Alexander
Volk
a,
Philipp
Thaler
a,
Daniel
Knez
b,
Andreas W.
Hauser
*a,
Johannes
Steurer
a,
Werner
Grogger
b,
Ferdinand
Hofer
b and
Wolfgang E.
Ernst
*a
aInstitute of Experimental Physics, Graz University of Technology, Petersgasse 16, A-8010 Graz, Austria. E-mail: andreas.w.hauser@gmail.com; wolfgang.ernst@tugraz.at; Fax: +43 (316) 873 108140; Tel: +43 (316) 873 8157 Tel: +43 (316) 873 8140
bInstitute for Electron Microscopy and Nanoanalysis & Graz Centre for Electron Microscopy, Graz University of Technology, Steyrergasse 17, A-8010 Graz, Austria
First published on 12th November 2015
Silver and gold nanowires are grown within superfluid helium nanodroplets and investigated by high resolution electron microscopy after surface deposition. The wire morphologies depend on the rate of metal atom doping in the pickup sequence. While high doping rates result in a polycrystalline face-centered cubic nanowire structure, at lower doping rates the initial fivefold-symmetry seems to be preserved. An explanation for this observation is given by computer simulations, which allow the derivation of timescales for the nanowire growth process inside helium nanodroplets.
Helium nanodroplets (HeN), on the other hand, were extensively used as weakly perturbing cryogenic matrices for the spectroscopy of atoms, molecules and small clusters in molecular beam experiments (see ref. 21–24 for detailed reviews). The possibility of sequential doping and local confinement of different species at 0.37 K makes HeN also a unique environment for cluster growth.21–23,25,26 The first surface deposition of HeN-grown metal clusters27,28 triggered a series of experimental studies on cluster growth and follow-up surface deposition.29–33 Gomez et al. found that Ag nanoparticles (Agn), synthesized in single helium droplets and subsequently deposited on a substrate, tend to agglomerate equidistantly along distinct lines.34 In the absence of external guiding forces, this can be taken as the first experimental evidence for the existence of vortices inside of HeN. This confirms several preceding computational studies on this issue (see ref. 35–38 and references therein). Further proof for the presence of vortices or even vortex lattices in the droplets was given by recent X-ray diffraction experiments on a Xe-doped HeN-beam and complementary density functional theory (DFT) calculations.39,40 Utilizing these vortices as inert templates, continuous monometallic nanowires with lengths of several hundred nanometers were synthesized inside HeN,41 as well as bimetallic core–shell nanowires.42 As an intrinsic property of the growth process, the diameter of these wires is ≈3–10 nm. In a recent study on the stability of HeN-grown Ag nanowires we could show that these thin structures segment due to thermally induced Ag atom diffusion after their deposition on a surface.43
Despite these experimental achievements, little is known about the actual growth process of nanowires inside the droplets.41,44 Our group was able to deduce a possible growth mechanism for pure Agn inside of vortex-free HeN by analyzing high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) images of the deposited clusters.30 A computational survey of the landing process revealed that small Agn (diameter dAg < 3 nm) presumably undergo reconstruction upon deposition, while for larger clusters the pronounced soft landing conditions28,45,46 favour the conservation of the initial morphology.47 Only recently we modelled the collision process between two coinage metal dopants in small HeN with a molecular dynamics (MD) simulation.48 The obtained timescales for dimer collisions were subsequently used in a model suitable for larger droplet sizes. It shows that for large HeN, multicenter aggregation leads to well separated clusters in one droplet for long timescales.49
In the present study we extend our previous work by investigating the influence of the doping conditions on the cluster growth and aggregation inside of large HeN. We further give timescales for the pinning of clusters due to attractive forces exerted by vortices present in the droplets, which causes the nanowire-growth. The obtained results are compared to HRTEM images of bare Ag and Au clusters and nanowires. Experiment and calculations indicate that an alteration in the amount of metal dopants induces different growth scenarios, which finally influences the morphology of the produced nanowires. To our belief a good understanding of the underlying growth process of nanowires in HeN is one of the key questions to be addressed in order to be able to synthesize more elaborate structures with this technique.
