View : 563 Download: 0

Formation efficiency of one-dimensional nanostructured titanium oxide affected by the structure and composition of titanate precursor: A mechanism study

Title
Formation efficiency of one-dimensional nanostructured titanium oxide affected by the structure and composition of titanate precursor: A mechanism study
Authors
Paek M.-J.Ha H.-W.Kim T.W.Moon S.-J.Baeg J.-O.Choy J.-H.Hwang S.-J.
Ewha Authors
최진호황성주
SCOPUS Author ID
최진호scopus; 황성주scopus
Issue Date
2008
Journal Title
Journal of Physical Chemistry C
ISSN
1932-7447JCR Link
Citation
Journal of Physical Chemistry C vol. 112, no. 41, pp. 15966 - 15972
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The formation mechanism and atomic arrangement of one-dimensional (ID) nanostructured titanates have been systematically investigated with combinative spectroscopic and microscopic analyses. First of all, the influence of the interlayer distances of the lepidocrocite-type titanate precursor on the formation efficiency of ID nanobelts has been studied, clearly demonstrating that the increase of basal spacing upon the protonation does not promote the formation of ID nanostructures. This finding did not support the previously proposed exfoliation mechanism of the layered titanate precursor. Of special interest is that the poor efficiency of the protonated titanate as a precursor could be enhanced by Fe substitution, underscoring the importance of precursor dissolution. According to time-dependent electron microscopic analyses, the hydrothermal alkali treatment initially gave rise not only to a decrease in the particle size of the precursor but also to the formation of ID titanate nanobelts with lepidocrocite structure, which was followed by the dissolution of the initially formed nanobelts, the appearance of bigger layer-shape crystallites, and their splitting into ID nanobelts with trititanate structure. This finding provided strong support for the dissolution/recrystallization model, in which the dissolution of the precursor plays a crucial role in the formation of ID nanostructured titanate. Electron diffraction, Ti K-edge X-ray absorption near-edge structure, and micro-Raman spectroscopy clearly demonstrated that the ID nanobelts prepared by the extended hydrothermal treatment (i.e., 48 h) and layer-shaped intermediate commonly crystallize with trititanate-type structure, which is clearly distinguishable from the lepidocrocite structure of the precursor. On the basis of all the present experimental findings, we are able to conclude that the ID titanate nanobelts with trititanate structure were produced via a splitting of intermediate layered crystallites formed from the dissolved species. © 2008 American Chemical Society.
DOI
10.1021/jp804436q
Appears in Collections:
자연과학대학 > 화학·나노과학전공 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE