| Literature DB >> 33784465 |
Ryoma Kamei1,2, Takuro Hosomi1,3, Eisuke Kanao4,5, Masaki Kanai1,2, Kazuki Nagashima1,3, Tsunaki Takahashi1,3, Guozhu Zhang1, Takao Yasui3,6, Jun Terao7, Koji Otsuka8, Yoshinobu Baba6, Takuya Kubo8, Takeshi Yanagida1,2.
Abstract
Seeded crystal growths of nanostructures within confined spaces offer an interesting approach to design chemical reaction spaces with tailored inner surface properties. However, such crystal growth within confined spaces tends to be inherently difficult as the length increases as a result of confinement effects. Here, we demonstrate a space-confined seeded growth of ZnO nanowires within meter-long microtubes of 100 μm inner diameter with the aspect ratio of up to 10 000, which had been unattainable to previous methods of seeded crystal growths. ZnO nanowires could be grown via seeded hydrothermal crystal growth for relatively short microtubes below the length of 40 mm, while any ZnO nanostructures were not observable at all for longer microtubes above 60 mm with the aspect ratio of 600. Microstructural and mass spectrometric analysis revealed that a conventional seed layer formation using zinc acetate is unfeasible within the confined space of long microtubes as a result of the formation of detrimental residual Zn complex compounds. To overcome this space-confined issue, a flow-assisted seed layer formation is proposed. This flow-assisted method enables growth of spatially uniform ZnO nanowires via removing residual compounds even for 1 m long microtubes with the aspect ratio of up to 10 000. Finally, the applicably of ZnO-nanowire-decorated long microtubes for liquid-phase separations was demonstrated.Entities:
Keywords: ZnO nanowires; capillary column; confined space; crystal growth; hydrothermal method; liquid-phase separation; microtubes
Year: 2021 PMID: 33784465 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c22709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229