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Squeezing Out Nanoparticles from Perovskites: Controlling Exsolution with Pressure. | LitMetric

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Article Abstract

Nanoparticle exsolution has emerged as a versatile method to functionalize oxides with robust metallic nanoparticles for catalytic and energy applications. By modifying certain external parameters during thermal reduction (temperature, time, reducing gas), some morphological and/or compositional properties of the exsolved nanoparticles can be tuned. Here, it is shown how the application of high pressure (<100 bar H) enables the control of the exsolution of ternary FeCoNi alloyed nanoparticles from a double perovskite. H pressure affects the lattice expansion and the nanoparticle characteristics (size, population, and composition). The composition of the alloyed nanoparticles could be controlled, showing a reversal of the expected thermodynamic trend at 10 and 50 bar, where Fe becomes the main component instead of Ni. In addition, pressure drastically lowers the exsolution temperature to 300 °C, resulting in unprecedented highly-dispersed and small-sized nanoparticles with a similar composition to those obtained at 600 °C and 10 bar. The mechanisms behind the effects of pressure on exsolution are discussed, involving kinetic, surface thermodynamics, and lattice-strain factors. A volcano-like trend of the exsolution extent suggests that competing pressure-dependent mechanisms govern the process. Pressure emerges as a new design tool for metallic nanoparticle exsolution enabling novel nanocatalysts and surface-functionalized materials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11579965PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202403544DOI Listing

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