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1.
Inorg Chem ; 60(4): 2406-2413, 2021 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33478208

ABSTRACT

The K3Sb4BO13 (KSBO) material undergoes an uncommon symmetry increase upon cooling, from triclinic symmetry at room temperature to monoclinic symmetry at low temperature. The first-order phase transition is accompanied by shrinkage of the unit cell, resulting in the transformation of every pair of head-to-tail triangular BO3 groups into one B2O6 unit featuring unique edge-sharing BO4 tetrahedra. This is the first material with B2O6 units formed through temperature lowering and exhibiting a B-O anionic framework composed uniquely of isolated edge-sharing BO4 tetrahedra. Several techniques including single-crystal X-ray diffraction experiments, Raman and 11B magic-angle-spinning NMR spectroscopies, and, for the first time, B K-edge electron energy loss spectroscopy were used to evidence the rare and discrete B2O6 units. The complete transformation of BO3 units into B2O6 units makes the KSBO compound the perfect candidate to extract information about B2O6 units whose signal can be unambiguously assigned.

2.
Inorg Chem ; 59(7): 4546-4553, 2020 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32186858

ABSTRACT

Several new materials with four structure-types (e.g., Cu0.32In1.74Ga0.84S4 (CIGS4), Cu0.65In1.75Ga1.4S5 (CIGS5), Cu1.44In2.77Ga0.76S6 (CIGS6), and Cu1.1In2.49Ga1.8S7 (CIGS7)) have been evidenced in the Cu2S-In2S3-Ga2S3 pseudo-ternary system. All of them present a 2D structure built upon infinite 2/∞[InS2] layers ((InS6) octahedra sharing edges) on which condense on both sides mono-, bi-, or tri-2/∞[MS] layers ((MS4) tetrahedra (M = Cu, In, Ga) sharing corners). (M(Td))n-2(In(Oh))Sn slabs are separated from each other by a van der Waals gap, and subscript n refers to the number of sulfur layers within the building block. These compounds have the propensity to display stacking faults but also polymorphic forms. Their optical gap (ca. 1.7 eV) is quite similar to the one of the Cu(In0.7Ga0.3)S2 chalcopyrite absorbers used in tandem solar cells, and the major charge carriers are holes. This suggests that they might be very attractive for photovoltaic applications in thin film devices but also for photocatalysis.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 58(22): 15004-15007, 2019 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31651150

ABSTRACT

Reduction of the size of a particle down to a few tens of nanometers or below may drastically affect its physical properties. That is well-known for quantum dots. Conversely, many works consider the chemical composition of nanoparticles as invariant upon reduction of their dimension. Here we demonstrate that the chemical composition of a transition-metal oxide, namely, nickel oxide, is drastically affected by its nanostructuration.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(41): 26068-26071, 2018 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30307015

ABSTRACT

The cubic phase of pure zirconia (ZrO2) is stabilized in dense thin films through a controlled introduction of oxygen vacancies (O defects) by cold-plasma-based sputtering deposition. Here, we show that the cubic crystals present at the film/substrate interface near-region exhibit fast ionic transport, which is superior to what is obtained with similar yttrium-stabilized cubic zirconia thin films.

6.
Small ; 12(21): 2885-92, 2016 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27061060

ABSTRACT

Controlling the porosity, the shape, and the morphology of Kirkendall hollow nanostructures is the key factor to tune the properties of these tailor-made nanomaterials which allow in turn broadening their applications. It is shown that by applying a continuous oxidation to copper nanowires following a temperature ramp protocol, one can synthesize cuprous oxide nanotubes containing periodic copper nanoparticles. A further oxidation of such nanoobjects allows obtaining cupric oxide nanotubes with a bamboo-like structure. On the other hand, by applying a sequential oxidation and reduction reactions to copper nanowires, one can synthesize hollow nanoobjects with complex shapes and morphologies that cannot be obtained using the Kirkendall effect alone, such as necklace-like cuprous oxide nanotubes, periodic solid copper nanoparticles or hollow cuprous oxide nanospheres interconnected with single crystal cuprous oxide nanorods, and aligned and periodic hollow nanospheres embedded in a cuprous oxide nanotube. The strategy demonstrated in this study opens new avenues for the engineering of hollow nanostructures with potential applications in gas sensing, catalysis, and energy storage.

