Darko
Makovec
*ab,
Nina
Križaj
ab and
Sašo
Gyergyek
a
aDepartment for Materials Synthesis, Jožef Stefan Institute, Jamova 39, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia. E-mail: darko.makovec@ijs.si
bJožef Stefan International Postgraduate School, Jamova 39, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia
First published on 21st April 2022
Understanding the processes involved in the formation of nanoparticles is a prerequisite for the control of their morphology. In this investigation we reveal the processes leading to the formation of two distinct morphologies of bismuth-titanate (Bi4Ti3O12) nanoparticles, i.e., nanoplatelets and nanowires, during hydrothermal treatment of precipitated Bi3+ and Ti4+ ions in a mineralizer hydroxide aqueous solution. Washed precipitates of the two ions in a stoichiometric ratio were suspended in hydroxide (NaOH or KOH) and hydrothermally treated for different times at temperatures up to 220 °C. The product was analysed with a combination of X-ray diffractometry and different electron-microscopy techniques using a transmission and an aberration-corrected scanning-transmission electron microscope. The hydrothermal treatment for 38 hours at 200 °C led to the formation of nanowires with a metastable orthorhombic structure and nanoplatelets with an equilibrium Aurivillius layered-perovskite structure at lower (≤1 mol L−1) and higher (>1 mol L−1) NaOH concentrations, respectively. At the initial stage of the hydrothermal synthesis, a mixture of two metastable polymorphs was formed: the nanowires and the highly defective perovskite phase. The perovskite phase in the form of globular aggregates of nanocrystallites only contained Bi3+ and Ti4+ cations (Na+, K+ and Ti3+ were not detected). In the continuation of the hydrothermal treatment, the aggregates of perovskite nanocrystals dissolved at lower NaOH concentrations, whereas at higher NaOH concentrations the nanowires dissolved while the Aurivillius nanoplatelets grew from the surfaces of the perovskite aggregates.
In our previous paper16 we revealed that the diverse morphologies of bismuth-titanate nanostructures are related to the different crystalline structures of the formed nanoparticles. In bulk form BIT crystallizes in an Aurivillius layered structure, which is characterized by two structural layers, i.e., a (Bi2O2)2+ layer and a perovskite (Bi2Ti3O10)2− layer, alternating along the pseudo-tetragonal c-axis.21 Below the Curie temperature the BIT adopts a monoclinic unit cell (S.G.: P1a1, a = 5.4449 Å, b = 5.4083 Å, c = 32.8137 Å, β = 89.977°).22 Because of the layered structure the BIT nanoparticles naturally grow predominantly in the a/b plane to form rectangular nanoplatelets with the large surfaces parallel to the (001) crystallographic planes. The rectangular BIT nanoplatelets with the Aurivillius-type structure were obtained when the precipitated Bi3+ and Ti4+ ions were hydrothermally treated for 38 hours at 200 °C in NaOH with a concentration of 2 mol L−1.16 When the concentration of NaOH was decreased to 0.5 mol L−1 the bismuth-titanate nanowires formed.16 However, structural analyses with a combination of atomic-resolution imaging in a scanning-transmission electron microscope (STEM) and X-ray diffractometry (XRD) showed that the nanowires exhibit a different crystal structure to the nanoplatelets. The structure of the nanowires was explained with an orthorhombic unit cell (a = 3.804 Å, b = 11.816 Å, and c = 9.704 Å). Atomic-resolution, high-angle annular dark-field imaging with a CS-probe-corrected scanning-transmission electron microscope showed the cation arrangement in two structural layers alternating along the orthorhombic c-direction: a structural layer that resembles the (Bi2O2)2+ layer of the Aurivillius-type structures, and a structural layer composed of two parallel layers of the Ti atoms, where every sixth Ti is replaced by Bi.16
In this investigation we systematically analysed the evolution of different crystalline structures/morphologies during the hydrothermal synthesis of BIT. The aim was to reveal the mechanisms involved in the formation of different nanostructures with special attention to the role of metastable polymorphs which appear as the transient phases.
