范德瓦尔斯力
扫描透射电子显微镜
氪
电子能量损失谱
X射线光电子能谱
离域电子
碳纳米管
Atom(片上系统)
材料科学
原子单位
光谱学
高分辨率透射电子显微镜
拉曼光谱
化学
原子物理学
化学物理
纳米技术
透射电子显微镜
氙气
化学工程
物理
量子力学
计算机科学
有机化学
光学
分子
工程类
嵌入式系统
作者
Ian Cardillo-Zallo,Johannes Biskupek,Sally Bloodworth,Elizabeth S. Marsden,Michael W. Fay,Quentin M. Ramasse,Graham A. Rance,Craig T. Stoppiello,William J. Cull,Benjamin L. Weare,Richard J. Whitby,Ute Kaiser,Paul D. Brown,Andrei N. Khlobystov
出处
期刊:ACS Nano
[American Chemical Society]
日期:2024-01-22
卷期号:18 (4): 2958-2971
被引量:8
标识
DOI:10.1021/acsnano.3c07853
摘要
Single-atom dynamics of noble-gas elements have been investigated using time-resolved transmission electron microscopy (TEM), with direct observation providing for a deeper understanding of chemical bonding, reactivity, and states of matter at the nanoscale. We report on a nanoscale system consisting of endohedral fullerenes encapsulated within single-walled carbon nanotubes ((Kr@C60)@SWCNT), capable of the delivery and release of krypton atoms on-demand, via coalescence of host fullerene cages under the action of the electron beam (in situ) or heat (ex situ). The state and dynamics of Kr atoms were investigated by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS), electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Kr atom positions were measured precisely using aberration-corrected high-resolution TEM (AC-HRTEM), aberration-corrected scanning TEM (AC-STEM), and single-atom spectroscopic imaging (STEM-EELS). The electron beam drove the formation of 2Kr@C120 capsules, in which van der Waals Kr2 and transient covalent [Kr2]+ bonding states were identified. Thermal coalescence led to the formation of longer coalesced nested nanotubes containing more loosely bound Krn chains (n = 3–6). In some instances, delocalization of Kr atomic positions was confirmed by STEM analysis as the transition to a one-dimensional (1D) gas, as Kr atoms were constrained to only one degree of translational freedom within long, well-annealed, nested nanotubes. Such nested nanotube structures were investigated by Raman spectroscopy. This material represents a highly compressed and dimensionally constrained 1D gas stable under ambient conditions. Direct atomic-scale imaging has revealed elusive bonding states and a previously unseen 1D gaseous state of matter of this noble gas element, demonstrating TEM to be a powerful tool in the discovery of chemistry at the single-atom level.
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