Publication | Open Access
Self-Confined Nucleation of Iron Oxide Nanoparticles in a Nanostructured Amorphous Precursor
22
Citations
18
References
2020
Year
Magnetic PropertiesEngineeringIron Oxide NanoparticlesMagnetic MaterialsMagnetismChemical EngineeringNanoscale ChemistryNucleationNanostructure SynthesisNanostructured Amorphous PrecursorCrystal FormationMaterials SciencePhysicsCrystalline DefectsNanotechnologyNanocrystalline MaterialMagnetite CrystallizationCrystallographyClassical Nucleation TheorySelf-confined NucleationNanophysicsNanomaterialsNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsAmorphous Solid
Crystallization from solution is commonly described by classical nucleation theory, although this ignores that crystals often form via disordered nanostructures. As an alternative, the classical theory remains widely used in a "multistep" variant, where the intermediate nanostructures merely introduce additional thermodynamic parameters. However, this variant still requires validation by experiments addressing indeed proper time and spatial scales (millisecond, nanometer). Here, we used in situ X-ray scattering to determine the mechanism of magnetite crystallization and, in particular, how nucleation propagates at the nanometer scale within amorphous precursors. We find that the self-confinement by an amorphous precursor slows down crystal growth by 2 orders of magnitude once the crystal size reaches the amorphous particle size (∼3 nm). Thus, not only the thermodynamic properties of transient amorphous nanostructures but also their spatial distribution determine crystal nucleation.
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