The products were characterized with transmission electron microscopy (TEM, Jeol 2010F) and a CS-probe-corrected STEM (Jeol ARM 200CF). XRD patterns were recorded with a PANalytical X' Pert PRO diffractometer (see the ESI† for details).
c OH [mol L−1] | T [° C] | t [h] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.17 | 0.5 | 2 | 3 | 6 | 24 | 38 | 72 | ||
A⋯morphous, B⋯i-based secondary phases (Bi2O2CO3, Bi2O3), W⋯nanoires with an orthorhombic structure, AW⋯ggregated nanoires, PC⋯globular aggregates of erovskite nanorystallites, NP⋯anolatelets with an Aurivillius structure, P⋯larger atelets with an Aurivillius phase, NP@PC⋯NP growing on the surfaces of PC. | |||||||||
N 0.002 | 200 | A | |||||||
N 0.01 | 200 | AW | |||||||
N 0.1 | 200 | A | AW | AW | |||||
N 0.5 | 200 | A | W, A, B | W, PC, B | W, PC | W | W | W | W |
N 0.5 | 80 | A | A | ||||||
N 0.5 | 100 | A, B | A | ||||||
N 0.5 | 140 | A, B | W | ||||||
N 0.75 | 200 | P, W | |||||||
N 1 | 200 | NP@PC, W | NP@PC, W | NP | |||||
N 2 | 80 | A | W, PC, B | ||||||
N 2 | 100 | A, B | NW, PC, B | ||||||
N 2 | 140 | W, PC | NP@PC | ||||||
N 2 | 160 | W, PC | NP@PC | ||||||
N 2 | 180 | W, PC | NP | ||||||
N 2 | 200 | A, B | W, PC, B | W, PC, B | NP@PC, W | NP | NP | NP | NP |
N 2 | 220 | NP | |||||||
N 4 | 200 | NP | |||||||
N 8 | 200 | NP@PC | |||||||
N 12 | 200 | PC | |||||||
K 0.5 | 200 | AW | |||||||
K 2 | 200 | A, B | W, PC, B | W, PC | W, PC | W, PC | W, PC | W, PC | W, PC, P |
According to EDXS analysis the nanowires and the nanoplatelets had the same composition, matching that of the starting Bi4Ti3O12 composition, within the uncertainty of the method. The Na peak was not significant for either of the two morphologies.
At a NaOH concentration of 8 mol L−1 the nanoplatelets were growing on the surfaces of larger globular particles (Fig. 1(e)). Finally, at the highest NaOH concentration of 12 mol L−1 only globular particles (from 100 nm to 250 nm in size) formed (Fig. 1(f)). Detailed analyses showed that the globular particles were compact aggregates of much smaller crystallites, around 15 nm in size. All the nanocrystallites making up an individual globular particle were oriented in a similar crystallographic orientation, resulting in a single-crystal-like SAED pattern with diffuse, streaked reflections corresponding to a (quasi)cubic unit cell with a = ∼3.9 Å (insets of Fig. 1(e) and (f), see also the dark-field (DF) TEM image, Fig. SI2†).
