| Literature DB >> 30978917 |
Abstract
With the continuous development and progress of materials science, increasingly more attention has been paid to the new technology of powder synthesis and material preparation. The hydrothermal method is a promising liquid phase preparation technology that has developed rapidly during recent years. It is widely used in many fields, such as the piezoelectric, ferroelectric, ceramic powder, and oxide film fields. The hydrothermal method has resulted in many new methods during the long-term research process, such as adding other force fields to the hydrothermal condition reaction system. These force fields mainly include direct current, electric, magnetic (autoclaves composed of non-ferroelectric materials), and microwave fields. Among them, the microwave hydrothermal method, as an extension of the hydrothermal reaction, cleverly uses the microwave temperature to compensate for the lack of temperature in the hydrothermal method, allowing better practical application. This paper reviews the development of the hydrothermal and microwave hydrothermal methods, introduces their reaction mechanisms, and focuses on the practical application of the two methods.Entities:
Keywords: application; functional materials; hydrothermal method; microwave hydrothermal method
Year: 2019 PMID: 30978917 PMCID: PMC6479615 DOI: 10.3390/ma12071177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Application field of hydrothermal methods.
Figure 2Schematic of typical hydrothermal method equipment.
Figure 3General steps for hydrothermal preparation.
Effect of mineralizers on ZrO2 crystallization using the hydrothermal method.
| Mineralizer | ZrO2 (300 °C, 24 h, 100 Mpa) | |
|---|---|---|
| Tetragonal | Monoclinic | |
| KF (8 wt.%) | No data | 16 nm |
| NaOH (30 wt.%) | No data | 40 nm |
| H2O | 15 nm | 17 nm |
| LiCl (15 wt.%) | 15 nm | 19 nm |
| KBr (15 wt.%) | 13 nm | 15 nm |
Figure 4Spectral wavelength-frequency diagram.
Figure 5Schematic diagram of water molecular motion in a microwave field.
Comparison of the morphology, particle size, and reaction conditions using the hydrothermal and microwave hydrothermal methods.
| Hydrothermal Method | Microwave Hydrothermal Method | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morphology | Raw Materials | Conditions | Size | Ref. | Morphology | Raw Materials | Conditions | Size | Ref. | |
| ZrO2 | Spherical | ZrOCl2·8H2O, NH4OH, NaOH | 150 °C, 24 h | 20–30 nm | [ | Monoclinic | ZrOCl2·8H2O, NaOH | 200 °C, 2 h, 2.45 GHz | 10–20 nm | [ |
| Rod | ZrOCl2·8H2O, NH4OH, NaOH | 200 °C, 24 h 250 °C, 24 h | 50 nm × (200–400) nm | [ | Tetragonal-monoclinic | ZrOCl4, NaOH | 150–220 °C, | ~20 nm | [ | |
| Al2O3 | Hollow | Al(NO3)3·9H2O, glucose | 160 °C, 3–8 h | 5.4–6.9 μm | [ | Hollow | KAl(SO4)2·12H2O, CO(NH2)2 | 180 °C, 40 min, 300 W | 0.8–1.2 μm | [ |
| Rod | Al(NO3)3·9H2O, N2H4⋅H2O | 200 °C, 12 h | 8 nm × (220–532) nm | [ | Fiber | Surfactant Brij 56, H2SO4, Aluminum sec-butoxide | 80 °C, 30 min, 500 W | ~50 nm | [ | |
| MnO2 | Belt | Mn2O3, NaOH | 170 °C, 12 h | 5–15 nm | [ | Flower | KMnO4, HCl | 100 °C, 25 min | 200–400 nm | [ |
| Urchin | MnSO4, (NH4)2S2O8 | 80 °C, 4 h | 2–3 μm | [ | Nanosphere | KMnO4, MnSO4·H2O | 75 °C, 30 min | 70–90 nm | [ | |
| TiO2 | Nanotube | TiO2, NaOH | 150 °C, 48 h | 8.1–27.3 nm | [ | Nanowire | TiO2, NaOH | 210 °C, 2 h, 350 W | 80–150 nm | [ |
| Acicular | TiOCl2 | 195 °C, >8 h | 100 nm × 50 nm | [ | Spherical | TiOCl2 | 195 °C, >30 min, 2.45 GHz | 10 nm | [ | |