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A novel and facile approach to obtain NiO nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers with enhanced photocatalysis

NiO nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers were easily and directly fabricated via one-pot uniaxial electrospinning followed by calcination process for the first time. Firstly, Ni(CH(3)COO)(2)/PVP composite nanofibers were prepared by a conventional electrospinning method, and then NiO nanowire-...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wang, Yue, Li, Dan, Ma, Qianli, Tian, Jiao, Song, Yan, Xi, Xue, Dong, Xiangting, Yu, Wensheng, Wang, Jinxian, Liu, Guixia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9078954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35541553
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra01211c
Descripción
Sumario:NiO nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers were easily and directly fabricated via one-pot uniaxial electrospinning followed by calcination process for the first time. Firstly, Ni(CH(3)COO)(2)/PVP composite nanofibers were prepared by a conventional electrospinning method, and then NiO nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers were successfully synthesized by two-stage calcination procedure of Ni(CH(3)COO)(2)/PVP composite nanofibers which was determined to be the key process for preparing NiO nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers. The NiO nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers have pure cubic phase structure with space group of Fm3̄m, and the outer diameter and wall thickness of nanotubes and nanowire diameter are 130 ± 0.99 nm, 30 nm and 40 nm, respectively. Preliminarily, it is satisfactorily found that NiO nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers used as photocatalyst for water splitting exhibit higher H(2) evolution rate of 622 μmol h(−1) than counterpart NiO hollow nanofibers of 472 μmol h(−1) owing to its novel nanostructure. The possible formation mechanism of NiO nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers is proposed. To evaluate the universality of this novel preparative technique, taking Co(3)O(4) as an example, it is found that Co(3)O(4) nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers are also successfully fabricated via this novel method. The special nanowire-in-nanotube structure of the one-dimensional nanomaterials makes them have promising applications in catalysis, lithium-ion battery, drug delivery, etc. This manufacturing strategy has some advantages over other methods to form nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanofibers, such as easy, highly efficient and cost effective. The design idea and synthetic technique provide a novel perspective to create other nanowire-in-nanotube structured nanomaterials.