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Structure and grain growth of Ti O 2 nanoparticles investigated by electron and x-ray diffractions and Ta 181 perturbed angular correlations
Ist Teil von
Journal of applied physics, 2006-07, Vol.100 (2), p.024305-024305-9
Ort / Verlag
American Institute of Physics
Erscheinungsjahr
2006
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Bare and coated
Ti
O
2
nanoparticles with particle sizes
d
<
5
nm
have been synthesized in a microwave plasma process. Structural properties of these materials have been investigated by transmission electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction, and perturbed angular correlation (PAC) measurements of the electric quadrupole interaction (QI) at the probe nucleus
Ta
181
on the metal site of
Ti
O
2
at temperatures
290
⩽
T
⩽
1450
K
. The electron diffraction of the uncoated nanoparticles in the as-synthesized state reflects long range order in the Ti sublattice. Depending on the particles size, either the anatase or the rutile phase of
Ti
O
2
was found. Anatase appears to be the stable form of nanocrystalline
Ti
O
2
below
d
∼
10
nm
. The PAC spectra of these nanocrystalline oxides are characterized by a broad distribution of strong quadrupole interactions, indicating a strongly disordered oxygen environment of the metal sites. Upon annealing, the grain size grows from
d
<
5
nm
after synthesis to
d
>
100
nm
after
1300
K
. PAC spectra taken in the same temperature range show that with increasing temperature, the initially disordered state transforms to well-ordered rutile
Ti
O
2
. The data suggest a critical grain size of
d
∼
10
nm
for the onset of the ordering process. The spectra of coarse-grained
Ti
O
2
are reached at a particle size
d
⩾
30
nm
. In
n
-
Ti
O
2
coated with
Al
2
O
3
and
Zr
O
2
both the cores and the coatings were found to grow with increasing temperature; the cores of the coated particles, however, grow much less than those of the noncoated particles. The PAC method was used to investigate the QI in both
Ti
O
2
cores and in the
Zr
O
2
coating of
n
-
Ti
O
2
∕
Zr
O
2
at different temperatures. These data suggest that although the coated particles grow with temperature, the ordering process is obstructed, possibly by a solid state reaction between the
Ti
O
2
kernels and the coatings.