Fig. 2 shows the XRD patterns of the samples synthesized in NaOH with an increasing concentration. The nanowires exhibited an orthorhombic structure characteristic for the bismuth-titanate nanowires16 (see patterns (a) and (b) for the samples synthesized in 0.1 mol L−1 NaOH and 0.5 mol L−1 NaOH, respectively). The structure is different to the Aurivillius structure of the bismuth-titanate nanoplatelets (see patterns (c) and (d) for the samples synthesized in 1 mol L−1 NaOH and 2 mol L−1 NaOH, respectively). Detailed structural analyses of the nanoplatelets and the nanowires are given in ref. 16. The XRD pattern of the sample synthesized in 12 mol L−1 NaOH consisted of sharp reflections corresponding to two Bi-rich phases, i.e., Bi2O2CO3 (PDF #004-0666) and Bi2O3 (PDF #006-0294), and broad reflections at the positions consistent with the quasi-cubic cell. Most probably, the Bi2O2CO3 formed from the reaction between the nanoparticles obtained with the precipitation of Bi3+ ions and the atmospheric carbon dioxide dissolved in the water.23
The electron and X-ray diffractions of the globular aggregates match well with the perovskite structure. Sodium bismuth titanate (Bi0.5Na0.5TiO3) perovskite is known to form during a hydrothermal treatment at high NaOH concentrations.9,17 However, the EDXS analysis in the TEM showed that the globular aggregates contained a much lower concentration of Na than expected for the stoichiometric Bi0.5Na0.5TiO3. According to the EDXS analysis, the globular aggregates synthesized in 12 mol L−1 NaOH contained approximately 20 at% of Ti, 12.5 at% of Bi, and 3–6 at% of Na. Here it should be noted that the quantitative EDXS analysis is limited by the bismuth's evaporation under electron-beam irradiation, non-ideal particle morphologies and the possible migration of the sodium atoms from the analysis site. The composition of the sample was also verified with chemical analysis. Even though the sample contained some Bi-rich secondary phases, the Na/Ti ratio measured with ICP-AES analysis16 confirmed the Na deficiency suggested by the EDXS. Most probably, the excess charge expected due to the excess of Bi3+ ions over the Na+ ions at the A sites of the ABO3 perovskite structure is compensated by charged cationic vacancies.
In summary, the single-phase bismuth-titanate nanowires and nanoplatelets are obtained with the hydrothermal treatment of precipitated Bi3+ and Ti4+ ions in NaOH with concentration of 0.5 mol L−1 and 2 mol L−1, respectively.
When the time of the hydrothermal treatment at 200 °C was prolonged to 30 minutes, Bi-based crystals were still sometimes observed with the TEM. However, most of the product consisted of particles having two different morphologies: nanowires (3–10 nm wide and up to ∼200 nm long) and larger globular particles (from ∼30 nm to over 200 nm in size) (Fig. 4(c)). The SAED pattern taken from the nanowires was consistent with the orthorhombic structure of bismuth-titanate nanowires16 (see the inset of Fig. 4(d)). High-resolution TEM (HRTEM) images (Fig. 4(d)) confirmed the single-crystalline nature of the nanowires. The dominant periodicity across the nanowire shown in Fig. 4(d) of 9.7 Å corresponds to the (001) planes of its orthorhombic structure. The globular particles were dense aggregates of smaller crystallites (a few nm in size) with a quasi-cubic structure, similar to the globular particles in the sample treated for 38 hours in 12 mol L−1 NaOH (see Fig. 1(f)). The crystallites constituting an individual aggregate were all oriented in a similar crystallographic orientation (see insets of Fig. 4(c) and (e)). After 1 hour, and also after 2 hours, of the treatment at 200 °C the product was similar to that after 30 minutes, only the size of both types of product particles gradually increased (Fig. 4(f)). XRD patterns of the products treated at 200 °C for 1 hour and 2 hours showed sharp reflections corresponding to the unreacted Bi-rich phases, i.e., Bi2O2CO3 and Bi2O3 (PDF #006-0294), and broad reflections (Fig. 2, pattern (c)). The broad reflections were located at the positions where the pure nanowires exhibited high-intensity reflections (see Fig. 2, pattern (a)) and at the positions consistent with the quasi-cubic unit cell with a = ∼3.9 Å.
