Synthesis of nanocrystals by discharges in liquid nitrogen from Si-Sn sintered electrode

H. Kabbara, C. Noël, J. Ghanbaja, K. Hussein, D. Mariotti, V. Švrcek, T. Belmonte*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The synthesis feasibility of silicon-tin nanocrystals by discharges in liquid nitrogen is studied using a Si-10 at % Sn sintered electrode. Time-resolved optical emission spectroscopy shows that silicon and tin melt almost simultaneously. The presence of both vapours does not lead to the synthesis of alloyed nanocrystals but to the synthesis of separate nanocrystals of silicon and tin with average sizes of 10 nm. These nanocrystals are transformed into amorphous silicon oxide (am-SiO2) and β-SnO2 by air oxidation, after evaporation of the liquid nitrogen. The synthesis of an am-Si 0.95 Sn 0.05 phase around large silicon crystals (∼500 nm) decorated by β-Sn spheroids is achieved if the current flowing through electrodes is high enough. When the sintered electrode is hit by powerful discharges, some grains are heated and tin diffuses in the large silicon crystals. Next, these grains are shelled and fall into the dielectric liquid.

Original languageEnglish
Article number17477
JournalScientific Reports
Volume5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2015

Keywords

  • silicon–tin nanocrystals
  • optical emission spectroscopy

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