Oriol
Lamiel-Garcia
a,
Andi
Cuko
ab,
Monica
Calatayud
bc,
Francesc
Illas
a and
Stefan T.
Bromley
*ad
aDepartament de Ciència de Materials i Química Física and Institut de Química Teòrica i Computacional (IQTCUB), Universitat de Barcelona, E-08028 Barcelona, Spain
bSorbonneUniversités, UPMC Univ Paris 06, CNRS, Laboratoire de Chimie Théorique CC 137, 4, place Jussieu F. 75252, Paris Cedex 05, France
cInstitutUniversitaire de France, France
dInstitució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats (ICREA), E-08010 Barcelona, Spain. E-mail: s.bromley@ub.edu
First published on 6th October 2016
Bottom-up and top-down derived nanoparticle structures refined by accurate ab initio calculations are used to investigate the size dependent emergence of crystallinity in titania from the monomer upwards. Global optimisation and data mining are used to provide a series of (TiO2)N global minima candidates in the range N = 1–38, where our approach provides many new low energy structures for N > 10. A range of nanocrystal cuts from the anatase crystal structure are also considered up to a size of over 250 atoms. All nanocrystals considered are predicted to be metastable with respect to non-crystalline nanoclusters, which has implications with respect to the limitations of the cluster approach to modelling large titania nanosystems. Extrapolating both data sets using a generalised expansion of a top-down derived energy expression for nanoparticles, we obtain an estimate of the non-crystalline to crystalline crossover size for titania. Our results compare well with the available experimental results and imply that anatase-like crystallinity emerges in titania nanoparticles of approximately 2–3 nm diameter.
Anatase nanocrystals are found to greatly differ from their rutile counterparts in being highly photochemically active and form the basis for many nano-titania based applications (e.g. photocatalysts,4 sunscreens,5 anti-pollution building materials6). Often the key to enhanced photoactivity is to form composite materials containing very small (≤5 nm diameter) stable anatase nanocrystals.7,8 As with most materials, however, further decreasing the size of anatase nanocrystals will eventually give way to a regime of nanoclusters, which generally do not display a crystalline order, thus losing much of their utility. Evidence from high resolution transmission electron microscopy has shown that isolated anatase nanocrystals can persist down to sizes as small as ∼5 nm in diameter.9 Recent experiments have further shown that the anatase crystal structure is extremely thermally persistent in 4 nm diameter nanoparticles.10 Although this implies that anatase is still thermodynamically stable, in this latter size range it is unclear whether such nanoparticles retain a facetted nanocrystal morphology. Indirect evidence from modelling suggests that when anatase nanoparticles start to become smaller than ∼5 nm, they may begin to exhibit a spherical morphology with an anatase core and an amorphous shell.11 Although not strictly nanocrystals according to our definition, such core–shell nanoparticles should clearly be regarded as partially crystalline. For even smaller TiO2 nanoparticles, with average diameters in the range 2–3 nm, fitting experimental X-ray spectroscopy data using the reverse Monte Carlo refined nanoparticle structures tend to support this feature.12 With decreasing size, eventually the anatase core is subsumed by the amorphous shell, and the nanoparticles will not exhibit any crystallinity. We refer to the non-crystalline titania species in this ultra-small size regime as nanoclusters.
From a bottom-up perspective, increasing in size from a single TiO2 monomer, nanoclusters need to attain a certain size before they begin to thermodynamically favour regular atomic ordering characteristic of a bulk crystal. From this perspective, this structural crossover between nanoclusters and nanocrystals can be seen as a size-dependent non-crystalline to crystalline (NC ↔ C) crossover. Herein, we provide an estimate of the NC ↔ C crossover size regime for TiO2 using accurate quantum chemically calculated energies of relaxed atomistically detailed nanoclusters and nanocrystals derived from bottom-up and top-down approaches respectively.