A large change in the morphology of product particles occurred when the treatment time was increased to 3 hours. The nanowires almost completely disappeared, while on the surfaces of the globular aggregates well-defined rectangular nanoplatelets grew (Fig. 4(g)). Fig. 4(h) shows the lattice image of a nanoplatelet growing on the surface of an aggregate. The nanoplatelet is oriented with its large surfaces parallel to the electron beam. The dominant periodicity of the fringes across the nanoplatelet of 16.4 Å corresponds to the (002) planes of the Aurivillius Bi4Ti3O12 structure. The corresponding XRD pattern (Fig. 3, pattern (d)) exhibits reflections corresponding to the Aurivillius structure and broad reflections of the quasi-cubic phase. With further prolongation of the treatment at 200 °C the nanowires and the quasi-cubic phase disappeared completely while the nanoplatelets grew. At first, the nanoplatelets remained in the form of small, distinct agglomerates, reflecting their formation with growth from the individual globular aggregate (Fig. 4(i)). Only after approximately 24 hours did the nanoplatelets separate. A TEM image and an XRD pattern of the final sample treated for 38 hours are shown in Fig. 1(d) and 2(pattern (d)), respectively. Also, after treatment for 3 days at 200 °C the product remained in the form of nanoplatelets of similar size compared to that after 38 hours.
The evolution of the nanoplatelets was also monitored with the treatment temperature. Short nanowires were obtained after treatment for a long time (3 days) at 80 °C (Fig. SI4†). After the treatment for 2 hours at 100 °C the product was composed of amorphous nanoparticles (Fig. SI5(a)†), similar to the sample treated for 10 minutes at 200 °C, whereas after 38 h at 100 °C the material was composed of globular nanocrystalline aggregates and nanowires (Fig. SI5(b)†). At 140 °C the product was composed of globular aggregates and nanowires after 2 hours, whereas after 38 hours the product was composed of globular aggregates with nanoplatelets growing from their surfaces (Fig. SI6†), similar to the sample treated for 3 hours at 200 °C. Also, the samples treated for 2 hours at 160 °C and 180 °C contained a mixture of globular aggregates and nanowires, whereas after 38 hours the sample treated at 160 °C contained a mixture of aggregated nanoplatelets and some larger globular aggregates with nanoplatelets growing from their surfaces (Fig. SI7†) and the sample treated at 180 °C contained only nanoplatelets (Fig. SI8†). Also, at the highest temperature of 220 °C only nanoplatelets were obtained.
The absence of Na+ raises a question about the valence of Ti in the perovskite structure. The Ti valence can be determined from electron-energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) as the energy-loss near-edge structure (ELNES) of the Ti-L2,3 edge depends on the valence of Ti if the atomic environment of the ions remains unchanged. The Ti-L2,3 ELNES shows a clear four-peak feature for Ti4+, whereas for Ti3+ the two peaks featuring both L2 and L3 merge into one peak when the energy resolution is limited.24,25 The Ti-L2,3 ELNES was identical for different bismuth-titanate particles and matched the ELNES for the Ti4+ standard, strongly suggesting the 4+ oxidation state of Ti in all three morphologies, i.e., the nanoplatelets, the nanowires and the perovskite nanocrystallites (see the ESI† for details; Fig. SI10). The 4+ oxidation state of Ti is also consistent with the white colour of the powders (Ti4+ has no d-electrons). A significant amount of Ti3+ (one d-electron) would result in an intense dark colour.26
Fig. 6 TEM images of product nanoparticles after hydrothermal treatment for different times at 200 °C in 0.5 mol L−1 NaOH: (a) after 0.5 hour, (b) after 3 hours, and (c) after 6 hours. |
The morphology of the formed nanoparticles evolved in a different way in 0.5 mol L−1 NaOH also with the treatment temperature, when compared with the treatment in 2 mol L−1 NaOH. A very long treatment (3 days) at 80 °C resulted in the formation of globular amorphous nanoparticles with a bimodal size distribution: the smaller were approximately 10 nm and the larger approximately 200 nm in size (Fig. SI13†). The EDXS analysis showed the same composition for the two sizes, roughly matching the starting Bi4Ti3O12 composition. The amorphous globular nanoparticles, partially agglomerated into round aggregates, also formed after 2 hours at 100 °C (Fig. SI14(a)†) and at 140 °C (Fig. SI15(a)†). After 38 hours the amorphous globular nanoparticles were present at 100 °C (Fig. SI14(b)†), whereas at 140 °C and above only nanowires formed (Fig. SI15(b)†).
