| Literature DB >> 28120829 |
Oliver S Hammond1, Karen J Edler1, Daniel T Bowron2, Laura Torrente-Murciano3.
Abstract
Ceria is a technologically important material with applications in catalysis, emissions control and solid-oxide fuel cells. Nanostructured ceria becomes profoundly more active due to its enhanced surface area to volume ratio, reactive surface oxygen vacancy concentration and superior oxygen storage capacity. Here we report the synthesis of nanostructured ceria using the green Deep Eutectic Solvent reline, which allows morphology and porosity control in one of the less energy-intensive routes reported to date. Using wide Q-range liquid-phase neutron diffraction, we elucidate the mechanism of reaction at a molecular scale at considerably milder conditions than the conventional hydrothermal synthetic routes. The reline solvent plays the role of a latent supramolecular catalyst where the increase in reaction rate from solvent-driven pre-organization of the reactants is most significant. This fundamental understanding of deep eutectic-solvothermal methodology will enable future developments in low-temperature synthesis of nanostructured ceria, facilitating its large-scale manufacturing using green, economic, non-toxic solvents.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28120829 PMCID: PMC5288492 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms14150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Characterization of deep eutectic-solvothermally synthesized ceria nanostructures.
(a) Representative TEM images of ceria materials after calcination (scale bars depict 100 nm), showing the effect of synthesis temperature and DES hydration ratio (w) on the morphology of the materials; (b) XRD patterns of representative ceria materials before and after calcination. (c) Mean crystallite size of calcined materials as determined by Scherrer analysis of XRD data. (d–f) N2 adsorption isotherms at 77 K of the Ce-x-10 materials, demonstrating the effect of synthetic temperature on the porosity of the materials. Ceria structures are labelled as Ce-x-y, where x is synthesis temperature and y the DES molar hydration ratio (w).
Intermolecular coordination numbers determined by EPSR.
| Choline | Choline | 8.1 | 6.33±1.89 |
| Choline | Chloride | 7.0 | 4.15±1.33 |
| Choline | Urea | 6.9 | 6.69±2.46 |
| Urea | Choline | 5.0 | 0.78±0.85 |
| Urea | Chloride | 5.5 | 2.14±1.02 |
| Urea | Urea | 6.2 | 6.11±2.53 |
| Cerium | Choline | 5.5 | 1.09±0.74 |
| Cerium | Chloride | 3.5 | 3.90±0.99 |
| Cerium | Urea | 4.3 | 1.67±1.11 |
| Cerium | Nitrate | 4.2 | 0.48±0.50 |
| Water | Choline | 4.0 | 0.37±0.54 |
| Water | Chloride | 4.4 | 0.85±0.57 |
| Water | Urea | 4.5 | 2.55±1.55 |
| Nitrate | Choline | 4.6 | 1.50±0.95 |
| Nitrate | Chloride | 5.5 | 1.60±1.04 |
| Nitrate | Urea | 5.5 | 3.50±1.56 |
EPSR, empirical potential structure refinement; RDF, radial distribution function.
The molecular centres for polyatomic species are taken to be the choline C2N atom, the urea CU atom, the O1 atom of water and the NN atom of nitrate. Intermolecular coordination numbers are determined using the first minima in RDFs (±0.05 Å) between molecules as the maximum radius of integration (rmax) and the fluctuation in this value is calculated by EPSR over 6,000 iterations of the model.
Figure 2Results from neutron diffraction and EPSR analysis.
(a) Experimental data (dotted lines) and EPSR fits (solid lines) for the four different reline isotopic contrasts. (b) Radial distribution functions (RDFs) of Ce(NO3)3.6H2O components around choline ions. (c) RDFs of Ce(NO3)3.6H2O components around urea molecules. (d) Snapshot demonstrating the variety in bonding interactions around the cerium ion taken from an iteration of the EPSR simulation. Bound chloride anions are stabilized by hydrogen bonding with choline and urea molecules, DES components ligate cerium via oxygen lone pair donation, and water and nitrate also contribute to the hydrogen bonding network. (e) Spatial density function (SDF) plot showing the 7.5% most probable 3D configurations of nitrate (blue) and cerium (orange) around choline ions. (f) SDF plot showing the 7.5% most probable 3D configurations of nitrate (blue) and cerium (orange) ions around urea molecules.
Figure 3Structure–property relationships for the Ce-x-10 materials.
(a) Catalytic CO oxidation conversion as a function of temperature (error bars represent the experimental error associated to the gas analyses used for the calculation of conversion values). (b) TPR (data normalized to mass of material). (c) Pore size distributions.