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Phase and Facet Control of Molybdenum Carbide Nanosheet Observed by In Situ TEM
Author(s) -
Lin Ziyuan,
Cai Lejuan,
Lu Wei,
Chai Yang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201700051
Subject(s) - molybdenum , materials science , carbide , facet (psychology) , carbon fibers , amorphous carbon , phase (matter) , interstitial defect , reactivity (psychology) , amorphous solid , electrochemistry , chemical engineering , crystallography , composite material , electrode , metallurgy , chemistry , composite number , organic chemistry , alternative medicine , doping , pathology , engineering , psychology , social psychology , big five personality traits , medicine , optoelectronics , personality
Transition metal carbides are of great potential for electrochemical applications. The phase and facet of molybdenum carbides greatly affect the electrochemical performance. Carburization of MoO 3 inside a transmission electron microscope to monitor the growth process of molybdenum carbides is performed. Carbon sources with different activities are used and the controllable growth of molybdenum carbides is investigated. The results show that the relatively inert amorphous carbon film produces Mo 2 C, where the interstitial sites formed by hexagonal closed packing molybdenum atoms are partially occupied by carbon atoms. In contrast, the carbon decomposed from the sucrose has a high portion of sp 3 hybridized and crosslinked carbon atoms with high reactivity, leading to the formation of MoC with full occupation of interstitial sites by carbon atoms. In addition, the MoC growth experiences a (111) to (100) facets change with the increase of temperature. The (111) facet formed at low temperature has Mo‐terminated or C‐terminated surface with higher surface energy and higher reactivity, while the (100) facet with 1:1 C/Mo ratio on the surface exhibits enhanced stability. The phase and facet control by carbon source and temperature allow us to tune the crystal structures and surface atoms as well as their electrochemical properties.