Abstract

Nanosizing can dramatically alter material properties by enhancing surface thermodynamic contributions, shortening diffusion lengths, and increasing the number of catalytically active sites per unit volume. These mechanisms have been used to explain the improved properties of catalysts, battery materials, plasmonic materials, etc. Here we show that Pd nanoparticles also have the ability to self-heal defects in their crystal structures. Using Bragg coherent diffractive imaging, we image dislocations nucleated deep in a Pd nanoparticle during the forward hydriding phase transformation that heal during the reverse transformation, despite the region surrounding the dislocations remaining in the hydrogen-poor phase. We show that defective Pd nanoparticles exhibit sloped isotherms, indicating that defects act as additional barriers to the phase transformation. Our results resolve the formation and healing of structural defects during phase transformations at the single nanoparticle level and offer an additional perspective as to how and why nanoparticles differ from their bulk counterparts.

Highlights

  • Nanosizing can dramatically alter material properties by enhancing surface thermodynamic contributions, shortening diffusion lengths, and increasing the number of catalytically active sites per unit volume

  • We show that the defective Pd nanoparticles exhibit sloped isotherms, suggesting that these defects act as additional barriers to the phase transformation

  • Bragg coherent diffractive imaging (BCDI) experiments were performed at beamline 34-ID-C of the Advanced Photon Source using 9 keV X-rays

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Summary

Introduction

Nanosizing can dramatically alter material properties by enhancing surface thermodynamic contributions, shortening diffusion lengths, and increasing the number of catalytically active sites per unit volume. Recent research has focused on the structural transformation of crystalline lattices to accommodate solute atoms, which is relevant to technologically important systems such as hydrogen storage in metals[7] and lithium storage in rechargeable batteries[8] In these systems, the crystalline particles often undergo phase transformations between solute-rich and solute-poor phases that have a lattice mismatch, which can result in the nucleation of defects like dislocations. Recent research has shown that the crystal quality of Pd nanoparticles can improve as a result of the phase transformation[17] These studies have focused on Pd nanoparticles smaller than 80 nm, which is below the critical size required for dislocation nucleation[20]. –d111/2 b u111 displacement field at 61 mbar c u111 displacement field at 81 mbar d u111 displacement field at after 4 hrs at 0 mbar

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