In Fig. 1 we represent the generic size dependent energetic stability of both non-crystalline (red line) and nanocrystals (blue line) for an arbitrary material. We note that although herein we will use calculated energies at 0 K to demonstrate our approach, these data could equally well be free energies from experiment and/or theory. The energy difference, ΔEC–NC(N), gives a measure of the metastability of crystalline particles with respect to non-crystalline clusters at relatively small sizes and vice versa at larger sizes. Using the plotted energies the NC ↔ C crossover size would seem to be defined as the size at which ΔEC–NC(N) becomes zero. In general, however, it is not expected that this crossover will always be defined by a definite single transition size above which nanocrystals are always more energetically stable and below which non-crystalline nanoclusters are always more stable. Size dependent structural preferences are well-known in nanocluster systems (e.g. icosahedral shell closing) and it is quite possible that, with increasing size, crystallinity would be first energetically favoured in a set of discrete increasingly sized nanoparticles covering a crossover range (N1, N2, … NC) before being manifestly prevalent for all N ≥ NC. More generally, it is quite likely that for sizes close to but smaller than NC there will be nanoclusters that exhibit partial crystallinity (e.g. a nanoparticle with crystalline cores and an amorphous shell). As such we define the NC size range as those nanoparticles which do not exhibit full crystallinity. In turn, we roughly define a fully crystalline nanocrystal as one which can be cut from a bulk crystal and which maintains its atomic ordering upon structural relaxation and with only minor displacement of atomic positions (i.e. no more than a ∼20% of a bond length). We further note that the NC ↔ C crossover will not generally be to the most stable bulk crystalline phase of the material but rather to a polymorph which is metastable in the bulk. Depending on the material there will be variable number of subsequent size dependent crossovers between polymorphs until the most stable bulk crystalline phase is reached.
In Fig. 1 we also note another interesting crossover size, Nmeta, indicating the smallest size that a nanocrystal can maintain an energetically metastable crystalline structure with respect to a non-crystalline nanocluster of the same size. Related to this concept, there have been important studies of nanosize dependent metastability of one crystal phase over another.13 The metastability we refer to, however, is, in a converse way, more similar to the metastability that a non-crystalline bulk structure (e.g. an amorphous glass) can possess with respect to a crystalline phase. The size region around Nmeta denotes the limit at which small nanocrystals start to become structurally unstable and spontaneously relax into non-crystalline species. We note that due to the stability of small clusters often being irregularly dependent on size, it is quite possible that close to size Nmeta there will be a set of different cluster sizes for which the crystalline order is easier to maintain and sizes for which only non-crystalline clusters are structurally stable.
For the vast majority of materials, neither NC nor Nmeta crossover sizes have been determined. For highly ionic materials NC and Nmeta will be quite similar and small in magnitude. In other words, in such cases the strong near-isotropic electrostatic interactions between the ions drive the system towards crystalline closely packed structures even for very small sizes (e.g. N < 20 for (NaCl)N,14 (MgO)N,15 (CeO2)N16). For such materials we note that small to moderately sized crystalline nanoparticles appear to be good theoretical models for calculating the properties of large nanocrystals and/or the corresponding bulk crystal.17–20 For many materials where the tendency to establish highly ordered atomic arrangements is relatively weaker, we may expect that the NC and Nmeta transition sizes could be very different. For example, in such a material one may be able to construct relatively small but very metastable nanocrystals, but where the thermodynamic NC ↔ C transition occurs at significantly larger nanoparticle sizes. Such a situation has been strongly hinted at in the IP-based studies of (ZnO)N
21 and (Fe2O3)N
22 nanosystems and is found to be the case in our DFT-based study of the (TiO2)N nanosystem. In such cases, calculations using such highly metastable nanocrystal models (i.e. with sizes close to Nmeta) as a means to explain experimental data involving considerably larger nanocrystals and/or bulk crystals, should be very carefully assessed.
Using a bottom-up global optimisation approach we show that, in the case of titania, such small bulk-mimicking nanocrystals are significantly metastable with respect to the most energetically stable nanoclusters of a corresponding size. Furthermore, by also considering a set of bulk-derived nanoparticles for various sizes we estimate the lower size limit at which bulk-like nanoparticles actually start to become the most energetically stable titania species. This latter estimate, corresponding to the NC size for titania, provides a guide to the size of crystalline nanoparticles which can safely be used as natural stable structural models of larger titania nanoparticles used in the experiment. Generally, our work demonstrates how ab initio calculations can provide lower bound estimates for NC. In other words, we show how the intrinsic size regimes for a material's (nano)crystalline stability can be theoretically predicted.
