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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Synergy of Miniemulsion and Solvothermal Conditions for the Low-Temperature Crystallization of Magnetic Nanostructured Transition-Metal Ferrites
Silvia GrossRafael Muñoz-espíMaria KokkinopoulouAlice AntonelloPaolo DolcetRebecca MomperKatharina LandfesterGerhard Jakobsubject
Materials Chemistry2506 Metals and AlloysIRON-OXIDEMaterials scienceAbsorption spectroscopyGeneral Chemical EngineeringChemistry (all); Chemical Engineering (all); Materials Chemistry2506 Metals and Alloys02 engineering and technologyThermal treatment010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesHYDROTHERMAL SYNTHESISlaw.inventionINORGANIC NANOPARTICLESTransition metallawMaterials ChemistryOrganic chemistryChemical Engineering (all)CrystallizationX-ray absorption spectroscopyAqueous solutionWET-CHEMISTRYChemistry (all)General ChemistrySELECTIVE OXIDATION021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesMiniemulsionChemical engineering0210 nano-technologyAmbient pressuredescription
Crystalline first-row transition-metal (Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, and Zn) ferrites were prepared by an unprecedented synergetic combination of miniemulsion synthesis and solvothermal route, pursuing unconventional conditions in terms of space confinement, temperature, and pressure. This synergy allowed for obtaining six different crystalline ferrites at much lower temperature (i.e., 80 °C) than usually required and without any postsynthesis thermal treatment. X-ray diffraction (XRD) revealed that analogous ferrites synthesized by miniemulsion at ambient pressure or in bulk (i.e., from an aqueous bulk solution and not in the confined space of the miniemulsion droplets) either at ambient pressure or under solvothermal conditions did not result in comparatively highly crystalline products. To follow the structural evolution at local level as a function of reaction time and depending on the synthesis conditions, X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) was used to determine the cation distribution in these structures. Well-defined nanostructures were observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Concerning their functional behavior, the synthesized ferrites presented superparamagnetism and were found to be active oxidation catalysts, as demonstrated for the oxidation of styrene, taken as a model reaction. Because of the magnetic properties, the ferrites can be easily recovered from the reaction medium, after the catalysis, by magnetic separation and reused for several cycles without losing activity.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-01-17 | Chemistry of Materials |