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Solution/Ammonolysis Syntheses of Unsupported and Silica-Supported Copper(I) Nitride Nanostructures from Oxidic Precursors

Herein we describe an alternative strategy to achieve the preparation of nanoscale Cu(3)N. Copper(II) oxide/hydroxide nanopowder precursors were successfully fabricated by solution methods. Ammonolysis of the oxidic precursors can be achieved essentially pseudomorphically to produce either unsupport...

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Autores principales: Szczęsny, Robert, Hoang, Tuan K. A., Dobrzańska, Liliana, Gregory, Duncan H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8402165/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34443514
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26164926
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author Szczęsny, Robert
Hoang, Tuan K. A.
Dobrzańska, Liliana
Gregory, Duncan H.
author_facet Szczęsny, Robert
Hoang, Tuan K. A.
Dobrzańska, Liliana
Gregory, Duncan H.
author_sort Szczęsny, Robert
collection PubMed
description Herein we describe an alternative strategy to achieve the preparation of nanoscale Cu(3)N. Copper(II) oxide/hydroxide nanopowder precursors were successfully fabricated by solution methods. Ammonolysis of the oxidic precursors can be achieved essentially pseudomorphically to produce either unsupported or supported nanoparticles of the nitride. Hence, Cu(3)N particles with diverse morphologies were synthesized from oxygen-containing precursors in two-step processes combining solvothermal and solid−gas ammonolysis stages. The single-phase hydroxochloride precursor, Cu(2)(OH)(3)Cl was prepared by solution-state synthesis from CuCl(2)·2H(2)O and urea, crystallising with the atacamite structure. Alternative precursors, CuO and Cu(OH)(2), were obtained after subsequent treatment of Cu(2)(OH)(3)Cl with NaOH solution. Cu(3)N, in the form of micro- and nanorods, was the sole product formed from ammonolysis using either CuO or Cu(OH)(2). Conversely, the ammonolysis of dicopper trihydroxide chloride resulted in two-phase mixtures of Cu(3)N and the monoamine, Cu(NH(3))Cl under similar experimental conditions. Importantly, this pathway is applicable to afford composite materials by incorporating substrates or matrices that are resistant to ammoniation at relatively low temperatures (ca. 300 °C). We present preliminary evidence that Cu(3)N/SiO(2) nanocomposites (up to ca. 5 wt.% Cu(3)N supported on SiO(2)) could be prepared from CuCl(2)·2H(2)O and urea starting materials following similar reaction steps. Evidence suggests that in this case Cu(3)N nanoparticles are confined within the porous SiO(2) matrix.
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spelling pubmed-84021652021-08-29 Solution/Ammonolysis Syntheses of Unsupported and Silica-Supported Copper(I) Nitride Nanostructures from Oxidic Precursors Szczęsny, Robert Hoang, Tuan K. A. Dobrzańska, Liliana Gregory, Duncan H. Molecules Article Herein we describe an alternative strategy to achieve the preparation of nanoscale Cu(3)N. Copper(II) oxide/hydroxide nanopowder precursors were successfully fabricated by solution methods. Ammonolysis of the oxidic precursors can be achieved essentially pseudomorphically to produce either unsupported or supported nanoparticles of the nitride. Hence, Cu(3)N particles with diverse morphologies were synthesized from oxygen-containing precursors in two-step processes combining solvothermal and solid−gas ammonolysis stages. The single-phase hydroxochloride precursor, Cu(2)(OH)(3)Cl was prepared by solution-state synthesis from CuCl(2)·2H(2)O and urea, crystallising with the atacamite structure. Alternative precursors, CuO and Cu(OH)(2), were obtained after subsequent treatment of Cu(2)(OH)(3)Cl with NaOH solution. Cu(3)N, in the form of micro- and nanorods, was the sole product formed from ammonolysis using either CuO or Cu(OH)(2). Conversely, the ammonolysis of dicopper trihydroxide chloride resulted in two-phase mixtures of Cu(3)N and the monoamine, Cu(NH(3))Cl under similar experimental conditions. Importantly, this pathway is applicable to afford composite materials by incorporating substrates or matrices that are resistant to ammoniation at relatively low temperatures (ca. 300 °C). We present preliminary evidence that Cu(3)N/SiO(2) nanocomposites (up to ca. 5 wt.% Cu(3)N supported on SiO(2)) could be prepared from CuCl(2)·2H(2)O and urea starting materials following similar reaction steps. Evidence suggests that in this case Cu(3)N nanoparticles are confined within the porous SiO(2) matrix. MDPI 2021-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8402165/ /pubmed/34443514 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26164926 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Szczęsny, Robert
Hoang, Tuan K. A.
Dobrzańska, Liliana
Gregory, Duncan H.
Solution/Ammonolysis Syntheses of Unsupported and Silica-Supported Copper(I) Nitride Nanostructures from Oxidic Precursors
title Solution/Ammonolysis Syntheses of Unsupported and Silica-Supported Copper(I) Nitride Nanostructures from Oxidic Precursors
title_full Solution/Ammonolysis Syntheses of Unsupported and Silica-Supported Copper(I) Nitride Nanostructures from Oxidic Precursors
title_fullStr Solution/Ammonolysis Syntheses of Unsupported and Silica-Supported Copper(I) Nitride Nanostructures from Oxidic Precursors
title_full_unstemmed Solution/Ammonolysis Syntheses of Unsupported and Silica-Supported Copper(I) Nitride Nanostructures from Oxidic Precursors
title_short Solution/Ammonolysis Syntheses of Unsupported and Silica-Supported Copper(I) Nitride Nanostructures from Oxidic Precursors
title_sort solution/ammonolysis syntheses of unsupported and silica-supported copper(i) nitride nanostructures from oxidic precursors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8402165/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34443514
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26164926
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