Solvothermal Synthesis
of Ultrasmall Tungsten Oxide
Nanoparticles
Posted on 2012-12-21 - 00:00
The synthesis of catalytically useful, ultrasmall oxide
nanoparticles
(NPs) of group 5 and 6 metals is not readily achievable through reported
methods. In this work, we introduce a one-pot, two-precursor synthesis
route to <2 nm MOx NPs in which a polyoxometalate
salt is decomposed thermally in a high-boiling organic solvent oleylamine.
The use of ammonium metatungstate resulted in oleylamine-coated, crystalline
WOx NPs at consistently high yields of
92 ± 5%. The semicrystalline NPs contained 20–36 WOx structural units per particle, as determined
from aberration-corrected high-resolution scanning transmission electron
microscopy, and an organic coating of 16–20 oleylamine molecules,
as determined by thermogravimetric analysis. The NPs had a mean size
of 1.6 ± 0.3 nm, as estimated from atomic force microscopy and
small-angle X-ray scattering measurements. Carrying out the synthesis
in the presence of organic oxidant trimethylamine N-oxide led to smaller WOx NPs (1.0 ±
0.4 nm), whereas the reductant 1,12-dodecanediol led to WOx nanorods (4 ± 1 nm × 20 ± 5 nm).
These findings provide a new method to control the size and shape
of transition metal oxide NPs, which will be especially useful in
catalysis.
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Soultanidis, Nikolaos; Zhou, Wu; Kiely, Christopher J.; Wong, Michael S. (2016). Solvothermal Synthesis
of Ultrasmall Tungsten Oxide
Nanoparticles. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/la3029462