Herein, we employ five nanocrystals all derived from stoichiometric cuts from the bulk anatase crystal phase with between 28–84 TiO2 units (i.e. 84–252 atoms), which retain their atomic structure reasonably well with respect to the original bulk atomic ordering and positions after structural relaxation (see Fig. 2). Anatase nanocrystals are experimentally found to exhibit a {101}-faceted bipyramidal shape which typically possess some degree of {001} truncation of the apices. Such a morphology can be rationalised through by cuts of the anatase bulk crystal exposing facets whose size and shape follow their surface energies as described by the Wulff construction.29 Our nanocrystals with N = 35 and N = 84 were cut from the parent anatase crystal so as to exhibit bipyramidal morphologies, and those with N = 33 and N = 78 units cut to have truncated bipyramidal shapes respectively. The 28 and 38 TiO2 unit nanocrystals were taken from those studies which used a number of structural principles in order to guide the way in which they were cut from the parent anatase crystal. In particular, the structures of the N = 38 nanocrystal were fabricated according to the requirements that all atoms should have sufficient coordination to support their formal oxidation state (i.e. O2− and Ti4+ for TiO2) and that the nanocrystal should have no net dipole moment.27,30 This procedure results in the N = 38 nanocrystal being fully-coordinated in contrast to the N = 35 and N = 84 bipyramidal nanocrystals which display two apical Ti–O terminations. In the case of the 28 unit nanocrystal a similar, albeit less formal, approach was followed whereby nanocrystals that would be as symmetric as possible in every direction were sought, while still possessing as much anatase-like structure as possible.31 We note that for this latter (TiO2)28 nanocrystal the original bulk-cut yields four terminal Ti–O groups which persist even after relaxing the structure. Nevertheless, this feature does not appear to detrimentally affect the energetic stability of the nanocrystal compared to similarly sized nanocrystals considered (i.e. for sizes N = 33 and N = 35). Conversely, however, we also note that in ref. 31 a N = 38 bulk cut is reported which has two singly coordinated terminal oxygen atoms, which after relaxation form bonds with nearby oxygen atoms (O–O distance of 1.44 Å). This nanoparticle is not used in our study due to this very non-bulk-like feature and the fact that it is highly metastable (>5 eV) relative to the (TiO2)38 bulk cut we employ from ref. 27.
Under the assumption that nanoclusters grow in a perfectly spherical manner one can derive the fraction of surface atoms, Fsurf(N), to be kN−α, where α = −1/3 and k = 4. Following the derivation for other cluster shapes yields different k values, while α is an unchanged general constant determined by the area-to-volume dimension of Fsurf(N). Many generic properties, G(N), of simple clusters (e.g. total energies, ionisation energies, melting temperatures) can be approximately fitted to a scaling law of the following type:32
G(N) = Gbulk + a1N−1/3, | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
E(N) = a0 + a1x + a2x2 + a3x3 + …, | (3) |
Here, we employ global optimisation with classical interionic potentials (IPs) to search the PES in a computationally efficient manner, and subsequently refine the resulting low energy cluster structures using unconstrained geometry optimisations at the DFT level of theory. This general IP–DFT strategy has been employed in a number of studies25,35,39,41,42 with various choices of IP and DFT functionals. We have found that the often-used bulk-parameterised IPs such as those reported by Matsui and Akaogi (MA)43 are not very size-transferable for evaluating the relative stabilities and structures of small discrete (TiO2)N species. We note, for example, that the MA IP tends to predict highly coordinated compact cluster structures to be very energetically stable,35,42 but which are not found to be particularly low in energy compared to more open structures, when refined using DFT geometry optimizations.39,41 In an attempt to rectify these shortcomings we have employed two strategies based on the MA IP type.
Firstly, we have taken the original MA IP parameterisation and used this together with another IP which favours the 4-coordination of oxygen ions around each cation. Specifically, we use the interaction parameters of IP by Flikkema and Bromley (FB) which was originally parameterised for (SiO2)N nanoclusters.44 For any particular (TiO2)N composition we assign a percentage of the Ti cations and O anions to be treated by the FB IP and the rest by the MA IP. The is purely a formal definition within the overall mixed IP parameterisation and finally all oxygen and all titanium ions are taken to be respectively equivalent after an energy minimisation of a cluster structure. The full set of parameters for this mixed MA–FB IP approach can be found in the ESI.† The FB-treated ions energetically favour the formation of four-coordinated Ti centres largely due to the FB IP possessing a relatively higher degree of O–O repulsion. Thus, when FB-parameterised centres replace the centres originally parametrised by the MA IP (which favour 6-coordinated Ti centres) more open cluster structures are favoured. We found that replacing 30–50% of the original MA-parameterised centres by our FB-parameterised centres was optimal for improving the tendency of the mixed IP to generate low energy (TiO2)N cluster structures. We note that this approach was employed previously in ref. 36 to generate candidate global minima for (TiO2)N for N = 8, 10.
