Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Anisotropic growth of NiO nanorods from Ni nanoparticles by rapid thermal oxidation

NiO nanorods with extremely high crystallinity were grown by rapid thermal oxidation through exposure of Ni nanoparticles (NPs) heated above 400 ° C to oxygen. Oxidation proceeds by nucleation of a NiO island on a Ni NP that grows anisotropically to produce a NiO nanorod. This process differs completely from that under mild oxidation conditions, where the surface of the NPs is completely covered with an oxide film during the early stage of oxidation. The observed novel behaviour strongly suggests an interfacial oxidation mechanism driven by the dissolution of adsorbed oxygen into the Ni NP sub-surface region, subsequent diffusion and reaction at the NiO/Ni interface. The early oxidation conditions of metal NPs impose a significant influence on the entire oxidation process at the nanoscale and are therefore inherently important for the precise morphological control of oxidized NPs to design functional nanomaterials.

Kenji Koga and Makoto Hirasawa

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