam can be used to drive reversible deposition/dissolution cycles of copper shells over gold nanoparticles in methanol. Besides revealing the influence of irreversible processes on the kinetic of growth/etching cycles, this study of nanostructure behaviour as a function of the dose rate highlights the possibility to switch the oxidising or reducing nature of liquid environment only with the electron beam. The chemical and electronic processes possibly involved in these tunable redox reactions are qualitatively discussed together with their possible impacts on electrochemical LCTEM experiments.Entities:
Keywords: Beam effects; Cu deposition/dissolution; galvanic corrosion; liquid-cell TEM; radiolysis; redox reactions
Year: 2017 PMID: 28470842 DOI: 10.1111/jmi.12568
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Microsc ISSN: 0022-2720 Impact factor: 1.758