Hollow or porous hematite (α-Fe2O3) nanoarchitectures have emerged as promising crystals in the advanced materials research. In this contribution, hierarchical mesoporous α-Re2O3 nanoarchitectures with a pod-like shape were synthesized via a room-temperature coprecipitation of FeCl3 and NaOH solutions, followed by a mild hydrothermal treatment (120°C to 210°C, 12.0 h). A formation mechanism based on the hydrothermal evolution was proposed. β-FeOOH fibrils were assembled by the reaction-limited aggregation first, subsequent and in situ conversion led to compact pod-like α-Re2O3 nanoarchitectures, and finally high-temperature, long-time hydrothermal treatment caused loose pod-like α-Re2O3 nanoarchitectures via the Ostwald ripening. The as-synthesized α-Re2O3 nanoarchitectures exhibit good absorbance within visible regions and also exhibit an improved performance for Li-ion storage with good rate performance, which can be attributed to the porous nature of Re2O3 nanoarchitectures. This provides a facile, environmentally benign, and low-cost synthesis strategy for α-Re2O3 crystal growth, indicating the as-prepared α-Re2O3 nanoarchitectures as potential advanced functional materials for energy storage, gas sensors, photoelectrochemical water splitting, and water treatment. © 2013 Zhu et al.; licensee Springer.
CITATION STYLE
Zhu, W., Cui, X., Liu, X., Zhang, L., Huang, J. Q., Piao, X., & Zhang, Q. (2013). Hydrothermal evolution, optical and electrochemical properties of hierarchical porous hematite nanoarchitectures. Nanoscale Research Letters, 8(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1186/1556-276X-8-2
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