Secondly, we have re-parameterised the original MA IP to reduce its strong tendency to form highly coordinated clusters. Here, the main change was to increase the repulsion between oxygen anions for O–O separations of 1.5–2.5 Å while maintaining very similar Ti–O interaction parameters. We note that the degree of O–O repulsion in this new parameterisation is not as high as in the FB IP (see the ESI† for IP parameters). We found that, as for the mixed IP strategy, this new parameterisation of the MA IP led to low energy cluster structures with relatively less compact structures and fewer highly coordinated Ti centres.
For both the above IP-based approaches we use Monte Carlo basin hopping45 global optimisation where we typically employ 10 runs each of typically one million steps, each one starting from a different initial structure. For the smallest sizes considered (i.e. N < 15) we note that the proposed global minima were usually obtained in runs of less than one million steps. During the run, the temperature was automatically adjusted to maintain an average acceptance ratio of new structures of between 65–80%. For the case of the mixed IP approach we also used specific oxygen–oxygen and titanium–titanium swap moves to help ensure that the best configuration of the two oxygen and two titanium types was achieved for any particular cluster structure. The lowest energy 40–50 structures resulting from the 10 runs for each cluster size were then re-optimised using FHI-AIMS with a light Tier 1 basis and the PBE46 functional. After this refinement, the best 7–8 structures were finally optimised using our reference PBE0/tight Tier 1 settings.
In addition to attempting direct global optimisation of (TiO2)N species, we also employed data mining47 where we took low energy globally optimised structures of (SiO2)N48,49 and (CeO2)N
16 and re-optimised them as corresponding (TiO2)N nanoclusters. Specifically, we mainly tried columnar-type (SiO2)N clusters49 and tetrahedral (CeO2)N fluorite-like cuts.50 We note, for example, that in the former case low energy structures were found for sizes N = 12 and 18, which concurred with the results from our global optimisations. More interestingly, in the latter case, for sizes N = 10, 20 and 35, new candidate global minima structures were found as described below.
![]() | ||
Fig. 3 Structures of the low energy bottom-up derived (TiO2)N clusters N = 1–24 employed in this work. |
![]() | ||
Fig. 4 Structures of low energy bottom-up derived (TiO2)N clusters N = 28, 35 (left), 38 found in this work from global optimisation. The N = 35 (right) nanoparticle was obtained from data-mining from a tetrahedral (CeO2)35 nanoparticle in ref. 16 and is calculated to be marginally metastable relative to the (TiO2)35 nanoparticle to its left. |
In line with the assumptions made in other studies regarding the tendency for higher energetic stability and more bulk-like character being associated with fewer terminal dangling oxygen Ti–O defects,26,30 our bottom-up generated set of clusters show a clear tendency to exhibit fewer such defects with increasing size. In particular all clusters we find for N > 18 are either fully-coordinated (i.e. zero terminal defects) or have at most one Ti–O defect. This tendency is also fully in line with the bottom-up studies of (SiO2)N clusters where a similar transition to fully-coordinated clusters has been predicted to occur for sizes N ≥ 26.51 Generally speaking, we also see a tendency for decreasing structural symmetry in the clusters with increasing size. Although, for example, all (TiO2)N global minima in the range N = 1–8 have some symmetry (i.e. greater than C1) the propensity for our candidate global minima to be symmetric falls away to such an extent that all our lowest energy clusters for N > 22 are not symmetric. We note that for the size N = 35, in addition to our lowest energy NC cluster, we also find a highly symmetric and very low energy, yet non-anatase-like, cluster (see Fig. 4) which we discuss below.
Generally, our searches do not find structures which display the anatase crystal structure for N = 1–38. In particular for sizes N = 28, 35 and 38, we find NC clusters which are significantly more stable (by 7.9–9.9 eV total energy) than their correspondingly sized anatase nanocrystal counterparts (shown in Fig. 2). This clearly implies that using metastable anatase nanocrystal structures within this size range to model the behaviour of larger nanocrystals may potentially introduce significant errors, and tests are required to accurately assess the validity and consequences of such modelling approaches.
