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Deep eutectic-solvothermal synthesis of nanostructured ceria.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Hammond, OS 
Edler, KJ 
Bowron, DT 
Torrente-Murciano, L 

Abstract

Ceria is a technologically important material with applications in catalysis, emissions control and solid-oxide fuel cells. Nanostructured ceria becomes profoundly more active due to its enhanced surface area to volume ratio, reactive surface oxygen vacancy concentration and superior oxygen storage capacity. Here we report the synthesis of nanostructured ceria using the green Deep Eutectic Solvent reline, which allows morphology and porosity control in one of the less energy-intensive routes reported to date. Using wide Q-range liquid-phase neutron diffraction, we elucidate the mechanism of reaction at a molecular scale at considerably milder conditions than the conventional hydrothermal synthetic routes. The reline solvent plays the role of a latent supramolecular catalyst where the increase in reaction rate from solvent-driven pre-organization of the reactants is most significant. This fundamental understanding of deep eutectic-solvothermal methodology will enable future developments in low-temperature synthesis of nanostructured ceria, facilitating its large-scale manufacturing using green, economic, non-toxic solvents.

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Keywords

0306 Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural), 0912 Materials Engineering

Journal Title

Nat Commun

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-1723
2041-1723

Volume Title

8

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/L020432/2)
We thank the UK ISIS Pulsed Neutron and Muon source at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory and the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) for co-funding a PhD studentship for O.S.H. in the Centre for Doctoral Training in Sustainable Chemical Technologies at the University of Bath (EP/L016354/1; STFC Studentship Agreement 3578) and LTM EPSRC’s Fellowship EP/L020432/2. We thank the ISIS Pulsed Neutron and Muon Source for beam time on the SANDALS instrument under allocation RB1510465. We thank Ursula Potter (Bath) for help with scanning electron microscopic and transmission electron microscopic imaging.
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