At the lower KOH concentration of 0.5 mol L−1, only aggregated nanowires formed with the treatment for 38 hours at 200 °C. Similar to the product synthesized in 0.1 mol L−1 NaOH, the nanowires were usually intergrown at an angle of 90° (Fig. 7(f)).
The Aurivillius Bi4Ti3O12 nanoplatelets always formed with growth at the surfaces of the perovskite nanocrystalline aggregates. The perovskite forms as a transient phase during the formation of the Aurivillius phase. The formation of the perovskite nanocrystals is faster than the formation of the ordered layered-perovskite Aurivillius phase. Thus, the perovskite forms first and only with ordering of the ions within the perovskite structure and the Aurivillius platelet crystals nucleate and grow at the surfaces of the perovskite aggregates.
From the thermodynamics point of view, only the Aurivillius Bi4Ti3O12 is stable, whereas the orthorhombic nanowires and the perovskite are “metastable” polymorphs. According to the empirical Ostwald step rule, a thermodynamically unstable polymorph often occurs before the stable phase, because it has a lower energy barrier for nucleation during the crystallization than the stable phase.30,31 It usually transforms in an energetically cascading series of polymorphic stages to the equilibrium phase. However, if the unstable polymorph has a lower surface energy than the equilibrium polymorph it can remain stable at the nanoscale.31 Metastable polymorphs of simple oxides stabilized at the nanoscale represent some of the technologically most important nanomaterials, e.g., photocatalytic anatase and magnetic maghemite nanoparticles. However, the metastable polymorphs are not restricted to simple oxides. Recently, we presented a metastable polymorph of magnetic strontium hexaferrite (SrFe12O19) stabilized at the nanoscale.32 With growth, e.g., during annealing at high temperatures, such metastable polymorph nanoparticles will transform to the thermodynamically stable phase. The bismuth-titanate nanowires topotactically transform to the equilibrium Aurivillius structure with annealing at temperatures above 500 °C.16 Also, annealing of the perovskite aggregates resulted in the transformation to the Aurivillius phase. For example, annealing of the perovskite aggregates in the sample treated in 2 mol L−1 NaOH for 1 hour at 200 °C resulted in the transformation to the Aurivillius phase (see the ESI† for details, Fig. SI16).
We were not able to accurately measure the chemical composition of the three phases. However, the absence of any precipitation of secondary phases during the transformations between the different phases strongly suggests that they all have the same composition. For example, no precipitation of any secondary phase was observed during the topotactic transformation from the orthorhombic nanowire structure to the Aurivillius structure.16 Also, no secondary phase was detected after the epitaxial growth of the Aurivillius nanoplatelets on the surfaces of the nanocrystalline perovskite aggregates (see Fig. 5).
The composition with a Bi/Ti atomic ratio of 4/3 is particularly strange for the perovskite. This suggests a high concentration of vacancies at the octahedral B sites of the ABO3 perovskite structure . The titanium vacancies are known to be the equilibrium charged defects formed for the compensation of excess charge during donor incorporation into some perovskite titanates, such as BaTiO3.33 For example, in the bulk ceramics at 1400 °C in air, up to ∼30 mol% of La3+ donors can be incorporated into the BaTiO3 structure at the Ba sites with the simultaneous formation of titanium vacancies for the charge compensation .34 For the bulk materials, the concentration of required for the charge balance in the perovskite with the starting BiTi0.75O3 composition seems unrealistically high. However, the perovskite phase obtained by the hydrothermal treatment was always in the form of (aggregated) nanocrystallites, where the large flexibility of the structure and the composition can be expected.35 The concentration of the charged vacancies required to maintain the charge neutrality can be decreased with the partial reduction of Ti4+ to Ti3+, accompanied by precipitation of the excess Bi3+. However, the EELS analysis (Fig. SI10†) and the white colour of the powders suggested the Ti was present in the oxidation state 4+.
