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Oriented attachment growth of hundred-nanometer-size LaTaON2 single crystals in molten salts for enhanced photoelectrochemical water splitting.

Authors :
Zhou, Junkang
Zhou, Chenguang
Shi, Zhan
Xu, Zhe
Yan, Shicheng
Zou, Zhigang
Source :
Journal of Materials Chemistry A; 5/7/2018, Vol. 6 Issue 17, p7706-7713, 8p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Oriented attachment (OA) has been widely used as a term to describe solution-based particle (generally, <10 nm in size) growth proceeding by crystallographic alignment. A big challenge in large-sized crystal growth by the OA crystallization process is the removal of the additives that cause the OA assembling process to occur. Here, we find that the molten salt environment is an ideal medium for OA growth of large-sized inorganic particles without the requirement of any additives. As an example, in Li ion-based molten salts, hundred-nanometer-size LaTaON<subscript>2</subscript> single crystals with no specific morphology can spontaneously assemble into micrometer-size regular crystals. Theoretical and experimental evidence indicated that this OA growth process among the large-sized crystals is governed by a trade-off between electrostatic repulsion and van der Waals attraction, which can be adjusted by the adsorption difference of positive and negative ions on the crystal surface. Finally, due to the significant decrease in charge recombination at grain boundaries, the large single crystal electrode exhibited an enhanced photoelectrochemical performance of 5.1 mA cm<superscript>−2</superscript> at 1.23V<subscript>RHE</subscript>, the highest performance among the previously reported LaTaON<subscript>2</subscript> photoanodes. Our findings offer a new approach to assemble large-size single crystals for advanced nanodevices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20507488
Volume :
6
Issue :
17
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
129389509
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c8ta02233j