Nature Materials Archives - Nanoarchitectonics Lab https://alpananayak.org/category/nature-materials/ Apply Now for Summer Project. JRF (PhD scholar), Institute fellow, externally funded, project category. Sun, 28 Dec 2025 22:21:50 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Atomically controlled electrochemical nucleation at superionic solid electrolyte surfaces https://alpananayak.org/atomically-controlled-electrochemical-nucleation-at-superionic-solid-electrolyte-surfaces/ https://alpananayak.org/atomically-controlled-electrochemical-nucleation-at-superionic-solid-electrolyte-surfaces/#respond Fri, 20 May 2022 12:58:41 +0000 https://alpananayak.org/?p=949 Atomically controlled electrochemical nucleation at superionic solid electrolyte surfaces Ilia Valov 1, Ina Sapezanskaia, Alpana Nayak, Tohru Tsuruoka, Thomas Bredow, Tsuyoshi […]

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Atomically controlled electrochemical nucleation at superionic solid electrolyte surfaces

Ilia Valov 1, Ina Sapezanskaia, Alpana Nayak, Tohru Tsuruoka, Thomas Bredow, Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, Georgi Staikov, Masakazu Aono, Rainer Waser

Affiliation

  • 1Research Centre Juelich, Peter Gruenberg Institute, Electronic Materials, 52425 Juelich, Germany. i.valov@fz-juelich.de

  • PMID: 22543299
  • DOI: 10.1038/nmat3307

Abstract

Electrochemical equilibrium and the transfer of mass and charge through interfaces at the atomic scale are of fundamental importance for the microscopic understanding of elementary physicochemical processes. Approaching atomic dimensions, phase instabilities and instrumentation limits restrict the resolution. Here we show an ultimate lateral, mass and charge resolution during electrochemical Ag phase formation at the surface of RbAg(4)I(5) superionic conductor thin films. We found that a small amount of electron donors in the solid electrolyte enables scanning tunnelling microscope measurements and atomically resolved imaging. We demonstrate that Ag critical nucleus formation is rate limiting. The Gibbs energy of this process takes discrete values and the number of atoms of the critical nucleus remains constant over a large range of applied potentials. Our approach is crucial to elucidate the mechanism of atomic switches and highlights the possibility of extending this method to a variety of other electrochemical systems.

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