posted on 2015-04-22, 00:00authored byEmily Asenath-Smith, Robert Hovden, Lena F. Kourkoutis, Lara A. Estroff
Biomineralization
strategies include the use of hydrogels to direct
the formation of composite, single-crystal-like structures with unique
structure–property profiles. Application of similar synthetic
approaches to transition-metal oxides has the promise to yield low-temperature
routes to hierarchically structured crystals that are optimized for
a range of applications. Here, growth of hematite (α-Fe2O3) within a silica hydrogel resulted in hierarchical,
mosaic crystals preferentially expressing catalytically active {110}
facets, which are absent in solution-grown controls. Quantitative
structural and compositional analysis reveals architectural changes
that begin with the incorporation of silicon into the hematite lattice
and propagate through to the nanoscale domain structure and assembly,
leading to microscale morphologies that show improved photocatalytic
performance. This work demonstrates the potential of applying bioinspired
crystallization techniques to design functional oxides with multiscale
architectural features.