Nonclassical Nucleation and Crystallization of LiNbO3 Nanoparticles from the Aqueous Solvothermal Alkoxide Route
The exact molecular reaction pathway and crystallization mechanisms of LiNbO3 nanoparticles under solvothermal conditions are derived through extensive time- and temperature-resolved experiments allowing to track all the transient molecular and solid species. Starting with a simple mixing of Li/Nb ethoxides, water addition is used to promote condensation after ligand exchange with different co-solvents including alcohols and glycols of variable carbon-chain length. A nonclassical nucleation scheme is first demonstrated after the identification of new octanuclear complexes with a {Li4Nb4O10} core whose solvophobic interactions mediate their aggregation, thus, resulting in a colloidal gel at room-temperature. Upon heating, a more or less frustrated aggregation-mediated crystallization process is then evidenced leading to LiNbO3 nanocrystals of adjustable mean size between 20 and 100 nm. Such a fine control can be attributed to the variable Nb-OR (R = alkoxy/glycoxy ligand) binding interactions at the surface of crystalline intermediates. Demonstration of such a nonclassical nucleation process and crystallization mechanism for LiNbO3 not only sheds light on the entire growth process of multifunctional nanomaterials with non-perovskite crystalline structures, but also opens new avenues for the identification of novel bimetallic oxoclusters involved in the formation of several mixed oxides from the aqueous alkoxide route.
WOS:001105210300001
2023-11-15
REVIEWED
Funder | Grant Number |
This work was supported by the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (projects RACINE, ANR-17-CE24-0029-03, and DARE, ANR-21-CE09-0036-01), the French-Swiss Interreg V program (project OncoNanoscreen), and the Swiss National Science Foundation (DARE, gra | ANR-17-CE24-0029-03 |
French Agence Nationale de la Recherche | |
French-Swiss Interreg V program | 200021E_205754 |
Swiss National Science Foundation | |
Centre Lyonnais de Microscopie (CLYM) | |