WO2002042201A1 - Production of fine-grained particles - Google Patents
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- WO2002042201A1 WO2002042201A1 PCT/AU2001/001510 AU0101510W WO0242201A1 WO 2002042201 A1 WO2002042201 A1 WO 2002042201A1 AU 0101510 W AU0101510 W AU 0101510W WO 0242201 A1 WO0242201 A1 WO 0242201A1
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Definitions
- the present invention relates to very fine-grained particulate material and to methods for producing such very fine-grained particulate material.
- the present invention relates to oxide materials of very fine-grained particulate material and to methods for producing such material.
- the particulate material has grain sizes in the nanometre scale.
- Metal oxides are used in a wide range of applications.
- metal oxides can be used in: • solid oxide fuel cells (in the cathode, anode, electrolyte and interconnect);
- catalytic materials automobile exhausts, emission control, chemical synthesis, oil refinery, waste management
- sensors eg gas sensors, fuel control for engines
- metal oxides typically have grain sizes that fall within the micrometre range and often are supplied in the form of particles having particle sizes greater than the micrometre range. It is believed that metal oxides that are comprised of nanometre sized grains will have important advantages over conventional metal oxides. These advantages include lower sintering temperatures, potentially very high surface areas, and sometimes improved or unusual physical properties. However, the ability to economically produce useful metal oxide materials with nanometre-sized grains has proven to be a major challenge to materials science. It has proven to be difficult to make such fine-scale metal oxides, particularly multi-component metal oxides, with: (a) the correct chemical composition;
- particles of material are typically agglomerates of a number of grains.
- Each grain may be thought of as a region of distinct crystallinity joined to other grains.
- the grains may have grain boundaries that are adjacent to other grain boundaries.
- some of the grains may be surrounded by and agglomerated with other grains by regions having a different composition (for example, a metal, alloy or amorphous material) to the grains.
- Methods described in the prior art for synthesising nano materials include gas phase synthesis, ball milling, co-precipitation, sol gel, and micro emulsion methods. The methods are typically applicable to different groups of materials, such as metals, alloys, intermetallics, oxides and non-oxides. A brief discussion of each will follow:
- Mechanical attrition or ball milling is another method that can be used to produce nano- crystalline materials (C.C. Koch, "Synthesis of Nanostructured Materials by Mechanical Milling: Problems and Opportunities", Nano Structured Materials, Vol 9, pp 13-22, 1997).
- mechanical attrition produces the nano-materials not by cluster assembly but by the structural decomposition of coarser-grained materials as a result of severe plastic deformation.
- the quality of the final product is a function of the milling energy, time and temperature. To achieve grain sizes of a few nanometres in diameter requires relatively long processing times (several hours for small batches).
- Another main drawback of the method is that the milled material is prone to severe contamination from the milling media.
- Precipitation reactions are among the most common and efficient types of chemical reactions used to produce inorganic materials at industrial scale.
- a precipitation reaction typically, two homogenous solutions are mixed and an insoluble substance (a solid) is subsequently formed. Conventionally, one solution is injected into a tank of the second solution in order to induce precipitation, however, simultaneous injection of the two solutions is also possible.
- the solid that forms can be recovered by methods such as filtration.
- the precursor material has subsequently to be calcined in order to obtain the final phase pure material.
- This requires, in particular, avoidance of phenomena that induce segregation of species during processing such as partial melting for example. Formation of stable intermediates also has to be avoided since the transformation to the final phase pure material might become nearly impossible in that case.
- Typical results for surface areas for single oxides can be of several tens of m /g. However, for a multi-cation compound, values less than 10m /g become more common.
- Sol-gel synthesis is also a precipitation-based method.
- Particles or gels are formed by 'hydrolysis-condensation reactions', which involve first hydrolysis of a precursor, followed by polymerisation of these hydrolysed percursors into particles or three-dimensional networks.
- hydrolysis-condensation reactions By controlling the hydrolysis-condensation reactions, particles with very uniform size distributions can be precipitated.
- the disadvantages of sol-gel methods are that the precursors can be expensive, careful control of the hydrolysis-condensation reactions is required, and the reactions can be slow.
- Microemulsion methods create nanometre-sized particles by confining inorganic reactions to nanometre-sized aqueous domains, that exist within an oil. These domains, called water-in-oil or inverse microemulsions, can be created using certain surfactant/water/oil combinations.
