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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Structural Metastability and Quantum Confinement in Zn1–xCoxO Nanoparticles
J. Pellicer-porresDaniel R. GamelinAlfredo SeguraRafael ValienteCarlos Renero-lecunaCarlos Renero-lecunaFernando RodríguezG. AlmonacidL. NatafS. AgouramJesús GonzálezRosa Martín-rodríguezsubject
Phase transitionCondensed matter physicsAbsorption spectroscopyChemistryMechanical EngineeringBioengineering02 engineering and technologyGeneral ChemistryElectronic structure021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciencesAbsorption bandMetastability0103 physical sciencesGeneral Materials Science010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyAbsorption (electromagnetic radiation)Single crystalWurtzite crystal structuredescription
This paper investigates the electronic structure of wurtzite (W) and rock-salt (RS) Zn1-xCoxO nanoparticles (NPs) by means of optical measurements under pressure (up to 25 GPa), X-ray absorption, and transmission electron microscopy. W-NPs were chemically synthesized at ambient conditions and RS-NPs were obtained by pressure-induced transformation of W-NPs. In contrast to the abrupt phase transition in W-Zn1-xCoxO as thin film or single crystal, occurring sharply at about 9 GPa, spectroscopic signatures of tetrahedral Co(2+) are observed in NPs from ambient pressure to about 17 GPa. Above this pressure, several changes in the absorption spectrum reveal a gradual and irreversible W-to-RS phase transition: (i) the fundamental band-to-band edge shifts to higher photon energies; (ii) the charge-transfer absorption band virtually disappears (or overlaps the fundamental edge); and (iii) the intensity of the crystal-field absorption peaks of Co(2+) around 2 eV decreases by an order of magnitude and shifts to 2.5 eV. After incomplete phase transition pressure cycles, the absorption edge of nontransformed W-NPs at ambient pressure exhibits a blue shift of 0.22 eV. This extra shift is interpreted in terms of quantum confinement effects. The observed gradual phase transition and metastability are related to the NP size distribution: the larger the NP, the lower the W-to-RS transition pressure.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-07-09 | Nano Letters |