In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures

This study appraises the use of in-situ diffraction and spectroscopy techniques, complemented with ex-situ electron microscopy analyses, to investigate the geometry and phase change behaviour of bundled ultrathin W18O49 nanowires and WO3 nanoparticles. Our in-situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) results hav...

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Main Authors: Thummavichai, Kunyapat, Wang, Nannan, Xu, Fang, Rance, Graham, Xia, Yongde, Zhu, Yanqiu
Format: Article
Published: Royal Society 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52732/
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author Thummavichai, Kunyapat
Wang, Nannan
Xu, Fang
Rance, Graham
Xia, Yongde
Zhu, Yanqiu
author_facet Thummavichai, Kunyapat
Wang, Nannan
Xu, Fang
Rance, Graham
Xia, Yongde
Zhu, Yanqiu
author_sort Thummavichai, Kunyapat
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This study appraises the use of in-situ diffraction and spectroscopy techniques, complemented with ex-situ electron microscopy analyses, to investigate the geometry and phase change behaviour of bundled ultrathin W18O49 nanowires and WO3 nanoparticles. Our in-situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) results have shown that the phase transition of WO3 nanoparticles occurs in sequence as the temperature increases, from monoclinic (room temperature) → orthorhombic (350 ºC) → tetragonal (800 °C), akin to bulk WO3; however, W18O49 nanowires remain stable as the monoclinic phase up to 500 °C, after which complete oxidation to WO3 and transformation to the orthorhombic β-phase at 550 °C is observed. The in-situ Raman spectroscopy investigations have shown that as the temperature increases, the Raman peaks downshift toward lower wavenumbers in both structures, which can be attributed to the increased bond lengths in the lattice. We have also demonstrated that the Raman shift at 187.6 cm-1 can be used as a fingerprint band for the phase transition from the γ- to the β-phase of the WO3 nanoparticle. Furthermore, WO3 nanoparticles exhibit the γ- to β-phase conversion at 275 °C, which is about 75 °C lower than the relaxation temperature of 350 °C for the monoclinic γ-W18O49 nanowires. We propose that this fundamental phase transition understanding can offer important guidance for the design and development of WOx-based nanodevices by defining their allowed operating conditions.
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spelling nottingham-527322020-05-04T19:33:52Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52732/ In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures Thummavichai, Kunyapat Wang, Nannan Xu, Fang Rance, Graham Xia, Yongde Zhu, Yanqiu This study appraises the use of in-situ diffraction and spectroscopy techniques, complemented with ex-situ electron microscopy analyses, to investigate the geometry and phase change behaviour of bundled ultrathin W18O49 nanowires and WO3 nanoparticles. Our in-situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) results have shown that the phase transition of WO3 nanoparticles occurs in sequence as the temperature increases, from monoclinic (room temperature) → orthorhombic (350 ºC) → tetragonal (800 °C), akin to bulk WO3; however, W18O49 nanowires remain stable as the monoclinic phase up to 500 °C, after which complete oxidation to WO3 and transformation to the orthorhombic β-phase at 550 °C is observed. The in-situ Raman spectroscopy investigations have shown that as the temperature increases, the Raman peaks downshift toward lower wavenumbers in both structures, which can be attributed to the increased bond lengths in the lattice. We have also demonstrated that the Raman shift at 187.6 cm-1 can be used as a fingerprint band for the phase transition from the γ- to the β-phase of the WO3 nanoparticle. Furthermore, WO3 nanoparticles exhibit the γ- to β-phase conversion at 275 °C, which is about 75 °C lower than the relaxation temperature of 350 °C for the monoclinic γ-W18O49 nanowires. We propose that this fundamental phase transition understanding can offer important guidance for the design and development of WOx-based nanodevices by defining their allowed operating conditions. Royal Society 2018-04-25 Article PeerReviewed Thummavichai, Kunyapat, Wang, Nannan, Xu, Fang, Rance, Graham, Xia, Yongde and Zhu, Yanqiu (2018) In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures. Royal Society Open Science, 5 . p. 171932. ISSN 2054-5703 phase transition tungsten oxide nanowires http://rsos.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/5/4/171932 doi:10.1098/rsos.171932 doi:10.1098/rsos.171932
spellingShingle phase transition
tungsten oxide
nanowires
Thummavichai, Kunyapat
Wang, Nannan
Xu, Fang
Rance, Graham
Xia, Yongde
Zhu, Yanqiu
In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures
title In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures
title_full In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures
title_fullStr In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures
title_full_unstemmed In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures
title_short In situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures
title_sort in situ investigations of the phase change behaviour of tungsten oxide nanostructures
topic phase transition
tungsten oxide
nanowires
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52732/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52732/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52732/