NANOSTRUCTURED MATERIALS Selected Synthesis Methods, Properties and Applications Other Books in Series DIAMOND: Electronic Properties and Applications Lawrence S. Pan and Don R. Kania, Editors ION IMPLANTATION: Basics to Device Fabrication Emanuel Rimini, Author SOLID STATE BATTERIES: Materials Design and Optimization C. Julien and G. Nazri, Authors SOL-GEL OPTICS: Processing and Applications L.C. Klein, Editor PHOTOREFRACTIVE EFFECTS AND MATERIALS David Nolte, Editor MATERIALS FOR OPTOELECTRONICS Maurice Quillec, Editor PIEZOELECTRIC ACTUATORS AND ULTRASONIC MOTORS Ken Uchino, Author WIDE-GAP LUMINESCENT MATERIALS: Theory and Applications Stanley R. Rotman, Editor THIN FILM FERROELECTRIC MATERIALS AND DEVICES R. Ramesh, Editor MICRO-ACTUATORS: Electrical, Thermal, Optical, Magnetic, Mechanical and Acoustic Massood Tabib-Azar, Author HIGH-TEMPERATURE SUPERCONDUCTORS: Materials, Properties and Applications Rainer Wesche, Author NANOCRYSTALLINE METALS AND OXIDES: Selected Properties And Applications Philippe Knauth, Joop Schoonman THE KLUWER INTERNATIONAL SERIES IN: ELECTRONIC MATERIALS: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Series Editor HARRY L. TULLER Massachusetts Institute of Technology NANOSTRUCTURED MATERIALS Selected Synthesis Methods, Properties and Applications edited by Philippe Knauth Professor Université de Provence Marseille, France Joop Schoonman Professor Delft University of Technology Delft, The Netherlands KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS NEW YORK, BOSTON, DORDRECHT, LONDON, MOSCOW eBook ISBN: 0-306-47722-X Print ISBN: 1-4020-7241-4 ©2004 Kluwer Academic Publishers New York, Boston, Dordrecht, London, Moscow Print ©2002 Kluwer Academic Publishers All rights reserved No part of this eBook may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording, or otherwise, without written consent from the Publisher Created in the United States of America Visit Kluwer Online at: http://kluweronline.com and Kluwer's eBookstore at: http://ebooks.kluweronline.com Dordrecht CONTENTS Nanomaterials Production by Soft Chemistry M.-P. Pileni Hydrothermal Synthesis of Nanomaterials O. Schäf, H. Ghobarkar, and P. Knauth EHDA in Particle Production T. Ciach, K.B. Geerse, and J.C.M. Marijnissen Dynamic Compaction of Nano-Structured Ceramics M.J.G. Jak Structural and Electrical Properties of Nanostructured and Coarse Manganese Spinel J. Molenda and J. Marzec Metal-Polymer Nanocomposites: Formation and Properties near the Percolation Threshold S. Zavyalov, A.Timofeev, A.Pivkina, and J.Schoonman Nanocrystalline Layers of CdSe Produced by Means ofa Multilayer Approach D. Nesheva, Z. Levi, I. Bineva, and H. Hofmeister X-Ray Diffraction from Nanostructured Materials J. Pielaszek High Resolution Electron Microscopy of Surfaces and Interfaces H. W. Zandbergen Nanoelectronics G. Allan, C. Delerue, C. Krzeminski, and M. Lannoo Index 23 43 55 1 2. Properties and Applications 73 97 115 127 145 161 185 1. Synthesis and Processing PREFACE In the framework of the rapid development of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, the domain of Nanostructured Materials is attracting more and more researchers, both academic and industrial. Synthesis methods are a major prerequisite for achievement in this rapidly evolving field. This book presents several important recent advances in synthesis methods for nanostructured materials and processing of nanoobjects into macroscopic samples, such as nanocrystalline ceramics. The chapters do not cover the whole spectrum of possible synthesis techniques, which would be limitless, but present highlights especially in the domains of interest of the editors. M.-P. Pileni presents “chimie douce” approaches for preparation of a large variety of nanostructured materials, including metals, alloys, semiconductors and oxides. Normal micelles, i.e. oil in water droplets, stabilized by a surfactant, and reverse micelles, i.e. water in oil droplets, are used as nanoreactors. Spherical nanoparticles and nanocrystals with a shape anisotropy, such as nanorods, can be obtained. O. Schäf et al. demonstrate that hydrothermal synthesis with water as solvent and reaction medium can be specifically adapted to nanostructured materials, if crystal growth can be avoided and a high degree of supersaturation is maintained, thereby enhancing the rate of nucleation. Different modes of operation are presented, including rapid expansion of supercritical solutions, rapid thermal decomposition of precursors in solution and static high-pressure hydrothermal synthesis. T. Ciach et al. present “electrospraying” as a powerful new route for the preparation of nanoparticles, especially of oxides for electroceramics. The principle of the electro-hydro-dynamic atomization technique and bipolar coagulation, i.e. mixing of two electrospray droplets, are explained and examples of nanoparticle production are given. M. Jak then shows how nanoparticles can be processed into nanostructured ceramics, by using dynamic compaction techniques. This chapter covers the explosive compaction and the room-temperature