Study of the Wet Chemical Etching of SiO and Nanoparticle@SiO Core-Shell Nanospheres.

ACS Appl Nano Mater

Soft Condensed Matter, Debye Institute for Nanomaterials Science, Utrecht University, Princetonplein 1, Utrecht 3584 CC, The Netherlands.

Published: February 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The development of liquid cell (scanning) transmission electron microscopy (LC-(S)TEM) allows for detailed study of nanomaterials in a liquid environment, focusing on their chemical behavior at the nanoscale.
  • This research demonstrates how LC-(S)TEM can effectively observe the etching of silica nanoparticles and the formation of yolk-shell structures, while highlighting the critical impact of electron beam dosage on material damage during imaging.
  • The study employs Monte-Carlo simulations to connect electron trajectories with energy deposition, leading to optimized imaging conditions that accurately reflect previously reported etching patterns in various silica-based nanoparticles.

Article Abstract

The recent development of liquid cell (scanning) transmission electron microscopy (LC-(S)TEM) has opened the unique possibility of studying the chemical behavior of nanomaterials down to the nanoscale in a liquid environment. Here, we show that the chemically induced etching of three different types of silica-based silica nanoparticles can be reliably studied at the single particle level using LC-(S)TEM with a negligible effect of the electron beam, and we demonstrate this method by successfully monitoring the formation of silica-based heterogeneous yolk-shell nanostructures. By scrutinizing the influence of electron beam irradiation, we show that the cumulative electron dose on the imaging area plays a crucial role in the observed damage and needs to be considered during experimental design. Monte-Carlo simulations of the electron trajectories during LC-(S)TEM experiments allowed us to relate the cumulative electron dose to the deposited energy on the particles, which was found to significantly alter the silica network under imaging conditions of nanoparticles. We used these optimized LC-(S)TEM imaging conditions to systematically characterize the wet etching of silica and metal(oxide)-silica core-shell nanoparticles with cores of gold and iron oxide, which are representative of many other core-silica-shell systems. The LC-(S)TEM method reliably reproduced the etching patterns of Stöber, water-in-oil reverse microemulsion (WORM), and amino acid-catalyzed silica particles that were reported before in the literature. Furthermore, we directly visualized the formation of yolk-shell structures from the wet etching of Au@Stöber silica and FeO@WORM silica core-shell nanospheres.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7976607PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.0c02771DOI Listing

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