4.7 Article

Role of Kinetics and Thermodynamics in Controlling the Crystal Structure of Nickel Nanoparticles Formed on Reduced Graphene Oxide: Implications for Energy Storage and Conversion Applications

Journal

ACS APPLIED NANO MATERIALS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.2c05528

Keywords

in situ transmission electron microscopy; graphene oxide; nickel nanoparticles; ultrafastheating

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Ultrafast heating accelerates the synthesis processes and controls the morphology of nanoparticles. This study investigates the formation of nickel nanoparticles on graphene oxide substrates under slow and ultrafast heating rates. The results show that the structure of graphene oxide plays a crucial role in stabilizing hexagonally close-packed nickel nanoparticles during ultrafast heating. In contrast, face-centered cubic nickel nanoparticles are formed under slow heating without a strong correlation with the substrate structure. Additionally, ultrafast heating leads to smaller-size nanoparticles due to rapid reduction, nucleation rate, and higher diffusion barrier. However, the crystal structure stability of nickel nanoparticles is unaffected by their size. These findings highlight the importance of the substrate in controlling the crystal structure during nonequilibrium processing and the competing effects of thermodynamics and kinetics in creating novel phases for energy storage and conversion applications.
Ultrafastheating has emerged recently to speed up the synthesisprocesses of nanoparticles and control their morphology. However,it is not clear how the heating rate affects the formation of metalnanoparticles, particularly those formed on substrates. Here, we exploredthe formation of nickel (Ni) nanoparticles on graphene oxide (GO)substrates under slow (20 degrees C/min) and ultrafast (10(3) degrees C/s) heating rates. The experiments were performed in situon heating microchip devices using an aberration-corrected transmissionelectron microscope. Interestingly, the GO structure was the mosteffective in controlling the stability of nanoparticles when ultrafastheating was employed, leading to a hexagonally close-packed Ni phase(hcp-Ni) because of less lattice mismatch with thegraphitic substrate. On the contrary, fcc-Ni nanoparticlesformed under a slow heating process where no strong correlation withthe GO crystal structure was observed. Additionally, ultrafast heatingresulted in smaller-size nanoparticles which could be ascribed torapid reduction, nucleation rate, and higher diffusion barrier of hcp-Ni crystals on rGO. Nevertheless, the stability of thecrystal structure of the nickel nanoparticles remains unaffected bytheir size. These results indicate the crucial role of the substrateon crystal structure during the nonequilibrium processing of materialsand the competing effects of thermodynamics versus kinetics in creatingnovel phases of materials for energy storage and conversion applications.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available