magnetic-pulse compaction techniques. Examples of ceramic oxides and nanocomposites are presented, which show the broad applicability of these techniques and the advantages in comparison with classical compaction. The following chapters are devoted to selected properties and applications of nanostructured materials and will be a good complement to those already presented in our previous volume in this series (P. Knauth, J. Schoonman, ed., Nanocrystalline Metals and Oxides : Selected Properties and Applications, Kluwer, Boston, 2002). J. Molenda et al. discuss the electrical and electrochemical properties of nanostructured manganese spinel, that is potentially important as cathode material in rechargeable lithium-ion batteries. S. A. Zavyalov et al. use co-condensation of metal nanoparticles in a polymer matrix to prepare nanocomposites. The percolation threshold of metal nanoparticles is important for the electrical, optical, and chemical properties of the nanocomposites. D. Nesheva et al. study evaporated multilayers with continuous nanocrystalline CdSe layers, or with discontinuous nanocrystals of CdSe, depending on the thickness and morphology of the other layer ( or ZnSe). Quantum size effects are attributed to 1D carrier confinement in the continuous CdSe layers and quasi-3D confinement in the discontinuous “composite” films. J. Pielaszek discusses how X-ray diffraction can be applied to study the structure of nanostructured materials. The determination of an average crystallite size from reflection broadening, especially using Scherrer’s equation, and the Rietveld refining, and atomistic modeling of X-ray diffraction patterns from nanostructured materials are described. H. Zandbergen introduces High Resolution Electron Microscopy as a powerful tool for studying nanostructures. The imaging process of HREM, the relations between the micrography and the material structure are described and examples of HREM studies of grain boundaries are shown. Ways to investigate the chemical composition and electronic effects are outlined. Given the tremendous importance of this field for the future development of the industrialized world and mankind in general, the final chapter of this book is devoted to « nanoelectronics ». G. Allan et al. present a prospective on further size reduction in microelectronics and on the future of molecular electronics. The first part treats devices built on inorganic materials and quantum effects, such as tunneling junctions. The second part introduces the concepts of molecular diodes, wires, and circuits, experiments on molecules in solution and imaging and fabrication of molecular objects. We thank all the colleagues who spend considerable time and effort in writing these high-level contributions. We are also pleased to acknowledge the support of the series editor Prof. Harry Tuller and of Greg Franklin, senior editor at Kluwer Academic Publishers. P. K. gratefully acknowledges the support by the "Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)", the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the European Union (COST 525 project), and the National Science Foundation (NSF) that helped to realize this and other projects on nanostructured materials. J. S. acknowledges the European Science Foundation-NANO program and the Delft Interfaculty Research Center “Renewable Energy” for support of exchange visits and nanoparticle research. Marseille, France, and Delft, The Netherlands, June 2002. P. Knauth and J. Schoonman viii Nanomaterials Production by Soft Chemistry M.P.Pileni Laboratoire LM2N, Université P. etM. Curie (Paris VI), B.P. 52, 4 Place Jussieu, F - 752 31 Paris Cedex 05, France. Abstract. In this paper, various ways to make nanocrystals are presented. It is possible, by using colloidal self-assemblies as nanoreactors, to produce a large variety of nanoparticles, semiconductors, metals, oxides and alloys The limitations in using these colloidal solutions to produce nanomaterials are pointed out. 2 I. Introduction. During the last decade, due to the emergence of a new generation of high technology materials, the number of groups involved in nanomaterials has increased exponentially1,2 . Nanomaterials are implicated in several domains such as chemistry, electronics, high density magnetic recording media, sensors and biotechnology. This is, in part, due to their novel material properties, that differ from both the isolated atoms and the bulk phase. An ultimate challenge in materials research is now the creation of perfect nanometer-scale crystallites (in size and shape) identically replicated in unlimited quantities in a state than can be manipulated and that behave as pure macromolecular substances. The essential first step in the study oftheir physical properties and the use of nanomaterials in various technologies is their production. Physical and chemical methods were developed: ball milling3,4 , a flame by vapor phase reaction and condensation5 , chemical reduction1 and coprecipitation1,6-10 have been employed to control the particle size (up to 10 nm) and morphology. More recently, new preparation