Abstract
Manganese oxide nanomaterials hold promise for sustainable nanotechnologies given their utility for a variety of applications, the Earth's abundance of manganese, and their low toxicity relative to other nanomaterials. However green scalable synthesis methods for such nanomaterials are needed. We report here a green room-temperature synthesis of polycrystalline Mn3O4 nanowires. In this procedure, aqueous Mn(II) is oxidized under circumneutral conditions by atmospheric oxygen in the presence of nanocrystalline iron oxide (α-Fe2O3), an inexpensive catalyst, and a classic biochemical Good's buffer, PIPES (piperazine-N,NI-bis(2- ethanesulfonic acid). The synthesis method is novel due to its simplicity, minimal energy input and waste output, and potential scalability. The Mn 3O4 nanowires have been characterized with a suite of electron microscopy techniques. © 2013 American Chemical Society.
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Veeramani, H., Aruguete, D., Monsegue, N., Murayama, M., Dippon, U., Kappler, A., & Hochella, M. F. (2013). Low-temperature green synthesis of multivalent manganese oxide nanowires. ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, 1(9), 1070–1074. https://doi.org/10.1021/sc400129n
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