Ionic conductivity is ubiquitous to many industrially important applications such as fuel cells, batteries, sensors, and catalysis. Tunable conductivity in these systems is therefore key to their commercial viability. Here, we show that geometric frustration can be exploited as a vehicle for conductivity tuning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
February 2015
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulation was used to explore the liquid-solid (crystal) phase change of a ceria nanoparticle. The simulations reveal that the crystalline seed, which spontaneously evolves and nucleates crystallisation, is a liquid rather than a solid. Evidence supporting this concept includes: (a) only 3% of the total latent heat of solidification had been liberated after 25% of the nanoparticle had (visibly) crystallised.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the charging of Li2MnO3 reveal that the reason nanocrystalline-Li2MnO3 is electrochemically active, in contrast to the parent bulk-Li2MnO3, is because in the nanomaterial the tunnels, in which the Li ions reside, are held apart by Mn ions, which act as a pseudo 'point defect scaffold'. The Li ions are then able to diffuse, via a vacancy driven mechanism, throughout the nanomaterial in all spatial dimensions while the 'Mn defect scaffold' maintains the structural integrity of the layered structure during charging. Our findings reveal that oxides, which comprise cation disorder, can be potential candidates for electrodes in rechargeable Li-ion batteries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArchitectural constructs are engineered to impart desirable mechanical properties facilitating bridges spanning a thousand meters and buildings nearly 1 km in height. However, do the same 'engineering-rules' translate to the nanoscale, where the architectural features are less than 0.0001 mm in size? Here, we calculate the mechanical properties of a porous ceramic functional material, ceria, as a function of its nanoarchitecture using molecular dynamics simulation and predict its yield strength to be almost two orders of magnitude higher than the parent bulk material.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnique physical, chemical, and mechanical properties can be engineered into functional nanomaterials via structural control. However, as the hierarchical structural complexity of a nanomaterial increases, so do the challenges associated with generating atomistic models, which are sufficiently realistic that they can be interrogated to reliably predict properties and processes. The structural complexity of a functional nanomaterial necessarily emanates during synthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanomaterials, with potential application as bio-medicinal agents, exploit the chemical properties of a solid, with the ability to be transported (like a molecule) to a variety of bodily compartments. However, the chemical environment can change significantly the structure and hence properties of a nanomaterial. Accordingly, its surface reactivity is critically dependent upon the nature of the (biological) environment in which it resides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe study of the chemical and biological properties of CeO2 nanoparticles (CNPs) has expanded recently due to its therapeutic potential, and the methods used to synthesize these materials are diverse. Moreover, conflicting reports exist regarding the toxicity of CNPs. To help resolve these discrepancies, we must first determine whether CNPs made by different methods are similar or different in their physicochemical and catalytic properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngiogenesis is the formation of new blood vessels from existing blood vessels and is critical for many physiological and pathophysiological processes. In this study we have shown the unique property of cerium oxide nanoparticles (CNPs) to induce angiogenesis, observed using both in vitro and in vivo model systems. In particular, CNPs trigger angiogenesis by modulating the intracellular oxygen environment and stabilizing hypoxia inducing factor 1α endogenously.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInstabilities of nanoscale ceria surface facets are examined on the atomic level. The electron beam and its induced atom migration are proposed as a readily available probe to emulate and quantify functional surface activity, which is crucial for, for example, catalytic performance. In situ phase contrast high-resolution transmission electron microscopy with spherical aberration correction is shown to be the ideal tool to analyze cationic reconstruction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe predict that the presence of extended defects can reduce the mechanical strength of a ceria nanorod by 70%. Conversely, the pristine material can deform near its theoretical strength limit. Specifically, atomistic models of ceria nanorods have been generated with full microstructure, including: growth direction, morphology, surface roughening (steps, edges, corners), point defects, dislocations and grain-boundaries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
January 2011