The stability of different phases depends decisively on the hydroxide concentration. Independent of the hydroxide concentration, the nanowires and the globular aggregates of perovskite nanocrystallites form with the crystallization of the amorphous nanoparticles in the initial stages of hydrothermal treatment. However, at higher concentrations (≥1 mol L−1 NaOH) the perovskite aggregates further transform into the Aurivillius nanoplatelets, while the nanowires dissolve. In contrast, at lower concentrations (≤1 mol L−1 NaOH), the nanowires grow with the treatment temperature/time, while the perovskite aggregates dissolve.
The kinetics of hydrothermal reactions during the synthesis of bismuth titanate evidently increases with the concentration of mineralizer hydroxide. At a higher NaOH concentration (2 mol L−1) the first crystalline particles form at 80 °C, below the boiling point of the aqueous reaction suspension, provided that the treatment time is long enough. That is a considerably lower temperature than at the lower concentration (0.5 mol L−1), where the first crystalline phases appeared above 100 °C. The kinetics also depends on the type of mineralizer hydroxide, with faster kinetics in NaOH than in KOH. The kinetics of the hydrothermal reactions further defines the morphology of the formed nanostructures. At NaOH concentrations of 2 mol L−1 and 4 mol L−1 the fast kinetics of the perovskite-to-Aurivillius transformation leads to a high nucleation rate and the formation of small nanoplatelets (Fig. 1(d)). In 1 mol L−1 NaOH the transformation kinetics is slower, leading to a lower nucleation rate and a higher growth rate, resulting in the rapid growth of the Aurivillius phase into much larger platelet crystals (Fig. 1(c)) than in 2 mol L−1 NaOH. Similarly, the nucleation of nanowires is faster in 0.5 mol L−1 NaOH than in 0.1 mol L−1 and 0.01 mol L−1 of NaOH, resulting in smaller, individual nanowires (Fig. 1(b)). At lower concentrations the slower nucleation rate and the faster growth rate result in rapid growth, leading to larger, crossed nanowires (Fig. 1(a)).
The formation of both bismuth-titanate nanostructures, i.e., the orthorhombic nanowires and the Aurivillius nanoplatelets, starts with crystallization from amorphous nanoparticles. The subsequent phase (and morphology) evolution depends on the concentration of hydroxide, which influences the stability of different phases and the kinetics of the hydrothermal reactions. The reaction kinetics increases with the hydroxide concentration. Independent of the hydroxide concentration, the nanowires and globular aggregates of the perovskite nanocrystallites form in the initial stage of the hydrothermal synthesis. The highly defected perovskite nanocrystallites contain Bi3+ and Ti4+ cations (significant amounts of Na+ or Ti3+ could not be detected). At lower NaOH concentrations the nanowires grow with the treatment temperature/time, while the perovskite aggregates dissolve. At higher NaOH concentrations the nanowires dissolve, while the Aurivillius nanoplatelets epitaxially grow on the surfaces of the perovskite nanocrystalline aggregates. A change of NaOH for KOH decreases the reaction kinetics and favours the formation of nanowires.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: List of materials used and additional information on the synthesis and characterization methods, additional TEM and XRD of samples hydrothermally treated in hydroxide of different concentrations and at different temperatures, EDXS elemental maps, STEM analyses, ELNES of Ti-L2,3 edge in different bismuth-titanate phases, and TEM of annealed samples. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ce00491g |
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