| Literature DB >> 29222511 |
Wenpei Gao1,2, Jianbo Wu1,2,3,4, Aram Yoon1,2, Ping Lu5, Liang Qi6, Jianguo Wen7, Dean J Miller7, James C Mabon2, William L Wilson1,2, Hong Yang8, Jian-Min Zuo9,10.
Abstract
Atomic motion at grain boundaries is essential to microstructure development, growth and stability of catalysts and other nanostructured materials. However, boundary atomic motion is often too fast to observe in a conventional transmission electron microscope (TEM) and too slow for ultrafast electron microscopy. Here, we report on the entire transformation process of strained Pt icosahedral nanoparticles (ICNPs) into larger FCC crystals, captured at 2.5 ms time resolution using a fast electron camera. Results show slow diffusive dislocation motion at nm/s inside ICNPs and fast surface transformation at μm/s. By characterizing nanoparticle strain, we show that the fast transformation is driven by inhomogeneous surface stress. And interaction with pre-existing defects led to the slowdown of the transformation front inside the nanoparticles. Particle coalescence, assisted by oxygen-induced surface migration at T ≥ 300 °C, also played a critical role. Thus by studying transformation in the Pt ICNPs at high time and spatial resolution, we obtain critical insights into the transformation mechanisms in strained Pt nanoparticles.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29222511 PMCID: PMC5722898 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-16900-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Atomic structure of Pt ICNPs. (A) A TEM image of dispersed Pt ICNPs showing the uniform size and structure. (B) A high resolution electron micrograph of a Pt ICNP. The ICNP deviates from the 3-fold axis about 5°. (C) The atomic model of a Pt ICNP relaxed by MD simulation. In the model, atoms with coordination numbers deviated from that of FCC lattice are colored in purple, showing the positions of defects and dislocations. (D) A simulated HREM image using the atomic model in (C). The model is tilted 5° about the horizontal axis.
Figure 2TEM evidence for the transformation of Pt ICNPs to FCC single crystals. (A–E) Transformation in a Pt ICNP in a time sequence from the start of observation (0 s) to 7.7825 s taken at the electron dose of 90 e/Å2s. Figs (F,G) are the zoom-in images of ICNP 1 before and after transformation (images size 1536 × 1228 pixels). Three Pt ICNPs are seen supported on other nanoparticles as marked in (A). The dashed red lines mark the initial surfaces of the ICNPs and boundaries, while the dashed yellow lines mark the transformation front inside ICNP 1 (marked with the blue hexagon in (A)), 36 nm in diameter). The insets in (A–E) at the bottom right corners illustrate the structure and the transformed portion of the particle. The images shown here were averaged over 11 frames recorded at 2.5 ms apart for a displayed time resolution of 27.5 ms. Scale bar, 10 nm.
Figure 3Analysis of boundary movements. (A) Transformation and (B) migration speed measured along three directions labelled as a, b and c and plotted as a function of time for Pt ICNP 1 shown in Fig. 2. A separate time coordinate is drawn on top of (B) at the unit of ms, starting from 7.5000 s.
Figure 4Propagation across the two neighboring Pt particles. (A–F) Transformation of Particle 2 (particle on the right) following the transformation of Particle 1 (particle on the left). Particle 2 is superimposed by the partial icosahedral schematic in white. Dotted red lines mark the edge of the particle(s). Dotted yellow lines are used to mark the boundary of Moiré fringe. Dashed yellow lines mark the grain boundaries. The image size are 958 × 658 pixels.
Figure 5Dislocation motion at the transformation front. (A–E) TEM images showing the contrast (indicated by red arrows) from dislocations moving with the boundary in Particle 2. (F) Illustration of the dislocation track as measured from the series snapshots in (A–E). The diffusive jump of three dislocations from 13.3375 s (B) to 13.5300 s (C) is indicated by the red dashed lines in (F). The two dislocations on the left most part disappeared as the transformation proceeded.
Figure 6Collective lattice transformation within a single domain of icosahedron. (A–F) A series of TEM images show the transformation within a single tetrahedral subunit of an icosahedron along the two-fold axis (image size 870 × 598 pixels). (G) The averaged intensity profile along the box from x to y in (A) is plotted for each image at different times. Number 1–6 are used to label the first six disappearing lattice fringes.
Figure 7Analysis of strain in a large Pt ICNP: (A) dark field aberration corrected TEM image showing the difference in contrast across the nanoparticle, and (B–D) the corresponding strain maps. (For details, see text).