Issue 24, 2019

Atomic-scale investigation on the ultra-large bending behaviours of layered sodium titanate nanowires

Abstract

A study on the mechanical properties of one-dimensional layered titanate nanomaterials is crucial since they demonstrate important applications in various fields. Here, we conducted ex situ and in situ atomic-scale investigation on the bending properties of a kind of ceramic-layered titanate (Na2Ti2O4(OH)2) nanowire using transmission electron microscopy. The nanowires showed flexibility along the 〈100〉 direction and could obtain a maximum bending strain of nearly 37%. By analysing the defect behaviours, the unique bending properties of this ceramic material were found to correlate with a novel arrangement of dislocations, an active dislocation nucleation and movement along the axial direction resulting from the weak electrostatic interaction between the TiO6 layers and the low b/a ratio. These results provide a pioneering and key understanding on the bending behaviours of layered titanate nanowire families and potentially other one-dimensional nanomaterials with layered crystalline structures.

Graphical abstract: Atomic-scale investigation on the ultra-large bending behaviours of layered sodium titanate nanowires

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Mar 2019
Accepted
20 May 2019
First published
22 May 2019

Nanoscale, 2019,11, 11847-11855

Atomic-scale investigation on the ultra-large bending behaviours of layered sodium titanate nanowires

Q. Liu, H. Zhan, H. Zhu, Z. Sun, J. Bell, A. Bo and Y. Gu, Nanoscale, 2019, 11, 11847 DOI: 10.1039/C9NR02082A

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