Abstract
Mesoporous TiO 2 -octylphosphonate hybrid materials were prepared in one step by a nonhydrolytic sol-gel method involving the reaction of Ti(OiPr) 4 , acetophenone (2 equiv) and diethyl octylphosphonate (from 0 to 0.2 equiv) at 200 °C for 12 hours, in toluene. The different samples were characterized by 31 P magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and nitrogen physisorption. For P/Ti ratios up to 0.1, the hybrid materials can be described as aggregated, roughly spherical, crystalline anatase nanoparticles grafted by octylphosphonate groups via Ti-O-P bonds. The crystallite size decreases with the P/Ti ratio, leading to an increase of the specific surface area and a decrease of the pore size of the hybrid samples. For a P/Ti ratio of 0.2, the volume fraction of organic octyl groups exceeds 50%. The hybrid material becomes nonporous and can be described as amorphous TiO 2 clusters modified by octylphosphonate units, where the octyl chains form an organic continuous matrix.
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Wang, Y., Mutin, P. H., & Alauzun, J. G. (2019). One-step nonhydrolytic sol-gel synthesis of mesoporous TiO 2 phosphonate hybrid materials. Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology, 9(1), 356–362. https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.10.35
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