Abstract

Physisorbed water originating from exposure to the ambient can have a strong impact on the structure and chemistry of oxide nanomaterials. The effect can be particularly pronounced when these oxides are in physical contact with a solid substrate such as the ones used for immobilization to perform electron or ion microscopy imaging. We used helium ion microscopy (HIM) and investigated morphological changes of vapor-phase-grown MgO cubes after vacuum annealing and pressing into foils of soft and high purity indium. The indium foils were either used as obtained or, for reference, subjected to vacuum drying. After four days of storage in the vacuum chamber of the microscope and at a base pressure of p < 10−7 mbar, we observed on these cubic particles the attack of residual physisorbed water molecules from the indium substrate. As a result, thin magnesium hydroxide layers spontaneously grew, giving rise to characteristic volume expansion effects, which depended on the size of the particles. Rounding of the originally sharp cube edges leads to a significant loss of the morphological definition specific to the MgO cubes. Comparison of different regions within one sample before and after exposure to liquid water reveals different transformation processes, such as the formation of Mg(OH)2 shells that act as diffusion barriers for MgO dissolution or the evolution of brucite nanosheets organized in characteristic flower-like microstructures. The findings underline the significant metastability of nanomaterials under both ambient and high-vacuum conditions and show the dramatic effect of ubiquitous water films during storage and characterization of oxide nanomaterials.

Highlights

  • Knowledge about the stability of engineered nanomaterials in aqueous systems is critical for predicting their functionality under environmental conditions

  • After four days under high-vacuum conditions at a base pressure lower than 3·10−7 mbar, helium ion microscopy (HIM) imaging reveals that important morphological changes of the MgO cubes have occurred (Figure 1)

  • This work underlines the metastability of metal oxide nanostructures and reports drastic material changes during storage under high vacuum conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Knowledge about the stability of engineered nanomaterials in aqueous systems is critical for predicting their functionality under environmental conditions. The shape change of the cubes was quantified by image analysis, using the edge length increase factor, defined as L2/L1, where L1 and L2 are the edge lengths before and after high-vacuum treatment in the HIM chamber, respectively. More than 45 edge lengths were measured before and after high-vacuum treatment, for both types of samples (i.e., when the indium foil was used as received or subjected to vacuum drying prior to imaging).

Results
Conclusion

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