Atomistic simulations of the crystalline-to-amorphous transformation of gamma-Al2O3 nanoparticles: delicate interplay between lattice distortions, stresses, and space charges
Simon Gramatte, Lars P.H. Jeurgens, Olivier Politano, Jose Antonio, Simon Greminger, Florence Baras, Angelos Xomalis, Vladyslav Turlo

TL;DR
This study uses large-scale molecular dynamics simulations to explore how gamma-Al2O3 nanoparticles undergo a crystalline-to-amorphous transformation at high temperatures, revealing the complex interplay of lattice distortions, stresses, and space charges.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the size-dependent phase stability and transformation mechanisms of gamma-Al2O3 nanoparticles at elevated temperatures.
Findings
Nanoparticles transform to amorphous at 900 K starting from the surface.
Charge imbalance induces tensile stress in the nanoparticle core.
Surface reconstruction and compositional heterogeneity are key to transformation.
Abstract
The size-dependent phase stability of gamma-Al2O3 was studied by large-scale molecular dynamics simulations over a wide temperature range from 300 to 900 K. For the gamma-Al2O3 crystal, a bulk transformation to alpha-Al2O3 by an FCC-to-HCP transition of the O sublattice is still kinetically hindered at 900 K. However, local distortions of the FCC O-sublattice by the formation of quasi-octahedral Al local coordination spheres become thermally activated, as driven by the partial covalency of the Al-O bond. On the contrary, spherical gamma-Al2O3 NPs (with sizes of 6 and 10 nm) undergo a crystalline-to-amorphous transformation at 900 K, which starts at the reconstructed surface and propagates into the core through collective displacements of anions and cations, resulting in the formation of 7- and 8-fold local coordination spheres of Al. In parallel, the reconstructed Al-enriched surface is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced ceramic materials synthesis · Aluminum Alloys Composites Properties · Boron and Carbon Nanomaterials Research
