| Literature DB >> 28788596 |
Agnieszka Kołodziejczak-Radzimska1, Teofil Jesionowski2.
Abstract
Zinc oxide can be called a multifunctional material thanks to its unique physical and chemical properties. The first part of this paper presents the most important methods of preparation of ZnO divided into metallurgical and chemical methods. The mechanochemical process, controlled precipitation, sol-gel method, solvothermal and hydrothermal method, method using emulsion and microemulsion enviroment and other methods of obtaining zinc oxide were classified as chemical methods. In the next part of this review, the modification methods of ZnO were characterized. The modification with organic (carboxylic acid, silanes) and inroganic (metal oxides) compounds, and polymer matrices were mainly described. Finally, we present possible applications in various branches of industry: rubber, pharmaceutical, cosmetics, textile, electronic and electrotechnology, photocatalysis were introduced. This review provides useful information for specialist dealings with zinc oxide.Entities:
Keywords: application; modification; synthesis; zinc oxide
Year: 2014 PMID: 28788596 PMCID: PMC5453364 DOI: 10.3390/ma7042833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1.Examples of zinc oxide structure: flower (a); rods (b); wires (c,d) (created based on [17,27,29] with permission from Elsevier Publisher and [11] AIP Publishing LLC).
Summary of methods of obtaining zinc oxide.
| Method | Precursors | Synthesis conditions | Properties and applications | References |
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| Mechanochemical process | ZnCl2, Na2CO3, NaCl | calcination: 2 h, 600 °C | hexagonal structure; particles diameter: 21–25 nm | [ |
| 400–800 °C | hexagonal structure; particles diameter: 18–35 nm | [ | ||
| 400 °C | regular shape of particles; diameter ~27 nm, | [ | ||
| 0.5 h | particles diameter: 27–56 nm | [ | ||
| 300–450 °C | particles diameter: ~51 nm, | [ | ||
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| Precipitation process | Zn(CH3COO)2, and KOH as a water solutions | temperature of process: 20–80 °C; drying: 120 °C | particles diameter: 160–500 nm, | [ |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, (NH4)2CO3, PEG10000 as a water solutions | drying: 12 h, 100 °C; calcination: 3 h, 450 °C | zincite structure; spherical particles ( | [ | |
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| Zn(NO3)2 | calcination: 2 h, 600 °C; aging: 240 h, 320 °C | wurtize structure; particles diameter: 50 nm; application: as a gas sensor | [ | |
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| Zn(NO3)2, NaOH | synthesis: 2 h; drying: 2 h, 100 °C | particles of spherical size of around 40 nm | [ | |
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| ZnSO4, NH4HCO3, ethanol | drying: overnight, 100 °C; calcination: 300–500 °C | wurtize structure; crystallite size 9–20 nm; particle size | [ | |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, NH3 aq. | precipitation temperature: 85 °C; drying: 10 h, 60 °C | hexagonal structure, shape of rods, flower-like particles: | [ | |
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| ZnSO4, NH4OH, NH4HCO3 | reaction: 30 min, 60 °C; drying: 12 h, 100 °C; calcination: 2 h, 400 °C | hexagonal structure, flake-like morphology ( | [ | |
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| microsized ZnO powder, NH4HCO3 | reaction: ~2 h, 25 °C; drying: 80 °C; calcination:1 h, 350 °C | hexagonal wurtize structure; flower-like and rod-like shape ( | [ | |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, NaOH | reaction: 30 min, 75 °C; drying: overnight, room temperature | hexagonal structure; flower shape ( | [ | |
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| Precipitation in the presence of surfactants | ZnCl2, NH4OH, CTAB | aging: 96 h, ambient temperature, calcination: 2 h, 500 °C | zincite structure; particles diameter: 54–60 nm, | [ |