methods have been developed such as sonochemical reactions11 , gel-sol12 , microwave plasma13 and low energy cluster beam deposition14 . In 1988, we developed a method based on reverse micelles (water in oil droplets) for preparing nanocrystals15 . In 1995, we were able to control size and shape of nanocrystals by using colloidal solutions as templates2 . Using these methods we fabricated various types of nanomaterials : metals semiconductors (CdS, CdTe etc...) and alloys (Fe-Cu, CdMnS, CdZnS). Normal micelles make it possible to produce ferrite magnetic fluids16 . Some of the techniques described above enable preparing amorphous nanoparticles whereas others favor formation of highly crystallized nanoobjects. One of the challenges is to produce anisotropic nanocrystals. Colloidal solutions can be used as a nano-reactor17 whose shape partially plays a role in the shape of the nanomaterial produced (see below). In the last two 3 years, a large number of groups have succeeded in making nanorods. Various nanomaterials such as silver18,19 , gold19-23 , platinium24,25 , copper26 and semiconductors27,28 were produced. In most cases, a surfactant, usually cethyltriethylammonium bromide or its derivatives, is added to the preparation solution. However, the colloidal solution is a mixture of several compounds and its structure is unknown. The surfactant is used as a polymer and plays an important role in formation of nanorods. The aspect ratio (length to width ratio) markedly depends on the amount of surfactant, but the key factor in favoring the nanocrystal growth in a given direction is not known. Self-assembled nanocrystals have attracted increasing interest over the last five years 17,29,30 . The level of research activity is growing seemingly exponentially, fueled in part by the observation of physical properties that are unique to the nanoscale domain. The first two- and three-dimensional superlattices were observed with and CdSe nanocrystals29,30 . Since then, a large number of groups have succeeded in preparing various selforganized lattices of silver31-34 , gold35-38 , cobalt39 , and cobalt oxide40 . With the exception of CdSe30 and cobalt39 nanocrystals, most superlattice structures have been formed from nanocrystals whose surfaces are passivated with alkanethiols. When nanocrystals are characterized by a low size distribution, they tend to self-organize in compact hexagonal networks. Conversely, if the distribution is too large they are randomly dispersed on a substrate. This is obtained when a drop of solution containing the nanocrystal is deposited on the substrate lying on a paper. Conversely, when the substrate is fixed with anti-capillary tweezers, rings made ofnanocrystals, and surrounded by bare substrate, are formed42 . This is observed with silver, gold, CdS and ferrite nanocrystals. These phenomena were attributed to either wetting34 or magnetic43 properties. In fact, they are due to Marangoni instabilities42 . Under other deposition conditions, large "wires" composed of silver nanoparticles have been observed, in which the degree of self-organization varies with the length of 4 the alkyl chains coating the particles44 . Interestingly, it has been recently demonstrated that the physical properties of silver45,46 , cobalt39,47,48 and ferrites49,50 nanocrystals organized in 2D and/or 3D superlattices differ from those of isolated nanoparticles. These changes in the physical properties are due to the short distances between the nanocrystals. Such collective properties are attributed to dipole-dipole interactions. Furthermore, the electron transport properties drastically change with the nanocrystal organization51 . In this paper a colloidal solution with a well-known structure is used as a template to produce nanocrystals. The size and shape of the materials are partially controlled by that ofthe template. II. Results and discussions. Colloidal solutions favor partial control of the size and shape of nanomaterials. In the following, colloid methods developed to make nanocrystals are described. II. 1. Spherical nanoparticles Several techniques are used to produce nanomaterials by soft chemistry. Either amorphous or crystalline nanoparticles are obtained. Whatever the procedure is, the major factors involved in controlling the size or shape ofnanoparticles are confinement, electrostatic interactions, reactant solubilities and large local amounts of reactant. After or during the production, nanoparticles have to be passivated to prevent coalescence. One of the first approaches to make nanoparticles was based on the variation of the solubility product of reactant with temperature52 . This controls the particle size. Simultaneously, syntheses of nanoparticles were developed in aqueous solution in presence of a charged polymer that strongly interacts with one of the reactants53,54 . In the following, data obtained by using colloidal self-assemblies as a nano-reactor to control the nanocrystal sizes are given. 