Tracking the morphology and phase transformations of anodic iron oxide nanotubes using X-ray spectroscopy

2017 ◽  
Vol 220 ◽  
pp. 109-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Li ◽  
A. Balaji ◽  
T.K. Sham
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinshu Yan ◽  
Andrew Frierdich ◽  
Jeff Catalano

Iron oxide minerals are ubiquitous in soils, sediments, and aquatic systems and influence the fate and availability of trace metals. Ferrihydrite is a common iron oxide of nanoparticulate size and poor crystallinity, serving as a thermodynamically unstable precursor to more crystalline phases. While aging induces such phase transformations, these are accelerated by the presence of dissolved Fe(II). However, the impact of trace metals on Fe(II)-catalyzed ferrihydrite phase transformations at ambient temperatures and the associated effects on trace metal speciation has seen limited study. In the present work, phase transformations of ferrihydrite that contains the trace metal zinc in its structure were investigated during aging at ambient temperature in the presence of two different Fe(II) concentrations at pH 7. X-ray diffraction reveals that low Fe(II) concentration (0.2 mM) generates hematite plus minor lepidocrocite, whereas high Fe(II) concentration (1.0 mM) promotes the production of a magnetite-lepidocrocite mixture. In both cases, a substantial fraction of ferrihydrite remains after 12 days. In contrast, Zn-free ferrihydrite forms primarily lepidocrocite and goethite in the presence of 0.2 mM Fe(II), with minor hematite and a trace of ferrihydrite remaining. For 1.0 mM Fe(II), magnetite, goethite, and lepidocrocite form when Zn is absent, leaving no residual ferrihydrite. Transformations of Zn-ferrihydrite produce a transient release of zinc to solution, but this is nearly quantitatively removed into the mineral products after 1 hour. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy suggests that zinc partitions into the newly formed phases, with a shift from tetrahedral to a mixture of tetrahedral and octahedral coordination in the 0.2 mM Fe(II) system and taking on a spinel-like local structure in the 1.0 mM Fe(II) reaction products. This work indicates that substituting elements in ferrihydrite may play a key role in promoting the formation of hematite in low temperature systems, such as soils or sediments. In addition, the retention of zinc in the products of ferrihydrite phase transformation shows that trace metal micronutrients and contaminants may not be mobilized under circumneutral conditions despite the formation of more crystalline iron oxides. Furthermore, mass balance requires that the abundance and isotopic composition of iron oxide-associated zinc, and possibly other trace metals, in the rock record may be retained during diagenetic phase transformations of ferrihydrite if catalyzed by dissolved Fe(II).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephan Müssig ◽  
Björn Kuttich ◽  
Florian Fidler ◽  
Daniel Haddad ◽  
Susanne Wintzheimer ◽  
...  

The controlled agglomeration of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) was used to rapidly switch their magnetic properties. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and dynamic light scattering showed that tailored iron oxide...


2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Alexandrescu ◽  
I. Morjan ◽  
A. Tomescu ◽  
C. E. Simion ◽  
M. Scarisoreanu ◽  
...  

Iron/iron oxide-based nanocomposites were prepared by IR laser sensitized pyrolysis ofFe(CO)5and methyl methacrylate (MMA) mixtures. The morphology of nanopowder analyzed by TEM indicated that mainly core-shell structures were obtained. X-ray diffraction techniques evidence the cores as formed mainly by iron/iron oxide crystalline phases. A partially degraded (carbonized) polymeric matrix is suggested for the coverage of the metallic particles. The nanocomposite structure at the variation of the laser density and of the MMA flow was studied. The new materials prepared as thick films were tested for their potential for acting as gas sensors. The temporal variation of the electrical resistance in presence ofNO2, CO, andCO2, in dry and humid air was recorded. Preliminary results show that the samples obtained at higher laser power density exhibit rather high sensitivity towardsNO2detection andNO2selectivity relatively to CO andCO2. An optimum working temperature of200°Cwas found.


2016 ◽  
Vol 869 ◽  
pp. 58-63
Author(s):  
Luiz Otávio Vicentin Maruya ◽  
Bruna Rage Baldone Lara ◽  
Belmira Benedita de Lima ◽  
Vanessa Motta Chad ◽  
Gilberto Carvalho Coelho ◽  
...  

This study reports on effect of boron and carbon addition on the phase transformations during ball milling and subsequent sintering of Si3N4+B and Si3N4+C powder mixtures. Ball milling at room temperature was conducted using stainless steel vials (225 mL) and balls (19mm diameter), 300 rpm and a bal-to-powder weight ratio of 10:1. The as-milled powders were uniaxially compacted in order to obtain cylinder samples with 10 mm diameter, which were subsequently sintered under nitrogen atmosphere at 1500°C for 1h. Characterization of the as-milled powders and sintered samples was performed by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, and energy dispersive spectrometry. Only peaks of Si3N4 were identified in X-ray diffractograms of as-milled Si3N4+B and Si3N4+C powders, suggesting that metastable structures were found during milling. After sintering at 1500°C for 1h, the Si3N4+BN and Si3N4+SiC ceramic composites were formed from the mechanically alloyed Si3N4+B and Si3N4+C powders.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryosuke Sinmyo ◽  
Elena Bykova ◽  
Sergey V. Ovsyannikov ◽  
Catherine McCammon ◽  
Ilya Kupenko ◽  
...  

Abstract Iron oxides are fundamentally important compounds for basic and applied sciences as well as in numerous industrial applications. In this work we report the synthesis and investigation of a new binary iron oxide with the hitherto unknown stoichiometry of Fe7O9. This new oxide was synthesized at high-pressure high-temperature (HP-HT) conditions, and its black single crystals were successfully recovered at ambient conditions. By means of single crystal X-ray diffraction we determined that Fe7O9 adopts a monoclinic C2/m lattice with the most distorted crystal structure among the binary iron oxides known to date. The synthesis of Fe7O9 opens a new portal to exotic iron-rich (M,Fe)7O9 oxides with unusual stoichiometry and distorted crystal structures. Moreover, the crystal structure and phase relations of such new iron oxide groups may provide new insight into the cycling of volatiles in the Earth’s interior.


Author(s):  
Innokenty Kantor ◽  
Alexander Kurnosov ◽  
Catherine McCammon ◽  
Leonid Dubrovinsky

AbstractA high-pressure quasi-single crystal X-ray diffraction study of a synthetic iron oxide Fe


1993 ◽  
Vol 311 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.T. Weihs ◽  
T.T. Barbee ◽  
M.M. Wall

ABSTRACTA study of phase transformations is reported for Cu-rich, Cu-Zr multilayer foils that were synthesized using magnetron sputter deposition and annealed using a differential scanning calorimeter. The foils range in composition from 1.6 at% to 9.0 at% Zr and consist of alternate layers of polycrystalline Cu and Zr. Differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray analysis and electron microscopy were used to examine three distinct reactions in the foils: a mixing and an amorphization of the Cu and the Zr, a crystallization to the metastable intermetallic, Cu51Zr14, and a transformation of the Cu51Zr14 phase into the equilibrium phase, Cu9Zr2. The asdeposited layering remained stable during the first two reactions and then broke down in the third reaction as large grains of Cu9Zr2 encompassed the smaller Cu grains. The heats of the reactions and the activation energies of these reactions are measured and are compared to values reported for bulk samples. The measured heats support the observation that amorphous Cu-Zr alloys phase separate and provide evidence that mixing and short range ordering produce 3.5 times more heat than long range ordering when Cu and Zr react and form Cu51Zr14.


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