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| Zn(NO3)2, NaOH, SDS, TEA (triethanolamine) | precipitation: 50–55 min, 101 °C | wurtize structure, shape of rod-like ( | [ | |
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| Sol-gel | Zn(CH3COO)2, oxalic acid, ethanol and methanol | reaction temperature: 60 °C; drying: 24 h, 80 °C; calcination: 500 °C | zincite structure; aggregate particles: ~100 nm; shape of rod; particles | [ |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, oxalic acid (C2H2O4), ethanol | reaction: 50 °C, 60 min; dried of gel: 80 °C, 20 h; calcined: under flowing air for 4 h at 650 °C | hexagonal wurtize structure; uniform, spherically shaped of particles | [ | |
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| zinc 2-ethylhexanoate, TMAH ((CH3)4NOH), ethanol and 2-propanol | reaction: room temperature; drying: 60 °C | cylinder-shaped crystallites, | [ | |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, diethanolamine, ethanol | reaction: room temperature; annealed of sol: 2 h, 500 °C | hexagonal wurtize structure; particles: nanotubes of 70 nm | [ | |
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| Solvothermal hydrothermal and microwave techniques | ZnCl2, NaOH | reaction: 5–10 h, 100–220 °C in teflon-lined autoclave | particles morphology: bullet-like (100–200 nm), rod-like (100–200 nm), sheet (50–200 nm), polyhedron (200–400 nm), crushed stone-like (50–200 nm) | [ |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, NaOH, HMTA (hexamethylenetetraamine) | reaction: 5–10 h, 100–200 °C; HMTA concentration: 0–200 ppm | spherical shape; particles diameter: 55–110 nm | [ | |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, Zn(NO3)2, LiOH, KOH, NH4OH | reaction: 10–48 h, 120–250 °C | hexagonal (wurtize) structure, size of microcrystallites: 100 nm–20 μm | [ | |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, NH3, zinc 2-ethylhexanoate, TMAH, ethanol, 2-propanol | time of autoclaving: 15 min, 2–72 h; final pH: 7–10 | particles with irregular ends and holes; aggregates consist particles of 20–60 nm, | [ | |
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| trimethylamine N-oxide, 4-picoline N-oxide, HCl, toluene, ethylenediamine (EDA), N,N,N’,N’-tetramethylethylenediamine (TMEDA) | reaction: 24–100 h, 180 °C | wurtize structure; particles morphology: nanorods (40–185 nm), nanoparticles (24–60 nm) | [ | |
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| Solvothermal hydrothermal and microwave techniques | Zn(CH3COO)2, Zn(NO3)2, ethanol, imidazolium tetrafluoroborate ionic liquid | reaction: 150–180 °C; drying: 80 °C in vacuum oven; calcinations: 500 °C | hexagonal (wurtize) structure, hollow microspheres (2–5 μm) consisted nano-sized particles and contained channels (10 nm); hollow microspheres consisted of nanorods (~20 nm); flower-like microspheres (2.5 μm) | [ |
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| zinc acetylacetonate, methoxy-ethoxy- and n-butoxyethanol, zinc oximate | precursor concentration: 2.5–10 wt%; microwave heating: 800 W, 4 min; drying: 75 °C in air | zincite structure; average crystallite size: 9–31 nm; particles diameter: 40–200 nm; | [ | |
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| Zn(NO3)2, deionized water, HMT (hexamethylenetetramine) | microwave heating: 2 min, 90 °C; drying: 2 h, 60 °C | hexagonal wurtize structure, nanorod and nanowire shape ( | [ | |
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| Emulsion | Zn(NO3)2, surfactant (ABS, Tween-80 and 40, C21H38BrN) | reaction: 25 °C, pH~8; drying: 24 h, 80 °C; calcination: 2 h, 600 °C | grain size: cationic surfactants (40–50 nm), nonionic surfactants (20–50 nm), anonic surfactants (~20 nm) | [ |
