Atomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic properties

When supported, thin films demonstrate remarkable structural transformations, with important implications for catalysis, sensors, electrochemistry, semiconductors or superconductors. At present, the tools available to characterize solid-solid systems cannot provide atomic level resolution of, for ex...

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Main Author: Măicăneanu, A
Other Authors: Sayle, D C
Language:en
Published: Department of Environmental and Ordnance Systems 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1826/3249
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spelling ndltd-CRANFIELD1-oai-dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk-1826-32492017-09-06T03:23:08ZAtomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic propertiesMăicăneanu, AWhen supported, thin films demonstrate remarkable structural transformations, with important implications for catalysis, sensors, electrochemistry, semiconductors or superconductors. At present, the tools available to characterize solid-solid systems cannot provide atomic level resolution of, for example mixed screw-edge dislocations. Therefore atomistic simulation can provide an invaluable complement to experiment. In this work atomistic simulation was employed to generate models of oxide thin films. First an atom deposition methodology was used to create an SrO thin film on a BaO(001) support. The evolution of the thin film from small clusters (submonolayer coverage), to five atomic layers, which includes cracks in its structure, was studied. Specifically, information related to growth and nucleation processes can be explored using this methodology. Secondly an amorphisation and recrystallisation methodology was developed to explore the more complex system, that of ceria deposited on zirconia and yttrium stabilized zirconia. Simulated amorphisation and recrystallisation involves forcing the thin film to undergo a transformation into an amorphous state prior to recrystallising and therefore the recrystallisation process rather than the (perhaps artificial) initial structure will dictate the final structure. The recrystallisation process enables the evolution of all the important structural modifications as the thin film evolves structurally in response to the support. These include dislocations (pure edge and mixed screw-edge), dislocation networks, grain-boundaries and defects (interstitials, vacancies and substitutionals, including complex defect association) all within a single simulation cell.Department of Environmental and Ordnance SystemsSayle, D C2009-03-11T11:38:26Z2009-03-11T11:38:26Z2009-03-11T11:38:26ZThesis or dissertationDoctoralPhDhttp://hdl.handle.net/1826/3249en© Cranfield University 2001. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright owner.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description When supported, thin films demonstrate remarkable structural transformations, with important implications for catalysis, sensors, electrochemistry, semiconductors or superconductors. At present, the tools available to characterize solid-solid systems cannot provide atomic level resolution of, for example mixed screw-edge dislocations. Therefore atomistic simulation can provide an invaluable complement to experiment. In this work atomistic simulation was employed to generate models of oxide thin films. First an atom deposition methodology was used to create an SrO thin film on a BaO(001) support. The evolution of the thin film from small clusters (submonolayer coverage), to five atomic layers, which includes cracks in its structure, was studied. Specifically, information related to growth and nucleation processes can be explored using this methodology. Secondly an amorphisation and recrystallisation methodology was developed to explore the more complex system, that of ceria deposited on zirconia and yttrium stabilized zirconia. Simulated amorphisation and recrystallisation involves forcing the thin film to undergo a transformation into an amorphous state prior to recrystallising and therefore the recrystallisation process rather than the (perhaps artificial) initial structure will dictate the final structure. The recrystallisation process enables the evolution of all the important structural modifications as the thin film evolves structurally in response to the support. These include dislocations (pure edge and mixed screw-edge), dislocation networks, grain-boundaries and defects (interstitials, vacancies and substitutionals, including complex defect association) all within a single simulation cell.
author2 Sayle, D C
author_facet Sayle, D C
Măicăneanu, A
author Măicăneanu, A
spellingShingle Măicăneanu, A
Atomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic properties
author_sort Măicăneanu, A
title Atomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic properties
title_short Atomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic properties
title_full Atomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic properties
title_fullStr Atomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic properties
title_full_unstemmed Atomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic properties
title_sort atomistic simulation of oxide materials with catalytic properties
publisher Department of Environmental and Ordnance Systems
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1826/3249
work_keys_str_mv AT maicaneanua atomisticsimulationofoxidematerialswithcatalyticproperties
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