The HeN-beam passes a 400 μm skimmer into a separate vacuum chamber where the droplets are doped with the desired metal. Ag or Au atoms are evaporated from separate resistively heated alumina ovens of 2.3 cm length. They are captured by the passing droplets, in which they subsequently agglomerate to clusters. After the pickup, the droplet beam enters a UHV chamber (base pressure <6 ≈ 10−10 mbar) and is terminated on commercial TEM grids (Ted Pella, Inc., Prod. No. 01824). This leads to the disintegration of the droplet and a soft deposition of the contained aggregates on the amorphous carbon (a-c) surface.28,45–47
The disintegration of the HeN causes a rise in the He background pressure pHe, which can be monitored with an ionization pressure gauge (Leybold Heraeus IM 220) and a quadrupole residual gas analyzer (Balzers QMA 200/QME 200), both mounted off the beam axis. Due to evaporative cooling,53 the HeN size and accordingly the total He flux ΦHe into the last chamber are reduced with increasing Ag/Au doping rate. Following ref. 28, we calculate the mean number of metal dopant atoms X per HeN as
(1) |
α | n Ag | n Au | |
---|---|---|---|
0.75 | 1.7 × 1010 | 2.6 × 106 | 2.0 × 106 |
0.5 | 7 × 106 | — | 650 |
0.2 | 1.7 × 1010 | 6.8 × 105 | 5.4 × 105 |
0.04 | 1.7 × 1010 | — | 1.1 × 105 |
For the given average droplet speed vD ≈ 173 m s−1 at T0 = 5.4 K51 the pickup rates reach up to 2 × 1010 atoms per s. The energy transferred to the droplet this way leads to an estimated increase of the droplet temperature from 0.37 K59 to ≈1.05 K.53,60 Since this temperature is still below the He superfluid transition temperature of 2.17 K, quantized vortices are preserved during the pickup.
As for a previous study,30 we use a Tecnai TF20 from FEI Company for TEM and HRTEM measurements on the deposited clusters and nanowires. The microscope is equipped with an FEG source and a high resolution Gatan imaging filter with an UltraScan CCD camera (2048 px × 2048 px). All images are recorded with 200 kV acceleration voltage and a current density as low as 1 pA nm−2 to prevent morphology changes of the particles during the imaging process.
Since the breakup of Ag nanowires becomes noticeable already at ≈260 K,43 some substrates are cooled via the substrate holder to liquid nitrogen (LN2) temperature for the investigation of continuous wires. After nanowire deposition, cooled substrates are immersed into LN2 within 5 s after the substrate holder has been detached from its mount in the chamber. These substrates are subsequently transferred to a suited cryo-TEM holder (Gatan, Model 792) without being removed from the LN2 bath. Other substrates are exposed to ambient conditions for times shorter than 5 min when transferred to the TEM. In all cases, the chamber is vented with gaseous N2 (grade 5).
According to the real experiment, cluster growth in HeN starts by the pickup of single atoms in a locally defined region. In the computer simulation we therefore add Ag (see Table 1) atoms with a fixed doping frequency. The latter is determined by the length of the pickup region and the velocity of the droplets in the HeN beam. Benchmark calculations show that the shrinking of the droplet due to evaporative cooling has a negligible impact on the doping cross-section for a fixed dopant vapor pressure. Therefore a constant doping frequency can be assumed. The dopants are spawned within the HeN volume at Landau velocity vλ ≈ 56 m s−1.61 The time it takes for two atoms to aggregate Δta(2) is taken from ref. 48 and adjusted as follows: as more dopant-atoms are added to the droplet, the nucleation rate will increase until equilibrium conditions are reached. In our model, the nucleation frequency increases with the number of pairs that can be formed by j particles, hence
(2) |
(3) |
An individual “aggregation timer” is defined for every particle enclosed in the droplet, which reflects the actual droplet size and its current loading with dopants, i.e. the size-dependent velocities of all clusters which are currently present in the droplet. For the first two atoms picked up by the droplet this timer is set to Δta(2), but it is reevaluated after every additional pickup following eqn (2) and (3). Whenever an aggregation timer expires, the corresponding particle merges with another particle randomly chosen from the current set, but with a probability proportional to the velocity of the second particle (i.e. mergers with smaller particles are preferred). The merging leads to the growth of the first particle and to a reevaluation of its aggregation timer according to eqn (3), while the second particle is removed from the set.