For our low energy clusters coming from our bottom-up searches, their structures and morphologies vary immensely with size and thus a fit using eqn (2) is not justified. Instead we assume that although the basic geometric and surface stress energy components of the total energy for regular nanocrystals is captured in eqn (2), a general expansion building on this basis (see eqn (3)) would be more suitable for this diverse set. We have attempted fits using eqn (3) with polynomials from degree 3 to degree 8. We find that for degree 3 and 4 polynomial fits, the resulting extrapolated line does not cross the fit derived for the top-down nanocrystals and simply tends to zero, implying unreasonably, and against experimental evidence, that non-crystalline clusters are always more stable than anatase nanocrystals. For degree 7 and 8 polynomial fits, the extrapolated trend line is non-monotonically decreasing with increasing N, unphysically predicting a decrease in energetic stability with increasing nanoparticle size. Fits with polynomials of degree 5 and 6, however, provide almost exactly the same monotonically decreasing trend line which meets the nanocrystal fit line, which is consistent with the observations. As such, these latter expansions of eqn (3) appear to be the only ones which lead to physical consistent fits of the data. We thus used the degree 5 fit to the nanocluster data which leads to estimate a NC ↔ C crossover size of N = 125 (i.e. 375 atoms) as shown in Fig. 5. The fitting parameters used can be found in the ESI† along with the plots of the energetic data with respect to N−1/3.
To provide an idea of the diameter of such an N = 125 sized nanoparticle in Fig. 6 we show a spherical semi-crystalline (i.e. anatase core and amorphous shell) nanoparticle of 130 TiO2 units (∼2.0 nm diameter) and a facetted anatase bulk cut of 151 TiO2 units (∼2.6 nm diameter). Accordingly, we thus predict the emergence of anatase-like crystallinity in TiO2 nanoparticle sizes to occur in nanoparticles of approximately 2–3 nm diameter. We note that our prediction, coming purely from a theoretical basis, is fully consistent with the experimental results in ref. 12.
![]() | ||
Fig. 6 Nanoparticles with sizes near to the predicted NC ↔ C crossover size. Left: A (TiO2)130 semi-crystalline spherical nanoparticle and right: A (TiO2)151 facetted bulk cut anatase nanocrystal. |
![]() | ||
Fig. 7 Pair distribution functions calculated using the Debyer code54 for: (i) anatase bulk-like nanocrystal, (ii) a top-down (TiO2)35 anatase bulk cut nanocrystal, and (iii) the lowest energy (TiO2)35 nanoparticle from our bottom-up global optimisations. Blue lines indicate tentative correspondence of anatase-like peaks in (i) and (ii). |
Although we have predicted a NC ↔ C crossover which is consistent with experiment, and for which we clearly can define nanocrystals with anatase crystallinity that are metastable to non-crystalline nanoparticles for sizes up to N = 125, we also find some very low energy nanoparticles which neither appear to be anatase-like nor totally non-crystalline. Specifically, for (TiO2)N sizes N = 10, 20 and 35, we obtain very energetically stable nanoclusters from data-mining from tetrahedral nanoclusters reported in ref. 16. For N = 10 and N = 20 these tetrahedral clusters are actually our best candidate global minima structures. All these nanoclusters are based on cuts from the cubic CeO2 bulk fluorite crystal structure which has eight-coordinated Ce4+ ions and four-coordinated O2− ions. For (CeO2)N these bulk-cut-based nanoclusters retain the as-cut fluorite crystal structure. However, in the case of (TiO2)N we find that, upon relaxation, the clusters distort in a such a way as to lower the local atomic coordination of the ions (see the ESI†). This distortion is consistent with the fact that the cubic polymorphs of TiO2 can only be stabilised at very high temperatures and pressures.55 Relaxation from a fluorite bulk cut allowing for lowering of coordination would be consistent with a distortion to the columbite crystal structure (i.e. the α-PbO2 structure, also known as the TiO2 II phase), another known high pressure phase of TiO2. Experimental X-ray absorption spectroscopy results report evidence for the TiO2 II phase (i.e. columbite) in ∼7 nm diameter titania nanoparticles56 and geologically α-PbO2-type TiO2 (i.e. columbite) has been found naturally in nanometer sized ultrahigh-pressure inclusions.57 Indeed, the energetically favoured prevalence for a columbite-like phase at small sizes could be consistent with the high surface stresses in such small nanoparticles which induces an effective high internal pressure. Our comparisons of the structures of the fluorite-cut-derived TiO2 nanoparticles with the bulk columbite crystal structure, however, do not strongly support the hypothesis that the nanoparticles are simple cuts from the columbite bulk crystal. In fact, although these nanoparticles clearly possess some regular fluorite-derived atomic ordering, they do not appear to be a single phase. From some directions, for example, the clusters appear to exhibit atomic ordering reminiscent of the brookite crystal phase, predicted in some studies to be an intermediate size-dependent stable TiO2 phase for nanoparticles with diameters between 11–35 nm.58 The structure of the Ti20O40 fluorite-derived nanocluster and its comparison with the original data-mined structure and the brookite crystal can be found in the ESI.†
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6nr05788h |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |