Inoculation of silicon nanoparticles with silver atoms

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Abstract

Silicon (Si) nanoparticles were coated inflight with silver (Ag) atoms using a novel method to prepare multicomponent heterostructured metal-semiconductor nanoparticles. Molecular dynamics (MD) computer simulations were employed, supported by high-resolution bright field (BF) transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) and aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) with a resolution ≤0.1â≤..nm in high angle annular dark field (HAADF) mode. These studies revealed that the alloying behavior and phase dynamics during the coating process are more complex than when attaching hetero-atoms to preformed nanoparticles. According to the MD simulations, Ag atoms condense, nucleate and diffuse into the liquid Si nanoparticles in a process that we term "inoculation", and a phase transition begins. Subsequent solidification involves an intermediate alloying stage that enabled us to control the microstructure and crystallinity of the solidified hybrid heterostructured nanoparticles.

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Cassidy, C., Singh, V., Grammatikopoulos, P., Djurabekova, F., Nordlund, K., & Sowwan, M. (2013). Inoculation of silicon nanoparticles with silver atoms. Scientific Reports, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep03083

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