Just Pé Jonasse, Marta Perxés, Savannah J Turner, Jessi E.S. van der Hoeven
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Core-shell nanoparticles can exhibit strongly enhanced performances in electro-, photo- and thermal catalysis. Lattice strain plays a key role in this and is induced by the mismatch between the crystal structure of the core and the shell metal. However, investigating the impact of lattice strain has been challenging due to the lack of a material system in which lattice strain can be controlled systematically, hampering further progress in the field of core-shell catalysis. In this work, we achieve such a core-shell nanoparticle system through the colloidal synthesis of trimetallic Pt-shell Au1-xCux-core nanoparticles. Our seed-mediated growth methodology yields well-defined Au1-xCux-cores, tunable in composition from 0 at-% Cu to 77 at-% Cu, and monodisperse in size. Subsequent overgrowth results in uniform, epitaxially grown Pt-shells with a controlled thickness of ~3 atomic layers. By employing a multi-technique characterization strategy combining X-ray diffraction, electron diffraction and aberration corrected electron microscopy, we unravel the atomic structure of the trimetallic system on a single nanoparticle-, ensemble- and bulk scale level, and we unambiguously demonstrate the controlled variation of strain in the Pt-shell from -3.62 % compressive-, to +3.79 % tensile strain, while retaining full control over all other structural characteristics of the system.
期刊介绍:
Nanoscale is a high-impact international journal, publishing high-quality research across nanoscience and nanotechnology. Nanoscale publishes a full mix of research articles on experimental and theoretical work, including reviews, communications, and full papers.Highly interdisciplinary, this journal appeals to scientists, researchers and professionals interested in nanoscience and nanotechnology, quantum materials and quantum technology, including the areas of physics, chemistry, biology, medicine, materials, energy/environment, information technology, detection science, healthcare and drug discovery, and electronics.