In order to study structural changes in our set of metal particles over time, we further keep track of the shape of each resulting particle, which is determined by the amount of binding energy released during coalescence. While the addition of single atoms to a preexisting cluster is treated in a way that yields a new spherical particle, two clusters only coalesce into a spherical particle if the released energy is large enough to completely melt at least one of the involved clusters. This treatment is based on the findings in ref. 14 and 16. The authors of the respective studies showed that the surface energy released upon coagulation of two small metal clusters in He II can lead to melting and a subsequent merging of the individual particles into a single sphere. For larger clusters the released energy may not be sufficient for a complete melting, so that the clusters stick together and form nanowires.
We use a slightly different approach to calculate the energy released upon coagulation, as this allows us a better implementation of coagulation events between different sized clusters. To start, we calculate the binding energy per atom Eb(n) in a cluster consisting of n atoms using the empirical relation62
(4) |
ΔEb = (n1 + n2) × Eb(n1 + n2) − (n1 × Eb(n1) + n2 × Eb(n2)). | (5) |
It is evident that without additional effects, given sufficient time, such an algorithm inevitably leads to one single final particle. In the real experiment the growth rates are damped due to the presence of vortices in large HeN. Particles caught by vortices are pinned to the vortex core and their motion is subsequently restricted to the direction along the vortex line.5,65 The coalescence of captured particles along the vortex core is the reason for the formation of continuous nanowires, but is not directly captured in the presented model. However, we can choose the maximum simulation time to be equal to the mean time it takes for a particle to get trapped by a vortex contained in the HeN, which will be derived in the next section. This enables us to follow the growth of the building blocks of the final nanowires.
(6) |
(7) |
(8) |
HRTEM images are recorded and compared to the corresponding simulations30,70 in order to determine the morphologies of the clusters. While a complete analysis of the Aun morphology distribution lies beyond the scope of this article, we report that the findings are in good agreement with the measurements on Agn.30 Above all, we can clearly identify icosahedral (Ih) and decahedral (Dh) clusters for large cluster diameters (dAu > 3 nm) in numerous cases, two of which are exemplary depicted in Fig. 1. As will be shown later, these structures can be identified as building blocks in conglomerated nanowires.
Fig. 1 Decahedral (a) and icosahedral (b) Aun synthesized in HeN free from vortices ( ≈ 7 × 106 atoms), observed after deposition on a TEM substrate. The morphologies found agree well with those of Agn produced under comparable conditions.30 Scale is the same for both images. |
In order to investigate the aggregation process in the presence of vortices, large HeN ( ≈ 1.7 × 1010 atoms) are doped with Ag or Au atoms, respectively. In both cases, the doping rate was adjusted so as to obtain either heavy (α = 0.75) or weak (α = 0.2) loading of the droplets. Subsequently, the TEM substrates are exposed to the droplet beam for 5 s. This time is chosen in order to obtain a decent surface coverage on one hand and to ensure an insignificant overlap between nanowires carried by different droplets.
Fig. 2(a) shows continuous Ag nanowires with a total length of several hundred nanometers and a mean diameter nw ≈ 5 nm (as obtained with α = 0.75). Cryo-HRTEM measurements on these wires reveal multiple domains of face centered cubic (fcc) morphology (Fig. 2(b)). Blurred parts along the wire are due to thickness oscillations, i.e. the structure is visible in the HRTEM measurements only for areas with similar thickness for a chosen defocus. Due to these perturbations in diameter, the wires break up via a surface diffusion process already below room temperature, as shown recently.43 The outcome of this so-called Rayleigh breakup is the occurrence of chains of Ag segments as depicted in Fig. 3(a) and (d), and previously found in other HeN34,41,44 and He II bulk experiments.18 HRTEM images reveal that in the case of heavy doping (α = 0.75, left column of Fig. 3) these segments can either adopt polycrystalline fcc morphologies (Fig. 3(b)) or exhibit large monocrystalline fcc domains (Fig. 3(c)). No clusters with Ih or Dh morphology were found under these doping conditions.
