open access publication

Article, 2024

From Gel to Crystal: Mechanism of HfO2 and ZrO2 Nanocrystal Synthesis in Benzyl Alcohol

Journal of the American Chemical Society, ISSN 0002-7863, 1520-5126, Volume 146, 15, Pages 10723-10734, 10.1021/jacs.4c00678

Contributors

Goossens, Eline 0000-0002-4653-7570 [1] [2] Aalling-Frederiksen, Olivia 0000-0003-1462-7173 [3] Tack, Pieter 0000-0001-8437-6678 [1] Van Den Eynden, Dietger 0000-0002-1252-8510 [1] [2] Walsh, Zarah 0000-0001-8570-045X [2] Jensen, Kirsten Marie Ørnsbjerg 0000-0003-0291-217X [3] De Buysser, Klaartje 0000-0001-7462-2484 [1] De Roo, Jonathan 0000-0002-1264-9312 (Corresponding author) [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Ghent University
  2. [NORA names: Belgium; Europe, EU; OECD];
  3. [2] University of Basel
  4. [NORA names: Switzerland; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  5. [3] University of Copenhagen
  6. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Nonaqueous sol-gel syntheses have been used to make many types of metal oxide nanocrystals. According to the current paradigm, nonaqueous syntheses have slow kinetics, thus favoring the thermodynamic (crystalline) product. Here we investigate the synthesis of hafnium (and zirconium) oxide nanocrystals from the metal chloride in benzyl alcohol. We follow the transition from precursor to nanocrystal through a combination of rheology, EXAFS, NMR, TEM, and X-ray total scattering (PDF analysis). Upon dissolving the metal chloride precursor, the exchange of chloride ligands for benzylalkoxide liberates HCl. The latter catalyzes the etherification of benzyl alcohol, eliminating water. During the temperature ramp to the reaction temperature (220 °C), sufficient water is produced to turn the reaction mixture into a macroscopic gel. Rheological analysis shows a network consisting of strong interactions with temperature-dependent restructuring. After a few minutes at the reaction temperature, crystalline particles emerge from the gel, and nucleation and growth are complete after 30 min. In contrast, 4 h are required to obtain the highest isolated yield, which we attribute to the slow in situ formation of water (the extraction solvent). We used our mechanistic insights to optimize the synthesis, achieving high isolated yields with a reduced reaction time. Our results oppose the idea that nonaqueous sol-gel syntheses necessarily form crystalline products in one step, without a transient, amorphous gel state.

Keywords

EXAFS, HCl, HfO2, NMR, PDF, PDF analysis, TEM, X-ray, X-ray total scattering, ZrO2, alcohol, amorphous gel states, analysis, benzyl, benzyl alcohol, chloride, chloride ligands, chloride precursors, combination, combination of rheology, crystal, crystalline particles, crystalline products, crystallinity, current paradigm, etherification, etherification of benzyl alcohol, exchange, exchange of chloride ligands, formation, formation of water, gel, gel state, growth, hafnium, highest isolation yields, interaction, isolated yields, kinetics, liberated HCl, ligand, macroscopic gels, mechanism, metal, metal chloride precursors, metal chlorides, metal oxide nanocrystals, mixtures, nanocrystal synthesis, nanocrystals, network, nonaqueous synthesis, nucleation, oxidation, oxide nanocrystals, paradigm, particles, precursor, production, ramp, reaction, reaction mixture, reaction temperature, reaction time, reduced reaction time, restructuring, results, rheological analysis, rheology, scattering, slow kinetics, sol-gel synthesis, state, sufficient water, synthesis, temperature, temperature ramp, time, total scattering, transition, water, yield, zirconium

Funders

  • Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science
  • Research Foundation - Flanders
  • The Velux Foundations

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