- Nanometre-sized particles can be made by preparing two different inverse microemulsions (eg (a) and (b)). Each microemulsion has a specific reactant dissolved in the aqueous domains. The inverse microemulsions are mixed, and when the aqueous domains in (a) collide with those in (b), a reaction takes place that forms a particle. Since the reaction volumes are small, the resultant particles are also small.
- Some microemulsion techniques are reviewed in "Nanoparticle and Polymer Synthesis in Microemulsion", J. Eastoe and B. Warne, Current Opinion in Colloid and Interface Science, vol.
- Surfactants are organic (carbon-based) molecules.
- the molecules have a hydrophilic (ie has an affinity for water) section and a hydrophobic (ie does not have an affinity for water) section.
- Surfactants can form a variety of structures in aqueous (and other) solutions dependent upon the type of surfactant, the surfactant concentration, temperature, ionic species, etc.
- the simplest arrangement is individual surfactant molecules dispersed in solution. This typically occurs for very low concentration of surfactants.
- the surfactant can coalesce to form "micelles".
- Micelles can be spherical or cylindrical. The diameter of the micelle is controlled mainly by the length of the surfactant chain and can range between -20 angstroms and ⁇ 300 angstroms.
- Liquid crystals consist of ordered micelles (eg micellar cubic, hexagonal) or ordered arrays of surfactant (eg lamella, bicontinuous cubic), within a solvent, usually water.
- surfactant-templating methods use ordered surfactant structures to template deposition of inorganic material.
- the surfactant is then removed without destroying the ordered structure.
- the size of the pores, the spacing between pores, and the type of ordered pore pattern are dependent upon the type of surfactant, the concentration of the surfactant, temperature and other solution variables. Pores sizes between ⁇ 20 angstroms and ⁇ 300 angstroms have been achieved. Spacings between the pores also lie approximately within this range.
- Periodic order at this scale can be detected using x-ray diffraction (XRD).
- XRD x-ray diffraction
- signal intensity is plotted against the angle of the incident x-ray beam on the sample.
- Periodic structures give rise to peaks on XRD scans.
- the length of the periodic spacing is inversely related to the angle at which the peak occurs.
- the ordered pore structures in surfactant-templated materials have much greater spacings, and therefore produce peaks at low angles (typically much less than 5°).
- SAXS small angle x-ray scattering
- surfactant micelles are essentially the same size. Pore sizes are therefore very uniform since pores are created in the space that was occupied by the micelles. Pore size distributions in materials may be obtained using nitrogen gas absorption instruments. An example of a pore size distribution from a surfactant-templated material is shown in fig 3. The distribution is extremely narrow, and is approximately centred on the diameter of the surfactant micelles. Such distributions are typical for surfactant templated materials.
- inorganic materials are crystalline. That is, their atoms are organised into highly ordered periodic structures. The type, amount and orientation of crystals in inorganic materials critically influences many important physical properties.
- a major drawback of most surfactant-templated materials is that normally the inorganic material is not highly crystalline. In fact in most cases it is considered amorphous.
- a variant on the surfactant templating method described above may be described as the production of surfactant-templated structures via self assembly. Many of the detailed mechanisms of this process are not clear, however the basic principle is that the surfactant- inorganic structures assemble at a substrate or a nucleus and grow from there.
- a general review of this method is given by Aksay-IA; Trau-M; Manne-S; Honma-I; Yao-N; Zhou-L; Fenter-P; Eisenberger-PM; Grune-SM "Biomimetic pathways for assembling inorganic thin films", Science vol. 273 (1996), p 892-898.
- Hydrolysis-condensation reactions involve an 'inorganic precursor', which is initially dissolved in solution. The first step in the reaction is hydrolysis of the precursor. This is followed by polymerisation of the hydrolysed precursor (condensation) to form an inorganic phase. Hydrolysis-condensation reactions maybe represented generally as: M - OR + H 2 O « ⁇ M - OH + ROH hydrolysis
- R an organic ligand, e.g. CH 3
- M - OR inorganic precursor, commonly an alkoxide
- the polymerisation nature of these reactions results in glass-like materials that do not contain a high degree of atomic order. As discussed previously this is a major limitation of most surfactant-templated materials. It is possible to increase the order in the inorganic material by heat treating at high temperatures, but almost all attempts to do this have resulted in collapse of the pore structure prior to crystallisation.
- This method uses a similar principle to the surfactant-templating methods described above.
- An aqueous-based electroplating solution is mixed with surfactant at an appropriate concentration to form a liquid crystal.
- This mixture is placed between two electrodes, and kept at a temperature where the surfactant organises to form a liquid crystal.
