Co-reporter:Takayuki Yamamoto, Hirokazu Kobayashi, Loku Singgappulige Rosantha Kumara, Osami Sakata, Kiyofumi Nitta, Tomoya Uruga, and Hiroshi Kitagawa
Nano Letters September 13, 2017 Volume 17(Issue 9) pp:5273-5273
Publication Date(Web):August 14, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b01535
Bulk silver iodide (AgI) is known to show a phase transition from the poorly conducting β/γ-phases into the superionic conducting α-phase at 147 °C. Its transition temperature decreases with decreasing the size of AgI, and the α-phase exists stably at 37 °C in AgI nanoparticles with a diameter of 6.3 nm. In this Letter, we investigated the atomic configuration, the phase transition behavior, and the ionic conductivity of AgI nanoparticles with a diameter of 3.0 nm. The combination of pair distribution function (PDF) analysis and reverse Monte Carlo (RMC) modeling based on high-energy X-ray diffraction (XRD) revealed for the first time that they formed the β/γ-phases with atomic disorder. The results of extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) analysis, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and AC impedance spectroscopy demonstrated that they did not exhibit the superionic phase transition and their ionic conductivity was lower than that of crystalline AgI. The disappearance of the superionic phase transition and low ionic conductivity in the very small AgI nanoparticles originates from their small size and disordered structure.Keywords: EXAFS analysis; pair distribution function analysis; phase transition; reverse Monte Carlo modeling; Silver iodide;
Co-reporter:Mio Kondo ; Shuhei Furukawa ; Kenji Hirai ; Takaaki Tsuruoka ; Julien Reboul ; Hiromitsu Uehara ; Stéphane Diring ; Yoko Sakata ; Osami Sakata ;Susumu Kitagawa
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2014 Volume 136(Issue 13) pp:4938-4944
Publication Date(Web):March 10, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ja409965g
Structural transformability accompanied by molecular accommodation is a distinguished feature of porous coordination polymers (PCPs) among porous materials. Conventional X-ray crystallography allows for the determination of each structural phase emerged during transformation. However, the propagation mechanism of transformation through an entire crystal still remains in question. Here we elucidate the structural nature of the spatial transient state, in which two different but correlated framework structures, an original phase and a deformed phase, simultaneously exist in one crystal. The deformed phase is distinctively generated only at the crystal surface region by introducing large guest molecules, while the remaining part of crystal containing small molecules maintains the original phase. By means of grazing incidence diffraction techniques we determine that the framework is sheared with sharing one edge of the original primitive cubic structure, leading to the formation of crystal domains with four mirror image relationships.