| Literature DB >> 32344810 |
Łukasz Laskowski1, Anna Majtyka-Piłat2, Krzysztof Cpałka3, Maciej Zubko2,4, Magdalena Laskowska1.
Abstract
The synthesis routes are presented for the preparation of nanocomposites composed of nanocrystals placed inside SBA-15 silica pores. The procedures assume treating the silica channels as nanoreactors, where nanocrystals are created as a result of thermal decomposition of internal functional units. Its sizes and chemical composition can be modified by the change of functional group types and density inside silica channels. The procedure is demonstrated by the example of copper pyrophosphate quantum dots and silver oxide nanoparticles inside silica mezochannels. The method can be easily adopted to other types of nanocrystals that can be synthesized inside silica nanoreactors.Entities:
Keywords: confinements; functional materials; mesoporous silica; nanocrystals; nanoreactors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32344810 PMCID: PMC7254358 DOI: 10.3390/ma13092009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Visualization of the procedure of nanocrystals fabrication in silica nanoreactor.
Figure 2Schematic presentation of the synthesis route of the initial materials: SBA-15 silica containing propyl copper phosphonate units (a) and SBA-15 silica containing propyl silver carbonate units (b). The number of N defines the doping rates by setting proportions between precursors of silica and functional units.
Figure 3TEM images of the investigated materials (upper rows) along with the electronograms (bottom rows): copper-containing material (a) and silver-containing ones (b). At the left side we can see the initial material (silica containing anchored metal ions—after stage 1 of the synthesis), while at the right side target material is presented (silica containing nanocrystals inside pores—after stage 2 of the synthesis: calcination at the high temperature). Both target materials were captured at light (left side) and dark field (right side) to make crystals well-visible. The bottom rows show electron diffraction patterns for the samples; the target samples show visible crystalline pattern, thus we present electronograms both native and with fitted theoretical diffraction rings for the copper pyrophosphate structure (a) and Ag2O crystal (b).
Figure 4High magnification TEM images of the investigated materials with the markers allowing for estimation of the nanocrystals size. Additional magnified figures with increased contrast and more markers can be seen at the bottom row. The green circles in the TEM image of silver-containing material pointing out the crystal agglomerations, probably on the surface of the silica carrier.
Figure 5Spin resolved density of states (DOS) with partial atomic contributions in copper pyrophosphate material calculated with the PBE functional. The vertical dashed line shows the position of the Fermi level.