JOURNAL ARTICLE

Implications of Precursor Chemistry on the Alkaline Hydrothermal Synthesis of Titania/Titanate Nanostructures

Dana L. MorganHongwei LiuRay L. FrostEric R. Waclawik

Year: 2009 Journal:   The Journal of Physical Chemistry C Vol: 114 (1)Pages: 101-110   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

A systematic study of four parameters within the alkaline hydrothermal treatment of three commercial titania powders—anatase, rutile, and Degussa P25—was made. These powders were treated with 5, 7.5, 9, and 10 M NaOH between 100 and 220 °C for 20 h. The effects of alkaline concentration, hydrothermal temperature, and precursor phase and crystallite size on the resultant nanostructure formation have been studied through X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and nitrogen adsorption. Through the correlation of these data, morphological phase diagrams were constructed for each commercial powder. Interpretation of the resultant morphological phase diagrams indicates that alkaline concentration and hydrothermal temperature affect nanostructure formation independently, where nanoribbon formation is significantly influenced by temperature for initial formation. The phase and crystallite size of the precursor also significantly influenced nanostructure formation, with rutile displaying a slower rate of precursor consumption compared with anatase. Small crystallite titania precursors formed nanostructures at reduced hydrothermal temperatures.

Keywords:
Crystallite Anatase Hydrothermal circulation Nanostructure Rutile Chemical engineering Hydrothermal synthesis Materials science Raman spectroscopy Transmission electron microscopy Phase (matter) Mineralogy Inorganic chemistry Chemistry Nanotechnology Metallurgy Photocatalysis Organic chemistry

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60
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2.23
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
48
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0.88
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