Title

Mapping Nanostructure: A Systematic Enumeration Of Nanomaterials By Assembling Nanobuilding Blocks At Crystallographic Positions

Keywords

Atomistic model; Crystallography; Electron microscopy; Mesostructure; Molecular dynamics; Nanobuilding blocks; Nanostructure; Oxide; X-ray diffraction

Abstract

Nanomaterials synthesized from nanobuilding blocks promise size-dependent properties, associated with individual nanopartides, together with collective properties of ordered arrays. However, one cannot position nanoparticles at specific locations; rather innovative ways of coaxing these particles to self-assemble must be devised. Conversely, model nanoparticles can be placed in any desired position, which enables a systematic enumeration of nanostructure from model nanobuilding blocks. This is desirable because a list of chemically feasible hypothetical structures will help guide the design of strategies leading to their synthesis. Moreover, the models can help characterize nanostructure, calculate (predict) properties, or simulate processes. Here, we start to formulate and use a simulation strategy to generate atomistic models of nanomaterials, which can, potentially, be synthesized from nanobuilding block precursors. Clearly, this represents a formidable task because the number of ways nanoparticles can be arranged into a superlattice is infinite. Nevertheless, numerical tools are available to help build nanopartide arrays in a systematic way. Here, we exploit the "rules of crystallography" and position nanoparticles, rather than atoms, at crystallographic sites. Specifically, we explore nanoparticle arrays with cubic, tetragonal, and hexagonal symmetries together with primitive, face centered cubic and body centered cubic nanoparticle "packing". We also explore binary nanoparticle superlattices. The resulting nanomaterials, spanning CeO, Ti-cloped CeO2, ZnO, ZnS, MgO, CaO, SrO, and BaO, comprise framework architectures, with cavities interconnected by channels traversing (zero), one, two and three dimensions. The final, fully atomistic models comprise three hierarchical levels of structural complexity: crystal structure, microstructure (i.e., grain boundaries, dislocations), and superlattice structure. © 2008 American Chemical Society.

Publication Date

6-1-2008

Publication Title

ACS Nano

Volume

2

Issue

6

Number of Pages

1237-1251

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1021/nn800065g

Socpus ID

47649099685 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/47649099685

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