July 28, 2016
Journal Article

Realignment of Nanocrystal Aggregates into Single Crystals as a Result of Inherent Surface Stress

Abstract

Assembly of nanoparticles building blocks during single crystal growth is widely observed in both natural and synthetic environments. Although this form of non-classical crystallization is generally described by oriented attachment, random aggregation of building blocks leading to single crystal products is also observed, but the mechanism of crystallographic realignment is unknown. We herein reveal that random attachment during aggregation-based growth initially produces a non-oriented growth front. Subsequent evolution of the orientation is driven by the inherent surface stress applied by the disordered surface layer and results in single crystal formation via grain boundary migration. This mechanism is corroborated by measurements of orientation rate vs external stress, demonstrating a predictive relationship between the two. These findings advance our understanding of aggregation-based growth of natural minerals by nanocrystals, and suggest an approach to material synthesis that takes advantage of stress induced co-alignment.

Revised: January 25, 2017 | Published: July 28, 2016

Citation

Liu Z., H. Pan, G. Zhu, Y. Li, J. Tao, B. Jin, and R. Tang. 2016. Realignment of Nanocrystal Aggregates into Single Crystals as a Result of Inherent Surface Stress. Angewandte Chemie International Edition 55, no. 41:12836-12840. PNNL-SA-118982. doi:10.1002/anie.201603794