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Nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics

One-dimensional objects as nanowires have been proven to be building blocks in novel applications due to their unique functionalities. In the realm of magnetic materials, iron-oxides form an important class by providing potential solutions in catalysis, magnetic devices, drug delivery, or in the fie...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Csiszár, Gábor, Solodenko, Helena, Lawitzki, Robert, Ma, Wenhao, Everett, Christopher, Csiszár, Orsolya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9419098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133865
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0na00919a
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author Csiszár, Gábor
Solodenko, Helena
Lawitzki, Robert
Ma, Wenhao
Everett, Christopher
Csiszár, Orsolya
author_facet Csiszár, Gábor
Solodenko, Helena
Lawitzki, Robert
Ma, Wenhao
Everett, Christopher
Csiszár, Orsolya
author_sort Csiszár, Gábor
collection PubMed
description One-dimensional objects as nanowires have been proven to be building blocks in novel applications due to their unique functionalities. In the realm of magnetic materials, iron-oxides form an important class by providing potential solutions in catalysis, magnetic devices, drug delivery, or in the field of sensors. The accurate composition and spatial structure analysis are crucial to describe the mechanical aspects and optimize strategies for the design of multi-component NWs. Atom probe tomography offers a unique analytic characterization tool to map the (re-)distribution of the constituents leading to a deeper insight into NW growth, thermally-assisted kinetics, and related mechanisms. As NW-based devices critically rely on the mechanical properties of NWs, the appropriate mechanical modeling with the resulting material constants is also highly demanded and can open novel ways to potential applications. Here, we report a compositional and structural study of quasi-ceramic one-dimensional objects: α-Fe ⊕ α-FeOOH(goethite) ⊕ Pt and α-Fe ⊕ α-Fe(3)O(4)(magnetite) ⊕ Pt core–shell NWs. We provide a theoretical model for the elastic behavior with terms accounting for the geometrical and mechanical nonlinearity, prior and subsequent to thermal treatment. The as-deposited system with a homogeneous distribution of the constituents demonstrates strikingly different structural and elastic features than that of after annealing, as observed by applying atom probe tomography, energy-dispersive spectroscopy, analytic electron microscopy, and a micromanipulator nanoprobe system. During annealing at a temperature of 350 °C for 20 h, (i) compositional partitioning between phases (α-Fe, α-Fe(3)O(4) and in a minority of α-Fe(2)O(3)) in diffusional solid–solid phase transformations takes place, (ii) a distinct newly-formed shell formation develops, (iii) the degree of crystallinity increases and (iv) nanosized precipitation of evolving phases is detected leading to a considerable change in the description of the elastic material properties. The as-deposited nanowires already exhibit a significantly large maximum strain (1–8%) and stress (3–13 GPa) in moderately large bending tests, which become even more enhanced after the annealing treatment resulting at a maximum of about 2.5–10.5% and 6–18 GPa, respectively. As a constitutive parameter, the strain-dependent stretch modulus undoubtedly represents changes in the material properties as the deformation progresses.
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spelling pubmed-94190982022-09-20 Nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics Csiszár, Gábor Solodenko, Helena Lawitzki, Robert Ma, Wenhao Everett, Christopher Csiszár, Orsolya Nanoscale Adv Chemistry One-dimensional objects as nanowires have been proven to be building blocks in novel applications due to their unique functionalities. In the realm of magnetic materials, iron-oxides form an important class by providing potential solutions in catalysis, magnetic devices, drug delivery, or in the field of sensors. The accurate composition and spatial structure analysis are crucial to describe the mechanical aspects and optimize strategies for the design of multi-component NWs. Atom probe tomography offers a unique analytic characterization tool to map the (re-)distribution of the constituents leading to a deeper insight into NW growth, thermally-assisted kinetics, and related mechanisms. As NW-based devices critically rely on the mechanical properties of NWs, the appropriate mechanical modeling with the resulting material constants is also highly demanded and can open novel ways to potential applications. Here, we report a compositional and structural study of quasi-ceramic one-dimensional objects: α-Fe ⊕ α-FeOOH(goethite) ⊕ Pt and α-Fe ⊕ α-Fe(3)O(4)(magnetite) ⊕ Pt core–shell NWs. We provide a theoretical model for the elastic behavior with terms accounting for the geometrical and mechanical nonlinearity, prior and subsequent to thermal treatment. The as-deposited system with a homogeneous distribution of the constituents demonstrates strikingly different structural and elastic features than that of after annealing, as observed by applying atom probe tomography, energy-dispersive spectroscopy, analytic electron microscopy, and a micromanipulator nanoprobe system. During annealing at a temperature of 350 °C for 20 h, (i) compositional partitioning between phases (α-Fe, α-Fe(3)O(4) and in a minority of α-Fe(2)O(3)) in diffusional solid–solid phase transformations takes place, (ii) a distinct newly-formed shell formation develops, (iii) the degree of crystallinity increases and (iv) nanosized precipitation of evolving phases is detected leading to a considerable change in the description of the elastic material properties. The as-deposited nanowires already exhibit a significantly large maximum strain (1–8%) and stress (3–13 GPa) in moderately large bending tests, which become even more enhanced after the annealing treatment resulting at a maximum of about 2.5–10.5% and 6–18 GPa, respectively. As a constitutive parameter, the strain-dependent stretch modulus undoubtedly represents changes in the material properties as the deformation progresses. RSC 2020-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9419098/ /pubmed/36133865 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0na00919a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Csiszár, Gábor
Solodenko, Helena
Lawitzki, Robert
Ma, Wenhao
Everett, Christopher
Csiszár, Orsolya
Nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics
title Nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics
title_full Nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics
title_fullStr Nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics
title_full_unstemmed Nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics
title_short Nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics
title_sort nonlinear elastic aspects of multi-component iron oxide core–shell nanowires by means of atom probe tomography, analytical microscopy, and nonlinear mechanics
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9419098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133865
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0na00919a
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