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Photochemical versus Thermal Synthesis of Cobalt Oxyhydroxide Nanocrystals
30
Citations
51
References
2012
Year
Materials ScienceEngineeringPhotochemistryNanomaterialsPhotochemical MethodsInorganic PhotochemistryCobalt Oxyhydroxide NanocrystalsSynthetic PhotochemistryCatalysisChemistryUnusual SizeMetastable Nanomaterials
Photochemical methods facilitate the generation, isolation, and study of metastable nanomaterials having unusual size, composition, and morphology. These harder-to-isolate and highly reactive phases, inaccessible using conventional high-temperature pyrolysis, are likely to possess enhanced and unprecedented chemical, electromagnetic, and catalytic properties. We report a fast, low-temperature and scalable photochemical route to synthesize very small (∼3 nm) monodisperse cobalt oxyhydroxide (Co(O)OH) nanocrystals. This method uses readily and commercially available pentaamminechlorocobalt(III) chloride, [Co(NH3)5Cl]Cl2, under acidic or neutral pH and proceeds under either near-UV (350 nm) or Vis (575 nm) illumination. Control experiments showed that the reaction proceeds at competent rates only in the presence of light, does not involve a free radical mechanism, is insensitive to O2, and proceeds in two steps: (1) Aquation of [Co(NH3)5Cl]2+ to yield [Co(NH3)5(H2O)]3+, followed by (2) slow photoinduced release of NH3 from the aqua complex. This reaction is slow enough for Co(O)OH to form but fast enough so that nanocrystals are small (ca. 3 nm). The alternative dark thermal reaction proceeds much more slowly and produces much larger (∼250 nm) polydisperse Co(O)OH aggregates. UV–Vis absorption measurements and ab initio calculations yield a Co(O)OH band gap of 1.7 eV. Fast thermal annealing of Co(O)OH nanocrystals leads to Co3O4 nanocrystals with overall retention of nanoparticle size and morphology. Thermogravimetric analysis shows that oxyhydroxide to mixed-oxide phase transition occurs at significantly lower temperatures (up to ΔT = 64 °C) for small nanocrystals compared with the bulk.
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