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| Zn(C17H33COO)2, NaOH, decane, water, ethanol | reaction: 2 h, room temperature or 90 °C | particles morphology: irregular particles aggregates (2–10 μm); needle-shaped ( | [ | |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, heptanes, Span-80, NH4OH | reaction: 1 h; aging: 2.5 h; drying: in rotary evaporator; calcination: 2 h, 700–1000 °C | hexagonal structure; spherical shape; particles diameter: 0.05–0.15 μm | [ | |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, NaOH and KOH, cyclohexane, non-ionic surfactants | reaction: ambient temperature; drying: 24 h, 120 °C | hexagonal structure; particles morphology: solids (164–955 nm, | [ | |
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| Microemulsion | Zn(NO3)2, NaOH, heptane, hexanol, Triton X-100, PEG400 | reaction: 15 h, 140 °C; drying: 60 °C | hexagonal (wurtize) structure; particles morphology: needle ( | [ |
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| Microemulsion | Zn(NO3)2, oxalic acid, isooctane, benzene, ethanol, diethyl ether, chloroform, acetone, methanol, Aerosol OT | reaction: 1 h; calcination: 3 h, 300 °C | equivalent spherical diameter: 11.7–12.9 nm, | [ |
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| Zn(CH3COO)2, Aerosol OT, glycerol, C20H37NaO7S, n-heptane, NaOH, methanol, chloroform | reaction: 24 h, 60–70 °C; drying: 1 h, 100 °C; calcination: 3 h, 300–500 °C | hexagonal wurtize structure, spherical shape (15–24 nm), rods shape ( | [ | |
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| ZnCl2, Zn(CH3COO)2, heptane, BTME (1,2-trimethoxysilyl)ethane, TMOS (tetramethoxysilane), methanol, Aerosol OT, NaOH | reaction: 2–3 h, room temperature or 40 °C; drying: under vacuum overnight; calcinations: 24 h, 700 °C | hexagonal structure, uniformly dispersed small particles, size of particles ~10 nm | [ | |
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| Other method | Zn(CH3COO)2 | thermal decomposition: 350–800 °C | uniform size of particles 20–30 nm | [ |
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| Zn(NO3)2, deionized water, HMT (hexamethylenetetramine) | ultrasonic irradiation: 30 min, 80 °C; drying: 2 h, 60 °C | hexagonal wurtize structure, nanorod and nanowire shape ( | [ | |
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| micron scale zinc metal powder | feed rate: 1 g/min; plasma power: 1 kW; O2 flow rate: 2.5 lpm; N2 flow rate: 12.5 lpm; reaction: 900 °C | nanowires shape ( | [ | |
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| diethylzinc (DEZ), oxygen | helium as a carrier gas | wurtize structure; average particle size: 9 nm | [ | |
Note: BET—surface area calculated based on BET equation; D—particles diameter; L—particles length.
Figure 2.Effect of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) surfactant on the structure of a ZnO crystal (created based on [45] with permission from Elsevier Publisher).
Figure 3.Overview showing two examples of synthesis by the sol-gel method: (a) films from a colloidal sol; (b) powder from a colloidal sol transformed into a gel (created based on [72] with permission from Elsevier Publisher).
Figure 4.Zinc oxide structures: (a) solids; (b) ellipsoids; (c) rods; and (d) flakes [60].
Figure 5.Synthesis and morphology of crystalline ZnO synthesized in a microemulsion system: (a) without PEG 400; and with the addition of: (b) 12.5%–25% PEG 400; (c) 50% PEG 400 (created based on [61] with permission from Elsevier Publisher).
Figure 6.Schematic diagram of the most popular modifying methods of ZnO.
Figure 7.Schematic representation of the synthesis of surface-modified ZnO ultrafine particles using an in situ modification method (created based on [41] with permission from Elsevier Publisher).
Figure 8.Probable mechanism occurring during modification of ZnO using vinyltrimethoxysilane.
Figure 9.Mechanism of nano-ZnO/PS composite synthesis by in situ emulsion polymerization (created based on [109] with permission from Elsevier Publisher).
Figure 10.(a) Probable mechanism of ZnO surface modification with maleic acid; and (b) exemplary FTIR spectra of obtained products.
Figure 11.Worldwide consumption of zinc oxide.
Figure 12.Schematic representation all the application of ZnO mentioned in the text.