Direct Imaging of Surface Melting on a Single Sn Nanoparticle

Nano Lett. 2023 Jul 26;23(14):6354-6359. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c00943. Epub 2023 Jul 7.

Abstract

Despite previous studies, understanding the fundamental mechanism of melting metal nanoparticles remains one of the major scientific challenges of nanoscience. Herein, the kinetics of melting of a single Sn nanoparticle was investigated using in situ transmission electron microscopy heating techniques with a temperature step of up to 0.5 °C. We revealed the surface premelting effect and assessed the density of the surface overlayer on a tin particle of 47 nm size using a synergetic combination of high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy imaging and low electron energy loss spectral imaging. Few-monolayer-thick disordered phase nucleated at the surface of the Sn particle at a temperature ∼25 °C below the melting point and grew (up to a thickness of ∼4.5 nm) into the solid core with increasing temperature until the whole particle became liquid. We revealed that the disordered overlayer was not liquid but quasi-liquid with a density intermediate between that of solid and liquid Sn.

Keywords: Sn; electron energy loss spectroscopy; in situ transmission electron microscopy; nanoparticles; quasi-liquid; surface melting.