Abstract

For the preparation of SiC nanowires (SiC NWs) by carbothermal reduction, it is of great significance to study the formation mechanism of sic nanowires for process optimization and the controllable preparation. Although first-principles molecular dynamics (FPMD) can simulate systems of hundreds of atoms on a picosecond time scale, the results of FPMD are still insufficient to elucidate the formation mechanism of core-shell SiC nanowires. To make up this deficiency, this article has conducted Deep Potential Molecular Dynamics (DPMD) simulation on nanoseconds timescales with near FPMD accuracy for systems containing thousands of atoms, the results more concretively show the formation process of core-shell SiC nanowires. DPMD simulation results show when CO molecules react with SiO molecules, CO molecules are wrapped by SiO molecules to form agglomerates, SiO molecules in the agglomerates that can come into contact with the wrapped CO molecules will react with wrapped CO molecules to form the SiC core, and SiO molecules that in the outer layer of the agglomerates will disproportionate into the amorphous SiO2 shell. Furthermore, the formation mechanism of SiC nanowires was validated in combination with thermodynamics and experimental methods. Thermodynamic results show that vacuum conditions are favorable for the formation of SiO and CO and lower the temperature of SiC preparation. Finally, the core-shell structure of SiC NWs with good luminescence properties were successfully prepared by carbothermal reduction method using carbon black and silicon dioxide as raw materials under the pressure of less than 5 kPa.

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