Developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopy

In the last two decades, the synthesis of inorganic nanostructures was boosted due to the impressive development of colloidal chemistry, which allowed obtaining a multiplicity of objects with finely regulated and uniform morphology, crystal structure and chemical composition. Moreover, different pos...

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Main Authors: Alberto Casu, Andrea Falqui
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Advances in Physics: X
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23746149.2019.1633957
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spelling doaj-bf71e9d267a34a798ca95e4bbf6a92d12020-11-25T01:27:43ZengTaylor & Francis GroupAdvances in Physics: X2374-61492019-01-014110.1080/23746149.2019.16339571633957Developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopyAlberto Casu0Andrea Falqui1King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)In the last two decades, the synthesis of inorganic nanostructures was boosted due to the impressive development of colloidal chemistry, which allowed obtaining a multiplicity of objects with finely regulated and uniform morphology, crystal structure and chemical composition. Moreover, different post-synthetic approaches further contributed to this development, one of the most used being cation-exchange, i.e . a method to partially or totally replace the cations of the starting ionic nanostructure. Meanwhile, transmission electron microscopy knew a new flourishing mainly due to the commercial availability of ultra-bright electron sources and spherical aberration correctors, whose combination permitted using very intense beams with concomitant point resolution better than 0.1 nm, and of ultrasensitive/ultrafast new electron cameras. In turn, these terrific improvements gave rise to an unprecedented progress of in situ electron microscopy, which consists of the live, direct observation over time of sample changes caused by external stimuli. Here we review how the in situ electron microscopy has been capable of promoting and imaging cation-exchange reactions at the solid state involving colloidal nanostructures, whose fast evolution during reactions in liquid would have made them otherwise not investigable.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23746149.2019.1633957in situ electron microscopynanostructurescolloidal chemistrycation-exchangesolid-state chemical reactions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alberto Casu
Andrea Falqui
spellingShingle Alberto Casu
Andrea Falqui
Developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopy
Advances in Physics: X
in situ electron microscopy
nanostructures
colloidal chemistry
cation-exchange
solid-state chemical reactions
author_facet Alberto Casu
Andrea Falqui
author_sort Alberto Casu
title Developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopy
title_short Developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopy
title_full Developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopy
title_fullStr Developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopy
title_full_unstemmed Developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopy
title_sort developments of cation-exchange by in situ electron microscopy
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Advances in Physics: X
issn 2374-6149
publishDate 2019-01-01
description In the last two decades, the synthesis of inorganic nanostructures was boosted due to the impressive development of colloidal chemistry, which allowed obtaining a multiplicity of objects with finely regulated and uniform morphology, crystal structure and chemical composition. Moreover, different post-synthetic approaches further contributed to this development, one of the most used being cation-exchange, i.e . a method to partially or totally replace the cations of the starting ionic nanostructure. Meanwhile, transmission electron microscopy knew a new flourishing mainly due to the commercial availability of ultra-bright electron sources and spherical aberration correctors, whose combination permitted using very intense beams with concomitant point resolution better than 0.1 nm, and of ultrasensitive/ultrafast new electron cameras. In turn, these terrific improvements gave rise to an unprecedented progress of in situ electron microscopy, which consists of the live, direct observation over time of sample changes caused by external stimuli. Here we review how the in situ electron microscopy has been capable of promoting and imaging cation-exchange reactions at the solid state involving colloidal nanostructures, whose fast evolution during reactions in liquid would have made them otherwise not investigable.
topic in situ electron microscopy
nanostructures
colloidal chemistry
cation-exchange
solid-state chemical reactions
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23746149.2019.1633957
work_keys_str_mv AT albertocasu developmentsofcationexchangebyinsituelectronmicroscopy
AT andreafalqui developmentsofcationexchangebyinsituelectronmicroscopy
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