BCC-Cu nanoparticles: from a transient to a stable allotrope by tuning size and reaction conditions.
Jan L AlfkeAndreas MüllerAdam H ClarkAntonio CervellinoMilivoj PlodinecAleix Comas-VivesChristophe CopéretOlga V SafonovaPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2022)
Metallic copper generally adopts an FCC structure. In this work, we detect highly unusual BCC-structured Cu nanoparticles as a transient intermediate during the H 2 reduction of a Cu I precursor, [Cu 4 O t Bu 4 ], grafted onto the surface of partially dehydroxylated silica. The Cu BCC structure, assigned by in situ Cu K-edge XANES and EXAFS, as well as in situ synchrotron PXRD, converts upon heating into the most commonly found FCC allotrope. DFT calculations show that the BCC-Cu phase is in fact predicted to be more stable for small particles, and that their stability increases at lower H 2 concentrations. Using this knowledge, we show that it is possible to synthesize BCC-structured Cu nanoparticles as a stable allotrope by reduction of the same grafted precursor either in 10% H 2 diluted in Ar or 100% H 2 at low temperature.