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Polymer-mediated formation of polyoxomolybdate nanomaterials

Posted on:2003-01-25Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:State University of New York at Stony BrookCandidate:Wan, QuanFull Text:PDF
GTID:2461390011979296Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
A polymer-mediated synthetic pathway to a polyoxomolybdate nanomaterial is investigated in this work. Block copolymers or homopolymers containing poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) are mixed with a MoO2(OH)(OOH) aqueous solution to form a golden gel or viscous solution. As revealed by synchrotron X-ray scattering measurements, electron microscopy, and other characterization techniques, the final dark blue polyoxomolybdate product is a highly ordered simple cubic network similar to certain zeolite structure but with a much larger lattice constant of ∼5.2 nm. The average size of the cube-like single crystals is close to 1 μm. Based on its relatively low density (∼2.2 g/cm3), the nanomaterial can be highly porous if the amount of the residual polymer can be substantially reduced. The valence of molybdenum is ∼5.7 based on cerimetric titration, representing the mixed-valence nature of the polyoxomolybdate structure.{09}The self-assembled structures (if any) of the polymer gel do not have any correlation with the final polyoxomolybdate nanostructure, excluding the possible role of polymers being a structure-directing template. On the other hand, the PEO polymer stabilizes the precursor molybdenum compound through coordination between its ether oxygen atoms and molybdenum atoms, and reduces the molybdenum (VI) precursor compound with its hydroxyl group being a reducing agent. The rare simple cubic ordering necessitates the existence of special affinities among the polyoxomolybdate nanosphere units resulted from the reduction reaction. Our mechanism study shows that the acidified condition is necessary for the synthesis of the mixed-valence polyoxomolybdate clusters, while H2O2 content modulates the rate of the reduction reaction. The polymer degradation is evidenced by the observation of a huge viscosity change, and is likely through a hydrolysis process catalyzed by molybdenum compounds. Cube-like polyoxomolybdate nanocrystals with size of ∼40 nm are obtained by means of inversed microemulsions. Reducing agents such as di(ethylene glycol) and glycerol are utilized to synthesize various nanoscale ordering polyoxomolybdate structures. Only PEO-containing polymers are capable of producing the simple cubic polyoxomolybdate nanomaterials. Such a synthetic strategy may open up new pathways to prepare similar functional nanomaterials.
Keywords/Search Tags:Polyoxomolybdate, Polymer, Simple cubic
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