Fig. 2 Ag nanowires synthesized in HeN ( ≈ 1.7 × 1010), deposited and imaged on a LN2 cooled (a-c) TEM grid. Continuous branched wires (a) show polycrystalline domains in HRTEM mode (b). |
Fig. 3 Chains of Ag segments resulting from the breakup of nanowires as depicted in Fig. 2. Left column: (a) heavy doping of the droplet (α = 0.75). HRTEM measurements reveal either polycrystalline morphology (b) or large monocrystalline domains (c). Right column: (d) weak doping (α = 0.2). Silver segments resulting from the breakup of small nanowires often exhibit fivefold symmetry, i.e. icosahedral ((e), top of (f)) or decahedral (bottom of (f)) morphologies. |
This is completely different from the findings obtained with Ag and α = 0.2 as depicted in the right column of Fig. 3. The existence of large Ihs (Fig. 3(e) and top of Fig. 3(f)) and Dhs (bottom of Fig. 3(f)) is dominating, being followed by particles with large monocrystalline domains. In contrast to the observations made for α = 0.75 we find only a very small amount of polycrystalline particles for weak loading of the droplets.
For large Au nanowires (α = 0.75) at LN2 temperature, we find the same branched structures as depicted in Fig. 2(a) for Ag. During the heat-up to room temperature Au nanowires undergo a surface smoothing but do not break into multiple segments (see Fig. 4(a)). The inner morphology (Fig. 4(b)) resembles that of continuous Ag wires, i.e. multiple fcc domains can be found. The wires resemble those found in bulk He II experiments in diameter, shape and morphology.12,13,17,19 Under low doping conditions (α = 0.2) we find short but continuous Au wires of slightly smaller diameter (Fig. 4(c)). In numerous cases, these wires contain spherical enclosures of ambiguous morphology, while the rest of the wire consists of multiple fcc domains (Fig. 4(d)).
Further reduction of the amount of doped Au atoms (α = 0.04) leads to the observation of segmented Au nanowires (Fig. 5). Assuming conserved volumes, we calculate the mean diameter of the initial wires as nw ≈ 3.0(1) nm. The distance between the centers of neighboring segments λ ≈ (13 ± 4) nm is in very good agreement with the theoretically derived relationship 2λ/d = 8.89 for the Rayleigh breakup of an ideal cylinder.71 The HRTEM image in Fig. 5 shows a small decahedral cluster (marked by an arrow) between two clusters of indistinct morphology.
Fig. 5 Segmented Au nanowire resulting from very weak doping (α = 0.04). The arrow marks a small decahedral cluster in the HRTEM image. |
As shown in our previous work,43 the breakup of Ag nanowires can be explained by the diffusion of wire surface atoms from thinner to thicker parts of the wire due to a gradient of the chemical potential. It is therefore convenient to assume that the observed morphologies are present already inside the initially continuous wires, and that they become clearly visible in the course of the breakup. It has been shown in several theoretical studies that the icosahedral shape is energetically preferred for small metal clusters, while intermediate and large clusters seem to be more stable in Dh and fcc morphologies, respectively (see ref. 72–74 and references therein). Further, it has been determined by MD simulations that the fcc morphology is preferred over the icosahedral morphology for Ag clusters with sizes larger than 1590 atoms (dAg ≈ 3.7 nm).75 The Ihs depicted in Fig. 3(e) and (f) both exhibit diameters larger than 5 nm (n > 3900 atoms). Therefore, it can be excluded that they were formed from fcc particles via a restructuring process. Such a growth sequence would further strongly contradict MD simulations recently performed by our own group.47 In simulations of silver clusters we could observe the conversion of Ihs and Dhs into fcc particles during surface deposition due to a recrystallization process, but not a single event of an inverse transformation from fcc into a particle of fivefold symmetry.
