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JOURNALS // Nanosystems: Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics // Archive

Nanosystems: Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics, 2017 Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 816–822 (Mi nano108)

This article is cited in 4 papers

CHEMISTRY AND MATERIAL SCIENCE

Stable Ti$_9$O$_{10}$ nanophase grown from nonstoichiometric titanium monoxide TiO$_y$ nanopowder

A. A. Valeevaa, M. G. Kostenkob

a Institute of Solid State Chemistry, Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 620990 Pervomayskaya 91, Ekaterinburg, Russia
b Ural Federal University named after the first President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin, 620002 Mira 19, Ekaterinburg, Russia

Abstract: A new stable Ti$_9$O$_{10}$ nanophase (sp. gr. Immm) has been detected by X-ray diffraction (XRD) after high energy ball milling and long-term vacuum annealing of nanocrystalline powder of nonstoichiometric disordered and ordered titanium monoxide TiO$_y$ with B1 structure (sp. gr. Fm$\bar3$m). With the help of XRD data, the unit cell of the Ti$_9$O$_{10}$ nanophase as well as the distribution of atoms and structural vacancies in the titanium and oxygen sublattices of this phase have been established. The crystal structure of Ti$_9$O$_{10}$ is derived from that of TiO$_y$ by (a) a migration of the vacancies to the specific crystallographic planes of B1 structure and (b) by orthorhombic distortions. The DFT calculations of the full energy of the coarsecrystalline phases TiO$_y$ and Ti$_9$O$_{10}$ revealed that the bulk ordered phase Ti$_9$O$_{10}$ is not preferable in comparison with the bulk disordered cubic phase TiO$_y$ with the same content of vacancies in the sublattices, so, it is the nanostate that causes the formation of Ti$_9$O$_{10}$.

Keywords: Titanium monoxide, ball milling, nanophase Ti$_9$O$_{10}$, phase transition, electronic structure.

PACS: 61.72.Dd, 61.72.Bb, 64.70.Nd, 71.20.Ps

Received: 22.10.2017
Revised: 27.10.2017

Language: English

DOI: 10.17586/2220-8054-2017-8-6-816-822



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