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A Dopant Replacement‐Driven Molten Salt Method toward the Synthesis of Sub‐5‐nm‐Sized Ultrathin Nanowires

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18

References

2020

Year

Abstract

The high-temperature molten-salt method is an important inorganic synthetic route to a wide variety of morphological phenotypes. However, its utility is limited by the fact that it is typically incapable of producing ultrathin (<5 nm diameter) nanowires, which have a crucial role in novel nanotechnology applications. Herein, a rapid molten salt-based synthesis of sub-5-nm-sized nanowires of hexagonal tungsten oxide (h-WO<sub>3</sub> ) that is critically dependent on a substantial proportion of molybdenum (Mo) dopant is described. This dopant-driven morphological transition in tungsten oxide (WO<sub>3</sub> ) may be attributable to the collapse of layered structure, followed by nanocluster aggregation, coalescence, and recrystallization to form ultrathin nanowires. Interestingly, due to the structural properties of h-WO<sub>3</sub> , the thus-formed ultrathin nanowires are demonstrated to be excellent photocatalysts for the production of ammonia (NH<sub>3</sub> ) from nitrogen (N<sub>2</sub> ) and water. The ultrathin nanowires exhibit a high photocatalytic NH<sub>3</sub> -production activity with a rate of 370 µmol g<sup>-1</sup> h<sup>-1</sup> and an apparent quantum efficiency of 0.84% at 420 nm, which is more than twice that obtained from the best-performing Mo-doped W<sub>18</sub> O<sub>49</sub> nanowire catalysts. It is envisaged that the dopant replacement-driven synthetic protocol will allow for rapid access to a series of ultrathin nanostructures with intriguing properties and increase potential applications.

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