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Molten‐Salt‐Assisted Self‐Assembly (MASA)‐Synthesis of Mesoporous Metal Titanate‐Titania, Metal Sulfide‐Titania, and Metal Selenide‐Titania Thin Films
Author(s) -
Karakaya Cüneyt,
Türker Yurdanur,
Dag Ömer
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201202716
Subject(s) - materials science , brookite , mesoporous material , anatase , chemical engineering , titanate , nanocrystalline material , metal , molten salt , inorganic chemistry , nanotechnology , photocatalysis , organic chemistry , ceramic , catalysis , metallurgy , chemistry , engineering
New synthetic strategies are needed for the assembly of porous metal titanates and metal chalcogenite‐titania thin films for various energy applications. Here, a new synthetic approach is introduced in which two solvents and two surfactants are used. Both surfactants are necessary to accommodate the desired amount of salt species in the hydrophilic domains of the mesophase. The process is called a molten‐salt‐assisted self‐assembly (MASA) because the salt species are in the molten phase and act as a solvent to assemble the ingredients into a mesostructure and they react with titania to form mesoporous metal titanates during the annealing step. The mesoporous metal titanate (meso‐Zn 2 TiO 4 and meso‐CdTiO 3 ) thin films are reacted under H 2 S or H 2 Se gas at room temperature to yield high quality transparent mesoporous metal chalcogenides. The H 2 Se reaction produces rutile and brookite titania phases together with nanocrystalline metal selenides and H 2 S reaction of meso‐CdTiO 3 yields nanocrystalline anatase and CdS in the spatially confined pore walls. Two different metal salts (zinc nitrate hexahydrate and cadmium nitrate tetrahydrate) are tested to demonstrate the generality of the new assembly process. The meso ‐TiO 2 ‐CdSe film shows photoactivity under sunlight.