5 i) Reverse micelles Reverse micelles are water in oil droplets stabilized by the surfactant55 . The water to surfactant concentration ratio, linearly controls the size of the droplet56 . Reverse micelles are subjected to Brownian motion and during these collisions the droplets combine to form a dimer with an exchange oftheir water contents. The dimer dissociates to again form reverse micelles. These two properties (control of the droplet size56 and the exchange process57 ) make possible the use of reverse micelles as a nano-reactor. Two micellar solutions are prepared. Each contains one of the reactants. By mixing these solutions, a chemical reaction takes place58 and nanomaterials are produced1,2 . The droplet size, which is controlled by w, controls the size of the particle. This procedure has been used to obtain a large variety of materials such as semiconductors1,59 , metals1,40,60 and oxides61 . When the two reactants are present as salts, amorphous nanomaterials are formed. Conversely, when one of the reactants is a functionalized surfactant (the reactant is the counter ion of the surfactant) nanocrystals are produced. In the latter case, it is possible to make well defined alloys like Cd1-yZnyS62 , Cd1-yMnyS63 whereas it is not possible with salt ions solubilized in the droplets. All the chemical reactions occurring in aqueous solution cannot be obtained in micelles. This was well demonstrated with telluride derivatives. CdTe is made as described above64 . But it is not possible to produce Cd1-yMnyTe65 whereas Cd1-yMnyS nanocrystals are formed. The replacement of sulfur by the telluride derivative induces formation of rods of telluride and CdTe nanocrystals65 . Similarly, it is possible to produce ZnS and not ZnTe. Again telluride rods are formed. These data clearly show that chemistry in homogeneous solution (aqueous) differs from that ofcolloids (water in oil droplets). In the following, one ofthe reactants is a functionalized surfactant. On increasing the water content, i.e., the size of the nano-reactor (water in oil droplet), the particle size increases (Fig. 1). However the variation of the nanocrystal diameter depends on the type of produced material. For II-VI 6 semiconductors59 such as CdS, ZnS, CdTe it is possible to control the particle diameter from 1.8 nm to 4 nm. Conversely for silver sulfide66 and copper67 nanocrystals it can be varied from 2 to 10 nm. The major change in the particle size is obtained at low water content: On increasing the water content, the particle size increases to reach a plateau around w=20. Ifit is assumed that the largest particle size and that of the water molecule volume is 1, CdS, ZnS, CdZnS, CdMnS, PbS, Co, Ag nanocrystals and the water molecule volume behave similarly as shown in Figure 2. This indicates that the crystal growth is related to the water structure inside the droplet, which is confirmed by the change in the O-H vibration ofthis water68 (Fig. 2). This is valid for most of the nanocrystals produced. Discrepancies are observed with silver sulfide and silver nanocrystals. With silver sulfide nanocrystals, a linear increase in the particle size with the water content is seen66 . With silver nanocrystals, the behavior observed in Figure 2 is obtained when the reducing agent is sodium borohydride. On using hydrazine as the reducing agent, the behavior markedly 7 changes. At low water content (w=2), the average size of nanocrystals is 5 nm with a low size distribution (12%). On increasing the water content, the size distribution markedly increases (40%) and the average diameter is around 3.5 nm. It does not change with increasing w from 10 to 40. Such changes in the behavior can be related to the fact that with sodium borohydride the chemical reaction is very fast whereas with hydrazine it is rather slow. It also must be noted that it is possible to make larger nanocrystals by using a plastic vessel which again prevents deposition ofa silver nanocrystal film on the surface. The crystalline structure of nanocrystals usually differs from that of the bulk phase. As an example, the II-VI semiconductors in the nano-scale are characterized by a hexagonal structure (Wurtzite)69,70 whereas the bulk phase is cubic (Zinc Blende). In some cases, the structure of nanocrystals in the phase obtained in the nanoscale is unstable compared to the bulk phase. In the bulk phase, silver iodide has, at room temperature, two stable phases and and an unstable one On the nanoscale range, the and phases are stable and the phase cannot be detected. These structural changes are observed for a large number of nanocrystals. Of course, this change in the structural behavior is not general. For example, silver sulfide nanocrystals form a monoclinic phase in the nano-scale and in the bulk materials. 8 By replacing a mixed surfactant by a functionalized surfactant, the phase diagram drastically changes71,72 . To our knowledge, one of most quantitative studies of the phase diagram obtained using functionalized surfactant was with copper diethyl sulfosuccinate, water, isooctane. Similar behavior was obtained with many other divalent surfactants such as and Reverse micelles are formed in two regions for the phase diagram: 0