Abstract
Vertically aligned Zn 2SiO 4-SiO x (x < 2) core-shell nanotube arrays consisting of Zn 2SiO 4-nanoparticle chains encapsulated into SiO x nanotubes and SiO x-coated Zn 2SiO 4 coaxial nanotubes were synthesized via one-step thermal annealing process using ZnO nanowire (ZNW) arrays as templates. The appearance of different nanotube morphologies was due to size-dependent thermal instability and specific melting of ZNWs. With an increase in ZNW diameter, the formation mechanism changed from decomposition of "etching" to Rayleigh instability and then to Kirkendall effect, consequently resulting in polycrystalline Zn 2SiO 4-SiO x coaxial nanotubes, single-crystalline Zn 2SiO 4-nanoparticle-chain-embedded SiO x nanotubes, and single-crystalline Zn 2SiO 4-SiO x coaxial nanotubes. The difference in spatially resolved optical properties related to a particular morphology was efficiently documented by means of cathodoluminescence (CL) spectroscopy using a middle-ultraviolet emission at 310 nm from the Zn 2SiO 4 phase. © 2010 The Author(s).
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Li, C., Bando, Y., Dierre, B., Sekiguchi, T., Huang, Y., Lin, J., & Golberg, D. (2010). Effect of size-dependent thermal instability on synthesis of Zn 2SiO 4-SiO x core-shell nanotube arrays and their cathodoluminescence properties. Nanoscale Research Letters, 5(4), 773–780. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11671-010-9556-7
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