Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Adsorption and Catalysis (LADCA) Department of Chemistry University of Antwerp Universiteitsplein 1 2610 Wilrijk Belgium
2. Analytical and Circular Chemistry (ACC) Institute for Materials Research (IMO-IMOMEC) University of Hasselt Agoralaan 1 3590 Diepenbeek Belgium
3. Electron Microscopy for Materials Research (EMAT) NANOlab Centre of Excellence University of Antwerp Groenenborgerlaan 171 2020 Antwerp Belgium
4. Sustainable Materials Management Flemish Institute for Technological Research (VITO NV) Boeretang 200 2400 Mol Belgium
Abstract
AbstractThe hydrolysis of the phosphonate ester linker during the synthesis of hybrid (organic‐inorganic) TiO2 nanoparticles is important when forming porous hybrid organic‐inorganic metal phosphonates. In the present work, a method was utilized to control the in‐situ partial hydrolysis of diphosphonate ester in the presence of a titania precursor as a function of acid content, and its impact on the hybrid nanoparticles was assessed. Organodiphosphonate esters, and more specific, their hydrolysis degree during the formation of hybrid organic‐inorganic metal oxide nanoparticles, are relatively under explored as linkers. Here, a detailed analysis on the hydrolysis of tetraethyl propylene diphosphonate ester (TEPD) as diphosphonate linker to produce hybrid TiO2 nanoparticles is discussed as a function of acid content. Quantitative solution NMR spectroscopy revealed that during the synthesis of TiO2 nanoparticles, an increase in acid concentration introduces a higher degree of partial hydrolysis of the TEPD linker into diverse acid/ester derivatives of TEPD. Increasing the HCl/Ti ratio from 1 to 3, resulted in an increase in degree of partial hydrolysis of the TEPD linker in solution from 4 % to 18.8 % under the applied conditions. As a result of the difference in partial hydrolysis, the linker‐TiO2 bonding was altered. Upon subsequent drying of the colloidal TiO2 solution, different textures, at nanoscale and macroscopic scale, were obtained dependent on the HCl/Ti ratio and thus the degree of hydrolysis of TEPD. Understanding such linker‐TiO2 nanoparticle surface dynamics is crucial for making hybrid organic‐inorganic materials (i. e. (porous) metal phosphonates) employed in applications such as electronic/photonic devices, separation technology and heterogeneous catalysis.
Subject
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics