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1.
Cryst Growth Des ; 21(8): 4674-4682, 2021 Aug 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34381312

RESUMO

Developing simple, inexpensive, and environmentally benign approaches to integrate morphologically well-defined nanoscale building blocks into larger high surface area materials is a key challenge in materials design and processing. In this work, we investigate the fundamental surface phenomena between MgO and water (both adsorption and desorption) with particles prepared via a vapor-phase process (MgO nanocubes) and a modified aerogel process (MgO(111) nanosheets). Through these studies, we unravel a strategy to assemble individual MgO nanoparticles into extended faceted single-crystalline MgO nanosheets and nanorods with well-defined exposed surfaces and edges. This reorganization can be triggered by the presence of H2O vapor or bulk liquid water. Water adsorption and the progressive conversion of vapor-phase grown oxide particles into hydroxides give rise to either one-dimensional or two-dimensional (1D or 2D) structures of high dispersion and surface area. The resulting Mg(OH)2 lamella with a predominant (001) surface termination are well-suited precursor structures for their topotactic conversion into laterally extended and uniform MgO(111) grain surface configurations. To understand the potential of polar (111) surfaces for faceting and surface reconstruction effects associated with water desorption, we investigated the stability of MgO(111) nanosheets during vacuum annealing and electron beam exposure. The significant surface reconstruction of the MgO(111) surfaces observed shows that adsorbate-free (111)-terminated surfaces of unsupported MgO nanostructures reconstruct rather than remain as charged planes of either three-fold coordinated O2- ion or Mg2+ ions. Thus, here we demonstrate the role water can play in surface formation and reconstruction by bridging wet chemical and surface science inspired approaches.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 16(43): 23922-9, 2014 Nov 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25277485

RESUMO

Optical properties of metal oxide nanoparticles are subject to synthesis related defects and impurities. Using photoluminescence spectroscopy and UV diffuse reflectance in conjunction with Auger electron spectroscopic surface analysis we investigated the effect of surface composition and oxygen adsorption on the photoluminescence properties of vapor phase grown ZnO and MgO nanoparticles. On hydroxylated MgO nanoparticles as a reference system, intense photoluminescence features exclusively originate from surface excitons, the radiative deactivation of which results in collisional quenching in an O2 atmosphere. Conversely, on as-prepared ZnO nanoparticles a broad yellow emission feature centered at hνEm = 2.1 eV exhibits an O2 induced intensity increase. Attributed to oxygen interstitials as recombination centers this enhancement effect originates from adsorbate-induced band bending, which is pertinent to the photoluminescence active region of the nanoparticles. Annealing induced trends in the optical properties of the two prototypical metal oxide nanoparticle systems, ZnO and MgO, are explained by changes in the surface composition and underline that particle surface and interface changes that result from handling and processing of nanoparticles critically affect luminescence.

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