posted on 2014-02-27, 00:00authored byFilippo Pizzocchero, Marco Vanin, Jens Kling, Thomas
W. Hansen, Karsten W. Jacobsen, Peter Bøggild, Timothy J. Booth
We perform in-situ transmission electron
microscopy (TEM) experiments
of silver nanoparticles channeling on mono-, bi-, and few-layer graphene
and discover that the interactions in the one-dimensional particle–graphene
contact line are sufficiently strong so as to dictate the three-dimensional
shape of the nanoparticles. We find a characteristic faceted shape
in particles channeling along graphene ⟨100⟩ directions
that is lost during turning and thus represents a dynamic equilibrium
state of the graphene–particle system. We propose a model for
the mechanism of zigzag edge formation and an explanation of the rate-limiting
step for this process, supported by density functional theory (DFT)
calculations, and obtain a good agreement between the DFT-predicted
and experimentally obtained activation energies of 0.39 and 0.56 eV,
respectively. Understanding the origin of the channels' orientation
and the strong influence of the graphene lattice on the dynamic behavior
of the particle morphology could be crucial for obtaining deterministic
nanopatterning on the atomic scale.