Title of article :
In situ high-temperature electron microscopy of 3DOM cobalt,
iron oxide, and nickel
Author/Authors :
Christopher F. Blanford، نويسنده , , C. BARRY CARTER، نويسنده , , Andreas Stein، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
High-temperature electron microscopy was
used to follow how the structure of two specimens of threedimensionally
ordered macroporous (3DOM) materials,
also known as inverse opals, and one specimen of a precursor
to a 3DOM material changed with temperature. The
change in grain size with temperature of 3DOM cobalt and
3DOM iron oxide (as magnetite) was monitored in situ in
the TEM by heating in stages to 900 and 1,000 C,
respectively. The two materials studied by TEM showed
contrasting grain growth behavior. For 3DOM cobalt,
carbon surrounding the nanometer-size grains led to slower
grain growth in thinner sample areas than in areas in closer
contact with other grains; a bimodal grain-size distribution
was observed after heating above 700 C for 90 min. The
grains of the 3DOM iron oxide had no carbon coating and
coarsened more evenly to give a unimodal size distribution.
Line scans from selected-area diffraction (SAD) patterns
were used for phase analysis and showed that traces of
cobalt oxide present in the 3DOM cobalt sample at room
temperature disappeared when the sample was heated
above 500 C. The transformation of a 3DOM precursor
material, nickel(II) oxalate–polystyrene (PS) latex
composites, was followed in situ by variable-temperature
environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM) from
room temperature to ca. 700 C in 0.5–0.7 kPa O2. The
ESEM examination of the 3DOM precursors permitted
real-time observation of the polymer template decomposition
and the shrinkage that occurs upon calcination of
these precursor materials
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science