Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
190817 | Electrochimica Acta | 2011 | 6 Pages |
Anatase nanotube arrays were grown by anodization with high crystallinity and a well ordered nanotubular structure. Nanotubes were stable to 800 °C, and this enhanced thermal stability of anatase nanotube arrays (without Ti support) was related to the induced tensile strain/stress inside the nanotube wall. The anatase-to-rutile phase transformation of titania nanotube arrays induces a tensile stress inside the nanotube wall that increases the critical nucleation size of rutile phase, as opposed to a compressive stress usually occurred on the surface of titania thin films or nanoparticles.
► A simple and efficient method to obtain well organized anatase nanotube arrays is reported. ► The anatase-to-rutile phase transformation of titania nanotube arrays without Ti support induces a tensile stress inside the nanotube wall, increasing the critical nucleation size of rutile phase. ► A model is proposed to explain the stress-induced anatase–rutile phase transformation inside nanostructured titania materials.