- One of the electrodes is a substrate that is to be coated. Applying an appropriate voltage causes inorganic material to be deposited at one electrode. This material only deposits in the space between the surfactant.
- the surfactant may be removed by heating or by dissolution in a solvent that does not attack the inorganic material.
- the organised pore structure is maintained in this method.
- the deposited material is almost always metal, which is very easy to crystallise, therefore strong high-angle XRD peaks are observed.
- Platinum and tin have been produced by this technique.
- Most of the surfactant-templating processes described in the literature have resulted in the formation of inorganic particles having a particle size in excess of one micrometre. Crystallinity is difficult to obtain. Reaction times are lengthy because significant time is required to form the surfactant - inorganic structure in solution.
- a metal cation salt/polymer gel is formed by mixing an aqueous continuous phase with a hydrophilic organic polymeric disperse phase.
- the hydrophilic organic polymer absorbs the liquid on to its structure due to chemical affinity.
- the product is a gel with the metal salt solution "frozen” within the dispersed polymeric network.
- the salt/polymer network is calcined to decompose the powder, leaving a high surface metal oxide powder.
- the calcining temperature is stated to be from 300°C to 1,000°C , preferably 450°C to 750°C .
- This patent requires that a hydrophilic organic polymer be used in the process for making metal oxide powders.
- the present invention provides a method of producing particles having nano-sized grains, the method comprising the steps of:
- step (b) mixing the solution from step (a) with one or more surfactants to form a surfactant/liquid mixture
- step (c) heating the mixture from step (b) above to form the particles .
- the particles are metal oxide particles and step (c) forms particles of metal oxide.
- step (b) involves mixing the solution from step (a) with one or more surfactants under conditions such that micelles are formed.
- the particles are preferably agglomerates of the grains.
- the grains are suitably lightly sintered together.
- the method may optionally further comprise the steps of treating the mixture from step (b) to form a gel and heating the gel to form the particles of metal oxide.
- Step (a) of the present process involves the preparation of a solution containing one or more metal cations.
- the metal cations are chosen according to the required composition of the metal oxide particles.
- the solution of one or more metal cations is preferably a concentrated solution.
- the inventors presently believe that a high concentration of dissolved metal is preferred for achieving the highest yield of product.
- a very large number of metal cations may be used in the present invention. Examples include metal cation from Groups 1A, 2 A, 3 A, 4 A, 5 A and 6 A of the Periodic Table, transition metals, lanthanides and actinides, and mixtures thereof. This list should not be considered to be exhaustive.
- the mixture may contain one or more different metal cations.
- the metal cation solution is suitably produced by mixing a salt or salts containing the desired metal(s) with a solvent. Any salt soluble in the particular solvent may be used.
- the metal cation solution may also be produced by mixing a metal oxide or metal oxides or a metal or metals with appropriate solvent(s).
- a number of solvents can be used to prepare the metal cation solution.
- the solvents are preferably aqueous-based solvents. Examples of suitable solvents include water, nitric acid, hydrochloric acid, sulphuric acid, hydrofluoric acid, ammonia, alcohols, and mixtures thereof.
- Step (b) of the method of the present invention involves adding surfactant to the mixture to to create a surfactant/liquid mixture.
- the surfactant is added to the solution under conditions in which micelles are formed, such that a micellar liquid is formed.
- micellar liquid is formed when surfactant is added in sufficient quantity such that the surfactant molecules aggregate to form micelles.
- micelles do not exhibit a significant degree of order, therefore the viscosity of the liquid is usually much less than that of more ordered liquid crystal phases, which are commonly gel-like.
- the amount of surfactant mixed with the solution is sufficient to produce a micellar liquid in which the micelles are closely spaced.
- the conditions under which the micellar liquid is formed will depend upon the particular surfactant(s) being used. In practice, the main variables that need to be controlled are the amount of surfactant added and the temperature. For some surfactants, the temperature should be elevated, whilst for others room temperature or below is necessary.
- Any surfactant capable of forming micelles may be used in the present invention.
- a large number of surfactants may be used in the invention, inlcuding non-ionic sufactants, cationic sufactants, anionic surfactants and zwitteronic surfactants.
- sufactants are non-ionic surfactants.
- Other surfactants that can be used include:
- Anionic surfactant Sodium dodecyl sulfate CH 3 (CH 2 ) ⁇ i OSO 3 NA
- Step (c) of the method of the present invention involves heating of the mixture from step (b) to an elevated temperature to thereby form the metal oxide particles.