Various polymorphs of MnO(2) are widely used as electrode materials in Li/MnO(2) batteries. Electrolytic manganese dioxide (EMD) is the most electrochemically active form of MnO(2) and is very difficult to characterize. Their structural details are still largely unknown owing to the poor quality of X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns obtained from most MnO(2) samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtomistic simulations reveal that ceria nanorods, under uniaxial tension, can accommodate over 6% elastic deformation. Moreover, a reversible fluorite-to-rutile phase change occurs above 6% strain for a ceria nanorod that extends along [110]. We also observe that during unloading the stress increases with decreasing strain as the rutile reverts back to fluorite.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCentral to porous nanomaterials, with applications spanning catalysts to fuel cells is their (perceived) "fragile" structure, which must remain structurally intact during application lifespan. Here, we use atomistic simulation to explore the mechanical strength of a porous nanomaterial as a first step to characterizing the structural durability of nanoporous materials. In particular, we simulate the mechanical deformation of mesoporous Li-MnO(2) under stress using molecular dynamics simulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoporous beta-MnO2 can act as a host lattice for the insertion and deinsertion of Li with application in rechargeable lithium batteries. We predict that, to maximize its electrochemical properties, the beta-MnO2 host should be symmetrically porous and heavily twinned. In addition, we predict that there exists a "critical (wall) thickness" for MnO2 nanomaterials above which the strain associated with Li insertion is accommodated via a plastic, rather than elastic, deformation of the host lattice leading to property fading upon cycling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanomaterials synthesized from nanobuilding blocks promise size-dependent properties, associated with individual nanoparticles, together with collective properties of ordered arrays. However, one cannot position nanoparticles at specific locations; rather innovative ways of coaxing these particles to self-assemble must be devised. Conversely, model nanoparticles can be placed in any desired position, which enables a systematic enumeration of nanostructure from model nanobuilding blocks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe predict, from computer modeling and simulation in partnership with experiment, a general strategy for synthesizing spherical oxide nanocrystals via crystallization from melt. In particular we "simulate synthesis" to generate full atomistic models of undoped and Ti-doped CeO2 nanoparticles, nanorods, and nanoporous framework architectures. Our simulations demonstrate, in quantitative agreement with experiment [Science 2006, 312, 1504], that Ti (dopant) ions change the shape of CeO2 nanocrystals from polyhedral to spherical.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFaraday Discuss
April 2007
Ceria, CeO2, based materials are a major (active) component of exhaust catalysts and promising candidates for solid oxide fuel cells. In this capacity, oxygen transport through the material is pivotal. Here, we explore whether oxygen transport is influenced (desirably increased) compared with transport within the bulk parent material by traversing to the nanoscale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCharacterization of materials is crucial for the quantification and prediction of their physical, chemical, and mechanical properties. However, as the complexity of a system increases, so do the challenges involved in elucidating its structure. While molecular simulation and modeling have proved invaluable as complements to experiment, such simulations now face serious challenges: new materials are being synthesized with ever increasing structural complexity, and it may soon prove impossible to generate models that are sufficiently realistic to describe them adequately.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCeria nanoparticles are one of the key abrasive materials for chemical-mechanical planarization of advanced integrated circuits. However, ceria nanoparticles synthesized by existing techniques are irregularly faceted, and they scratch the silicon wafers and increase defect concentrations. We developed an approach for large-scale synthesis of single-crystal ceria nanospheres that can reduce the polishing defects by 80% and increase the silica removal rate by 50%, facilitating precise and reliable mass-manufacturing of chips for nanoelectronics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe calculate, using simulated amorphisation and recrystallisation (A&R), that ceria (CeO2) nanoparticles, about 8 nm in diameter, comprise a high concentration of labile surface oxygen species, which we suggest will help promote the oxidation of CO to CO2. In particular, the ceria nanoparticle contains a high proportion of reactive {100} surfaces, surface steps and corner sites. When reduced to CeO1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFModels of MnO2 nanoparticles, with full atomistic detail, have been generated using a simulated amorphization and recrystallization strategy. In particular, a 25,000-atom "cube" of MnO2 was amorphized (tension-induced) under molecular dynamics (MD). Long-duration MD, applied to this system, results in the sudden evolution of a small crystalline region of pyrolusite-structured MnO2, which acts as a nucleating "seed" and facilitates the recrystallization of all the surrounding (amorphous) MnO2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe show, using simulation techniques, that the high ionic conductivity in BaF2/CaF2 heterolayers is because the interfaces reduce the activation energy barriers to mobility and increase the number of charge carriers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Commun (Camb)
November 2004
Evolutionary simulation has been used to generate full atomistic models for CeO2 nanoparticles, which comprise [100]-truncated [111] octahedra in accord with experiments.
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