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(1) The pioneer groups in mesoporous materials have a scientific background related to zeolites; therefore, they are mainly familiar with silicon and aluminum chemistry.
(2) The high reactivity toward hydrolysis and condensation of transition metal oxide precursors increases the extent of uncontrolled phase separation between organic and inorganic components, yielding non-mesostructured materials, but porous gels.
(3) The redox reactions, the possible phase transitions, and the crystallization processes are often accompanied by the collapse of the structural integrity.
(4) Synthesis procedures are extremely sensitive to many external parameters, leading in some cases to irreproducible results.
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(1) Metallic (TM, Al, Sn) alkoxide precursors are more reactive toward hydrolysis and condensation than Si alkoxides.
(2) Because of this high reactivity, inorganic polymerization has to be partially blocked. In some cases, clusters or nanoparticles may result, which aggregate upon drying. Thermal treatment of these randomly ordered aggregates can lead to textural mesoporosity, even if the overall solid presents little or no order at the mesoscopic scale.
(3) The mesostructure quality and the extension of the organized domains are often lower for TM than for silica-based systems.
(4) The obtained structures are often unstable toward template removal. This is particularly marked for metals capable of presenting various oxidation states (V, W).
(5) After hydrolysis and condensation, metal centers mostly present a higher coordination than tetrahedral silicon.
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Control of the Precursor Reactivity
Inorganic hydrolysis and condensation have to be mastered, to avoid the instantaneous formation of an inorganic network, which would irreversibly ¡°freeze¡± an ill-organized structure.
The reactivity of the precursors can be efficiently controlled by different means:
(1) by carefully adjusting the pH and dilution of metal salt solutions,
(2) by using alkoxides or other salts in the presence of condensation inhibitors (acids, complexing agents),
(3) by working in nonaqueous solvents and limited quantities of water,
(4) by resorting to evaporation-induced self-assembly,
(5) by modifying the redox state, or
(6) by using preformed nanoobjects.Some of the reported synthesis methods use a combination of two or more of these concepts;
Coordination Polyhedra, Flexibility, and Curvature.
¥ Limit the size of the first oligomers obtained after hydrolysis, rendering them less compact and more linear, by means of inhibitors or mono bridging anions.
¥ Resort to nonhydrolytic condensation processes in the first stages of texturing; typically, these processes favor lower coordination polyhedra.
¥ Perform synthesis in extreme pH conditions, in which the connectivity between coordination polyhedra may be more versatile.
¥ Combine metal cations with metal centers that accept tetrahedral coordination [Si, Al, V(IV), Ga], which can give rise to more flexible species.
¥ Insert other type of anions in the inorganic network, these anions being polyatomic (phosphate, carboxylate, ...) or being forced to bridge a limited number of cations.
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Anion binding in self-assembled monolayers in mesoporous
http://sciencenet.cn/blog/admin/images/upfiles/200710318201946999.pdf
Chemical Strategies To Design Textured Materials
http://sciencenet.cn/blog/admin/images/upfiles/200710318520578546.pdf
Facile Synthesis and Characterization of Novel Mesoporous
http://sciencenet.cn/blog/admin/images/upfiles/2007103185020875845.pdf
Harnessing the Sol¨CGel Process
http://sciencenet.cn/blog/admin/images/upfiles/20071031852246175.pdf
Manganese Oxide Mesoporous Structures Mixed-Valent Semiconducting Catalysts
http://sciencenet.cn/blog/admin/images/upfiles/2007103185723953128.pdf
Ordered Meso- and Macroporous Binary and Mixed Metal Oxides
http://sciencenet.cn/blog/admin/images/upfiles/2007103184525281992.pdf
Organization of Organic Molecules with Inorganic Molecular Species into Nanocomposite Biphase Arrays
http://sciencenet.cn/blog/admin/images/upfiles/200710318202857876.pdf
¹ý¶É½ðÊôÌåϵÓÐÐò½é¿×²ÄÁÏÑо¿½øÕ¹
http://sciencenet.cn/blog/admin/images/upfiles/2007103181329609813.pdf
±¾ÎÄÒýÓõØÖ·£ºhttp://sciencenet.cn/blog/user_content.aspx?id=9989
[ Last edited by daiqiguang on 2007-10-31 at 11:34 ] |