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Structure of metallic nanowires and nanoclusters formed in superfluid helium

54

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13

References

2011

Year

Abstract

It is shown that metallic nanowires (5–8 nm in diameter) that form during laser ablation of Ni, Pb, In, and Sn targets embedded in HeII contain extended single-crystal segments, while spherical clusters (about 2 μm in diameter) that form under these conditions have a regular shape and an atomically smooth surface. Such structures are explained by melting of metal ablation products under their coalescence in HeII. The short-term action of a low-intensity beam of electrons with an energy of 200 keV initiates the explosion in metallic spheres preserved in the vacuum chamber of a transmission electron microscope, which is accompanied with the formation of thousands of clusters with a diameter of a few nanometers. This effect is due to metastability of internal mechanical stresses produced upon sharp cooling of molten spheres by liquid helium. A mechanism of condensation of atoms and nanoparticles in quantized vortices of superfluid helium is proposed.

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