Literature DB >> 18507466

Pyrolysis, crystallization, and sintering of mesostructured titania thin films assessed by in situ thermal ellipsometry.

John D Bass1, David Grosso, Cédric Boissiere, Clément Sanchez.   

Abstract

In-situ thermal ellipsometric analysis is used to elucidate new and fine-scale details on the thermally driven densification, pyrolysis, crystallization, and sintering of dense and ordered mesoporous titania thin films prepared by evaporation-induced self-assembly. The role of the heating schedule, initial film thickness, nature of the substrate and templating agent, solution aging, and presence of water and other additives in the calcination environment is examined. Each of these parameters is shown to have unique and often substantial effects on the final film structure, while the technique itself provides detailed insight into the chemical origin and evolution of these effects. In-situ monitoring and control over the governing chemical processes, such as high-temperature adsorption phenomena that impact nanocrystal growth, is also demonstrated. The evolution of both the porosity and chemical processes occurring inside these materials are evaluated, including extraction of kinetic parameters for the pyrolysis of the template and crystallization of the matrix walls. The latter is shown to be strongly dependent on the presence of mesoscale ordering with ordered cubic films indicating a 1D diffusion-limited crystallization process and dense films following a 3D diffusion-limited process. Less well-ordered mesoporous films, despite similarities in pore volume and pore size distributions, are kinetically more reminiscent of dense films in terms of crystallization. In-situ thermal ellipsometry, by detailing the evolution of the thermally driven chemistry and ceramization that dictate the final film properties, provides immensely important insight into the synthesis and optimization of advanced functional materials based on titania and other metal oxide thin films.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18507466     DOI: 10.1021/ja078140x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  1 in total

Review 1.  Versatility of Evaporation-Induced Self-Assembly (EISA) Method for Preparation of Mesoporous TiO₂ for Energy and Environmental Applications.

Authors:  Luther Mahoney; Ranjit T Koodali
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2014-03-31       Impact factor: 3.623

  1 in total

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