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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Role of Covalent Functionalization in the Thermal Stability and Decomposition of Hybrid Layered Hydroxides
Eugenio CoronadoVíctor OestreicherGonzalo Abellánsubject
Cromatografia de gasosThermogravimetric analysisMaterials scienceMaterials compostos02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter PhysicsMass spectrometry01 natural sciencesDecomposition0104 chemical sciencesCovalent functionalizationChemical engineeringGeneral Materials ScienceThermal stabilityGas chromatography0210 nano-technologyHybrid materialMaterialsdescription
The room temperature synthesis of two Co-based hybrid layered hydroxides containing the same organic ligand (suberate [Sub]), one connected through purely electrostatic interactions (CoAl layered double hydroxide [LDH]), and the other covalently functionalized (α-CoII simonkolleite phase) has been carried out. The magnetic properties exhibit an acute difference in the magnetization temperatures (from ≈10 K for the CoAl-LDH to ≈55 K for the α-CoII). Moreover, the role of the covalent functionalization in the thermal stability and the decomposition has been investigated by a forefront characterization tool consisting of thermogravimetric analysis coupled with gas chromatography and mass spectrometry (TG-GC-MS). The LDH exhibits a higher thermal stability of ≈50 ºC with broad mass loss steps, whereas the water molecules interact stronger with the α-CoII(Sub) hybrid, suggesting a higher confinement in the interlayer space. Interestingly, at higher temperatures (>400 ºC), the α-CoII(Sub) gives rise to the selective formation of cycloheptanone, in contrast to the LDH phase leading to different carbonyl containing compounds. These findings offer new fundamental insights into the thermal behavior of hybrid materials based on layered hydroxides, highlighting the important role of covalent functionalization in its properties.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-09-25 | physica status solidi (RRL) – Rapid Research Letters |