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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Atomic structure relaxation in nanocrystalline NiO studied by EXAFS spectroscopy: Role of nickel vacancies

Alexei KuzminAndris AnspoksR. KalendarevAleksandr Kalinko

subject

Materials scienceExtended X-ray absorption fine structureNon-blocking I/OAnalytical chemistryCondensed Matter PhysicsNanocrystalline materialElectronic Optical and Magnetic Materialssymbols.namesakeMicrocrystallineNanocrystalVacancy defectsymbolsddc:530SpectroscopyDebye model

description

Nanocrystalline NiO samples have been studied using the Ni K-edge extended x-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy and recently developed modeling technique, combining classical molecular dynamics with ab initio multiple-scattering EXAFS calculations (MD-EXAFS). Conventional analysis of the EXAFS signals from the first two coordination shells of nickel revealed that (i) the second shell average distance R(Ni–Ni2) expands in nanocrystalline NiO compared to microcrystalline NiO, in agreement with overall unit cell volume expansion observed by x-ray diffraction; (ii) on the contrary, the first shell average distance R(Ni–O1) in nanocrystalline NiO shrinks compared to microcrystalline NiO; (iii) the thermal contribution into the meansquare relative displacement σ 2 is close in both microcrystalline and nanocrystalline NiO and can be described by the Debye model; (iv) the static disorder is additionally present in nanocrystalline NiO in both the first Ni–O1 and second Ni–Ni2 shells due to nanocrystal structure relaxation. Within the MD-EXAFS method, the force-field potential models have been developed for nanosized NiO using as a criterion the agreement between the experimental and theoretical EXAFS spectra. The best solutions have been obtained for the 3D cubic-shaped nanoparticle models with nonzero Ni vacancy concentration Cvac: Cvac ≈ 0.4–1.2% for NiO nanoparticles having the cube size of L ≈ 3.6–4.2 nm and Cvac ≈ 1.6–2.0% for NiO thin film composed of cubic nanograins with a size of L ≈ 1.3–2.1 nm. Thus our results show that the Ni vacancies in nanosized NiO play important role in its atomic structure relaxation along with the size reduction effect.

https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.86.174114