Monocrystalline spinel nanotube fabrication based on the Kirkendall effect

Nat Mater. 2006 Aug;5(8):627-31. doi: 10.1038/nmat1673. Epub 2006 Jul 2.

Abstract

There is a deep interest in methods to fabricate hollow nanocrystals for potential application as high-efficiency catalysts or drug-delivery agents. Tubular one-dimensional nanocrystals have been prepared for a wide variety of materials, including semiconductors, metals, ferroelectrics and magnetite. They can be produced by rolling up layered materials or via an axial growth in a rolled-up form, coating pores in templates or by eliminating the core of a core-shell nanowire. The Kirkendall effect, a classical phenomenon in metallurgy, was recently applied to explain the formation of hollow spherical nanocrystals. Although the experimental demonstration and theoretical treatment mainly concern binary compounds and planar interfaces or nanoscale spherical interfaces, the fabrication route provided by the Kirkendall effect should be generic, and should also work for high-aspect-ratio hollow cylinders (that is, nanotubes) or even more complex superstructures. In this letter, we report, for the first time, on ultra-long single-crystal ZnAl(2)O(4) spinel nanotubes (total diameter: approximately 40 nm, wall thickness: approximately 10 nm) fabricated through a spinel-forming interfacial solid-state reaction of core-shell ZnO-Al(2)O(3) nanowires involving the Kirkendall effect. Our results simultaneously represent an extension of applying the Kirkendall effect in fabricating hollow nano-objects from zero-dimensional to multidimensional, and from binary to ternary systems.