Anomalous Shape Evolution of Ag2O2 Nanocrystals Modulated by Surface Adsorbates during Electron Beam
Etching
Posted on 2018-12-24 - 00:00
An
understanding of nanocrystal shape evolution is significant
for the design, synthesis, and applications of nanocrystals with surface-enhanced
properties such as catalysis or plasmonics. Surface adsorbates that
are selectively attached to certain facets may strongly affect the
atomic pathways of nanocrystal shape development. However, it is a
great challenge to directly observe such dynamic processes in situ
with a high spatial resolution. Here, we report the anomalous shape
evolution of Ag2O2 nanocrystals modulated by
the surface adsorbates of Ag clusters during electron beam etching,
which is revealed through in situ transmission electron microscopy
(TEM). In contrast to the Ag2O2 nanocrystals
without adsorbates, which display the near-equilibrium shape throughout
the etching process, Ag2O2 nanocrystals with
Ag surface adsorbates show distinct facet development during etching
by electron beam irradiation. Three stages of shape changes are observed:
a sphere-to-a cube transformation, side etching of a cuboid, and bottom
etching underneath the surface adsorbates. We find that the Ag adsorbates
modify the Ag2O2 nanocrystal surface configuration
by selectively capping the junction between two neighboring facets.
They prevent the edge atoms from being etched away and block the diffusion
path of surface atoms. Our findings provide critical insights into
the modulatory function of surface adsorbates on the shape control
of nanocrystals.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Zhang, Qiubo; Gao, Guoping; Shen, Yuting; Peng, Xinxing; Shangguan, Junyi; Wang, Yu; et al. (2018). Anomalous Shape Evolution of Ag2O2 Nanocrystals Modulated by Surface Adsorbates during Electron Beam
Etching. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b04719Â