Stress Induced Structural Transformations in Au Nanocrystals


Abstract in English

Nanocrystals can exist in multiply twinned structures like the icosahedron, or single crystalline structures like the cuboctahedron or Wulff-polyhedron. Structural transformation between these polymorphic structures can proceed through diffusion or displacive motion. Experimental studies on nanocrystal structural transformations have focused on high temperature diffusion mediated processes. Thus, there is limited experimental evidence of displacive motion mediated structural transformations. Here, we report the high-pressure structural transformation of 6 nm Au nanocrystals under nonhydrostatic pressure in a diamond anvil cell that is driven by displacive motion. In-situ X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy were used to detect the transformation of multiply twinned nanocrystals into single crystalline nanocrystals. High-pressure single crystalline nanocrystals were recovered after unloading, however, the nanocrystals quickly reverted back to multiply twinned state after redispersion in toluene solvent. The dynamics of recovery was captured using transmission electron microscopy which showed that the recovery was governed by surface recrystallization and rapid twin boundary motion. We show that this transformation is energetically favorable by calculating the pressure-induced change in strain energy. Molecular dynamics simulations showed that defects nucleated from a region of high stress region in the interior of the nanocrystal, which make twin boundaries unstable. Deviatoric stress driven Mackay transformation and dislocation/disclination mediated detwinning are hypothesized as possible mechanisms of high-pressure structural transformation.

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