Abstract

Surfactant-assisted ball milling of the Fe powder in paraffin has been used for fabrication of core–shell nanocrystalline particles. The local atomic structure of the bulk and surface layers of the mechanically milled particles has been studied using X-ray absorption spectroscopic techniques with synchrotron radiation from the DORIS storage ring at DESY, Hamburg. Regardless of milling environment composition, the as-prepared powders were shown to be characterized by a significant drop in the EXAFS signal intensity and coordination numbers of the Fe–Fe pairs due to the formation of nanocrystalline state in the particles. It has been shown that an addition of perfluorononanoic acid as a surfactant has a more prominent effect on the structure of the shell layers. The effect is revealed as an appearance of light element atoms (O, F, C) in the local atomic environment of the Fe atoms due to formation of oxide, carbide and adsorbed structures of different types in the particle shell.

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