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Get Free AccessElectrodeposition is an increasingly important method to synthesize supported nanoparticles, yet the early stages of electrochemical nanoparticle formation are not perfectly understood. In this paper, the early stages of silver nanoparticle electrodeposition on carbon substrates have been studied by aberration-corrected TEM, using carbon-coated TEM grids as electrochemical electrodes. In this manner we have access to as-deposited nanoparticle size distribution and structural characterization at the atomic scale combined with electrochemical measurements, which represents a breakthrough in a full understanding of the nanoparticle electrodeposition mechanisms. Whereas classical models, based upon characterization at the nanoscale, assume that electrochemical growth is only driven by direct attachment, the results reported hereafter indicate that early nanoparticle growth is mostly driven by nanocluster surface movement and aggregation. Hence, we conclude that electrochemical nulceation and growth models should be revised and that an electrochemical aggregative growth mechanism should be considered in the early stages of nanoparticle electrodeposition.
Jon Ustarroz, Xiaoxing Ke, Annick Hubin, Sara Bals, Herman Terryn (2011). New Insights into the Early Stages of Nanoparticle Electrodeposition. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 116(3), pp. 2322-2329, DOI: 10.1021/jp210276z.
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Type
Article
Year
2011
Authors
5
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
DOI
10.1021/jp210276z
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