Element | α | d D/nm | t trap/ms |
---|---|---|---|
Ag | 0.75 | 720 | 1.4 |
0.2 | 1060 | 3.0 | |
Au | 0.75 | 720 | 1.8 |
0.2 | 1060 | 4.0 | |
0.04 | 1130 | 4.6 |
The time evolution of the total number of particles j present in one helium droplet is depicted in Fig. 6 for the attenuations realized in the experiment. It can be seen that in both cases the number of individual particles quickly drops after the pickup of new atoms has ended and that the following agglomeration takes place on a much longer timescale. The reason for this behaviour lies in the slow velocities of large clusters (see eqn (3)) compared to the Landau velocity assumed for freshly spawned metal atoms in the simulation. This finding has also been verified experimentally by the observation of bimetallic core–shell clusters with single or double cores.49 In order to realize the latter case two clusters have to grow in the droplet in the first of two consecutive pickup regions and have to stay separated until the droplets reach the second pickup cell. The corresponding HeN flight time can be estimated as ≈1 ms in our apparatus.50
Fig. 6 also reveals a decrease of j during the pickup process for larger attenuations, while j seems to stay nearly constant for α = 0.2. This behaviour can be explained by the shrinking of HeN which is much more prominent for α = 0.75 as can be seen from Table 2. The HeN flight time between the pickup cell and the TEM substrate is ≈6 ms. Comparing this to the timescale of cluster growth and to ttrap, it is evident that most clusters have to grow outside the vortex in a multicenter aggregation process, and that nearly all clusters will be captured by the vortex before substrate deposition.
The monitoring of the number of particles contained in spherical clusters nsp can give us a further important insight into the agglomeration process. Fig. 7 depicts the absolute occurrence of a certain value of nsp for all spherical particles contained in a single HeN. The lines shown correspond to the smoothed envelopes of histograms. Every histogram is calculated from several simulation runs for every depicted time of the aggregation process. Snapshots are taken during the pickup process at 30, 70, 130 (end of the pickup) and at 150 μs. As explained in the computational details, spherical clusters which do not melt during agglomeration are treated as elongated particles, built from the initially spherical collision partners. nsp includes all spherical clusters, regardless of whether they are present as building blocks of elongated structures or as individual spheres. From this, it follows that Fig. 7 directly reflects the sizes of the last complete melting of the clusters. A merging event which does not lead to molten clusters does affect j, but not the depicted histograms of nsp.
The large amount of small clusters present in the droplets during the pickup process is efficiently reduced after the addition of new atoms has ended, which is in good agreement with the behaviour depicted in Fig. 6. In fact, the final distribution of spherical building blocks is reached after 150 μs. This means that melting processes are practically limited to the pickup time, and that 20 μs after the end of pickup melting is negligible. After 150 μs, the spherical clusters still coagulate to form the final nanoparticles. This process takes the time which we calculated as ttrap earlier.
The most striking feature in Fig. 7 is that the positions of the histogram maxima are determined by the attenuation, i.e. the doping rate. A high doping rate in the case of α = 0.75 leads to a stronger heating of the clusters as more atoms impinge within a given time while the cooling rate rc is the same as for weaker doping. The effect is further enhanced by the pronounced shrinking of the droplet under heavy doping conditions, and leads to a slight shift of the histogram maxima towards higher values of nsp in Fig. 7. We can extract from the histograms sp ≈ 600 (Ag ≈ 2.7 nm) for α = 0.2 and sp ≈ 3000 (Ag ≈ 4.6 nm) for α = 0.75, which are also in good agreement with the diameters observed for deposited nanowires in the cryo-TEM images. As explained above, the fcc structure is energetically preferred over the Ih morphology for cluster sizes larger than 1590 atoms (dAg ≈ 3.7 nm).75 Since the clusters solidify from a molten state, it is justified to assume that the formation of Ihs is much more probable at α = 0.2 than it is for α = 0.75. This explains the exclusive findings of particles of fivefold symmetry under weak doping conditions in the experiment.
We believe that our experimental findings and the computational model presented will be of use in future attempts of gaining better control over the synthesis and the design of nanostructures within HeN. It would also be desirable to determine the morphologies of clusters enclosed in the HeN before substrate deposition, e.g. by X-ray scattering, a technique which has been exploited recently to investigate the morphologies of large free Ag nanoparticles.76
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