7.
Inorg Chem ; 55(15): 7729-33, 2016 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27409456

ABSTRACT

Optical and electrical characteristics of solid materials are well-known to be intimately related to the presence of intrinsic or extrinsic defects. Hence, the control of defects in semiconductors is of great importance to achieve specific properties, for example, transparency and conductivity. Herein, a facile and controllable reduction method for modulating the defects is proposed and used for the case of p-type delafossite CuCrO2 nanoparticles. The optical absorption in the infrared region of the CuCrO2 material can then be fine-tuned via the continuous reduction of nonstoichiometric Cu(II), naturally stabilized in small amounts. This reduction modifies the concentration of positive charge carriers in the material, and thus the conductive and reflective properties, as well as the flat band potential. Indeed, this controllable reduction methodology provides a novel strategy to modulate the (opto-) electronic characteristics of semiconductors.

8.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 15(30): 12748-56, 2013 Aug 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23799511

ABSTRACT

Phosphonic and carboxylic fluorescent nanoparticles have been fabricated by direct reprecipitation in water. Their fluorescence properties strongly differ from those of the corresponding esters where strong H-bonding formation is prohibited. Comparative experiments between the two acid derivatives, differing only in their acid functions while keeping the same alkyl chain, have evidenced the peculiar behavior of the phosphonic acid derivative compared to its carboxylic analog. A dramatic emission quenching for the phosphonic acid in aprotic toluene could be observed while a fivefold increase in the fluorescence signal was observed for molecules assembled as nanoparticles. Such properties have been attributed on the theoretical basis to the formation of folded conformers in solution, leading to deactivation of the radiative excited state through intramolecular H-bonding. These studies evidence for the first time through time-resolved fluorescence measurements the stronger H-donating character of phosphonic acids compared to the carboxylic ones, and provide information on the degree of structural heterogeneity within the nanoparticles. They should pave the way for the rational fabrication of chelating acid fluorophores, able to complex metal oxides to yield stiff hybrid magnetofluorescent nanoparticles which are attracting considerable attention in the growing fields of bimodal imaging and vectorization applications.


Subject(s)
Carboxylic Acids/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Phosphorous Acids/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Solutions/chemistry , Water/chemistry
9.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 3605, 2021 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34127660

ABSTRACT

Designing and synthesising new metastable compounds is a major challenge of today's material science. While exploration of metastable oxides has seen decades-long advancement thanks to the topochemical deintercalation of oxygen as recently spotlighted with the discovery of nickelate superconductor, such unique synthetic pathway has not yet been found for chalcogenide compounds. Here we combine an original soft chemistry approach, structure prediction calculations and advanced electron microscopy techniques to demonstrate the topochemical deintercalation/reintercalation of sulfur in a layered oxychalcogenide leading to the design of novel metastable phases. We demonstrate that La2O2S2 may react with monovalent metals to produce sulfur-deintercalated metastable phases La2O2S1.5 and oA-La2O2S whose lamellar structures were predicted thanks to an evolutionary structure-prediction algorithm. This study paves the way to unexplored topochemistry of mobile chalcogen anions.

10.
Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ; 66(Pt 10): 1116-20, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20944244

ABSTRACT

The 2C protein, which is an essential ATPase and one of the most conserved proteins across the Picornaviridae family, is an emerging antiviral target for which structural and functional characterization remain elusive. Based on a distant relationship to helicases of small DNA viruses, piconavirus 2C proteins have been predicted to unwind double-stranded RNAs. Here, a terminally extended variant of the 2C protein from echovirus 30 has been studied by means of enzymatic activity assays, transmission electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy and dynamic light scattering. The transmission electron-microscopy technique showed the existence of ring-shaped particles with ∼12 nm external diameter. Image analysis revealed that these particles were hexameric and resembled those formed by superfamily 3 DNA virus helicases.


Subject(s)
DNA Viruses/physiology , Enterovirus B, Human/physiology , RNA Helicases/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Viral Proteins/chemistry , Virion/chemistry , In Vitro Techniques , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Protein Conformation , Protein Multimerization , RNA Helicases/genetics , RNA Helicases/metabolism , RNA Helicases/ultrastructure , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Recombinant Proteins/ultrastructure , Structural Homology, Protein , Viral Proteins/genetics , Viral Proteins/metabolism , Viral Proteins/ultrastructure , Virion/ultrastructure
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