nanocrystallization
Nanocrystallization is the formation of crystalline particles on the nanometer scale, producing nanocrystals with dimensions typically from 1 to 100 nanometers. It can occur from melts, solutions, or vapors and is governed by nucleation and growth. The kinetics and thermodynamics depend on supersaturation, temperature, and the environment at interfaces, with high surface area and possible size-dependent properties distinguishing nanocrystals from bulk crystals.
Mechanisms include homogeneous and heterogeneous nucleation, followed by growth on existing nuclei. Common bottom-up routes are
Characterization focuses on size, phase, and crystallinity. Techniques include X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and SAED
Applications span catalysis, electronics, photovoltaics, sensing, and biomedicine. Quantum dots are used in displays and imaging;