INVESTIGADORES
SOLER ILLIA Galo Juan De Avila Arturo
artículos
Título:
Nanoencapsulation of isotropic and anisotropic particles through a green chemistry aerosol method: a scalable approach for ad-hoc surface tuning
Autor/es:
FRANCESCHINI, ESTEBAN A.; GIMÉNEZ, GUSTAVO; LOMBARDO, M. VERÓNICA; ZELCER, ANDRÉS; SOLER-ILLIA, GALO J.A.A.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF SOL-GEL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Año: 2021
ISSN:
0928-0707
Resumen:
The interest in core?shell materials with chemically tunable mesoporous surfaces has significantly grown in recent years. The main limitation to obtain these systems through sequential precipitation is the tuning of the core and shell sol-gel chemistry, which usually implies low concentrations and leads to high-quality colloids although in small quantities after a lengthy and costly process. Aerosol approaches can lead to faster production and easier separation of functional materials with well-defined architectures. We present a ?green chemistry? general method to coat sub-micron colloidal particles with a variety of mesoporous metal oxide nanofilms via an aerosol synthesis technique. Different types of particulate supports with isotropic and anisotropic shapes were dispersed into the precursor solutions in order to synthesize a mesoporous shell keeping the shape of the support. We chose the synthesis of TiO2 and TiSiO4 nanofilms on conventional Stöber SiO2 spherical particles, and on anisotropic micronized mica particles as a case study. We used the commercial surfactant Pluronic® F127 as a porogen. The structure and composition of the obtained nanofilms were characterized by electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, focused ion beam coupled to SEM, and nitrogen adsorption/desorption isotherms. The TiO2 shells obtained (with an anatase-like structure) have pore diameters between 3.9?4.8 nm depending on the support with film thicknesses of ~100 nm, while amorphous TiSiO4 shells have larger diameters (9.5?16 nm) with film thicknesses of between 50 and 200 nm depending on the support used. The method presented shows high reproducibility and, unlike batch methods, allows the continuous production and straightforward recovery of the materials. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]