The role of titanium-oxo clusters in the sulfate process for TiO2 production
Author(s) -
Károly Kozma,
Maoyu Wang,
Pedro I. Molina,
Nicolas P. Martin,
Zhenxing Feng,
May Nyman
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
dalton transactions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.98
H-Index - 184
eISSN - 1477-9234
pISSN - 1477-9226
DOI - 10.1039/c9dt01337g
Subject(s) - titanium , production (economics) , chemical engineering , materials science , sulfate , process (computing) , nanotechnology , metallurgy , computer science , engineering , economics , macroeconomics , operating system
TiO 2 is manufactured for white pigments, solar cells, self-cleaning surfaces and devices, and other photocatalytic applications. The industrial synthesis of TiO 2 entails: (1) the dissolution of ilmenite ore (FeTiO 3 ) in aqueous sulfuric acid which precipitates the Fe while retaining the Ti in solution, followed by (2) dilution or heating the Ti sulfate solution to precipitate the pure form of TiO 2 . The underlying chemistry of these processing steps remains poorly understood. Here we show that the dissolution of a simple Ti IV -sulfate salt, representative of the industrial sulfate process for the production of TiO 2 , immediately self-assembles into a soluble Ti-octadecameric cluster, denoted as {Ti 18 }. We observed {Ti 18 } in solution by small-angle X-ray scattering and Ti extended X-ray absorption fine structure (Ti-EXAFS) analysis, and ultimately crystallized it for absolute identification. The {Ti 18 } metal-oxo cluster was previously reported as a polycation; but shown here, it can also be a polyanion, dependent on the number of sulfate ligands it carries. After immediate self-assembly, the {Ti 18 }-cluster persists until TiO 2 precipitates, with no easily identified structural intermediates in the solution or solid state, despite the fact that the atomic arrangement of {Ti 18 } differs vastly from that of titania. The evolution from solution phase {Ti 18 } to precipitated TiO 2 nanoparticles was detailed by X-ray scattering and Ti-EXAFS. We offer a hypothesis for the key mechanism of complete separation of Fe from Ti in the industrial sulfate process. These findings also highlight the emerging importance of the unusual Ti(Ti) 5 pentagonal building unit, featured in {Ti 18 } as well as other early d 0 ransition metal-oxo clusters including Nb, Mo and W. Finally, this study presents an example of crystal growth mechanisms in which the observed "pre-nucleation cluster" does not necessarily predicate the structure of the precipitated solid.
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