- This step may optionally be preceded by a step of treating the surfactant/liquid mixture to form a gel.
- the gel forms due to ordering of the micelles to form a liquid crystal.
- it is sufficient to change the temperature of the mixture to form the gel. For some mixtures, cooling will result in gel formation. For other mixtures, heating will result in gel formation. This appears to be dependent upon the surfactant(s) used.
- step (c) involves heating the gel.
- the heating step results in the formation of the metal oxide and the pore structure of the particles.
- the method of the present invention only requires a relatively low applied temperature. Indeed, applied temperatures of less than about 300°C have been found to be suitable in experimental work conducted to date. Preferably, the maximum applied temperature reached in step (c) does not exceed about 600°C, more preferably about 450°C, most preferably about 300°C.
- the present inventors believe that the process of the present invention may involve localised exothermic reactions occurring, which could lead to highly localised temperatures. However, it remains a significant advantage of the present invention that the applied temperature is relatively low compared to prior art processes known to the inventors.
- the heating step may involve a rapid heating to the maximum desired temperature, or it may involve a much more closely controlled heat treatment regime.
- the heating step may be carried out under a controlled atmosphere.
- the heating step may involve heating to a drying temperature (generally below the boiling temperature of the mixture) to dry the mixture, followed by a slow ramp up to the maximum applied temperature, or followed by a series of incremental increases to intermediate temperatures before ultimately reaching the maximum applied temperature.
- the duration of the heating step may vary widely, with a preferred time in step (c) being from 15 minutes to 24 hours, more preferably 15 minutes to 2 hours even more preferably 15 minutes to 1 hour. It will be appreciated that step (c) is intended to encompass all heating profiles that result in the formation of particles of metal oxide.
- the heating step (c) of the present invention encompasses all such heating steps that result in the formation of the desired metal oxide particles.
- the heating step may be carried out using heating apparatus known by the person of skill in the art to be suitable for such purposes. Examples include hot plates or other heated substrates, ovens, stationary table furnaces, rotary table furnaces, induction furnaces, fluid bed furnaces, bath furnaces, flash furnaces, tube furnaces, infrared furnaces, muffle furnaces, drop furnaces, belt furnaces, rotary furnaces, rotary kilns, rotary dryers, spray dryers, spin-flash dryers, drum dryers, reaction vessels, and flash calciners.
- the heating step of the present invention breaks down any order that existed in the surfactant/liquid mixture, and the results of the method of the present invention are particles of metal oxide having nano-sized grains with significant amounts of crystallinity, disordered pore structures, broad distributions of pore sizes and an essentially homogenous composition throughout.
- the present invention can be distinguished from the prior art surfactant templating processes which are reliant upon the micellar or liquid crystal structure being maintained throughout a reaction step (which may or may not involve heating) to result in the formation of metal oxide materials having very narrow pore distributions and ordered pore structures. Such prior art processes are dependent upon the propogation of slow, controlled hydrolysis-condensation reactions to obtain the desired pore structure.
- the metal oxide particles produced by preferred embodiments of the method have nano-sized grains.
- the grain size falls within the range of l-lOOnm, more preferably l-50nm, even more preferably l-20nm, even more preferably 2-lOnm, most preferably 2-8nm.
- the grain size was determined by examining a sample of the particles using TEM (transmission electron microscopy), visually evaluating the grain size and calculating an average grain size therefrom.
- the particles may have varying particle size due to the very fine grains aggregating or cohering together.
- the particle size may vary from the nanometre range up to the micrometre range or even larger.
- the particles may have large specific surface areas (for the particular metal oxide, when compared with prior art processes for making those particles) and exhibit a broad distribution of pore sizes.
- the present invention also encompasses metal oxide particles.
- the present invention provides metal oxide particles characterised in that the particles have a grain size substantially in the range from 1 to lOOnm.
- the grain size falls within the range of 1 to 50nm, more preferably l-20nm, even more preferably 2nm to 10nm, most preferably 2nm to 8nm.
- the particles are preferably substantially crystalline and contain only small or negligible amounts of amorphous material.
- the particles preferably have other properties as described with reference to the particles described with reference to the first aspect of the invention. Brief description of the drawings
- Figure 1 shows a schematic diagram of a prior art process for forming particules using an ordered array of surfactant particles
- Figure 2 shows an exemplary x-ray diffraction pattern of particles produced using the prior art method depicted schematically in Figure 1
- Figure 3 shows an exemplary pore size distribution of particles produced using the prior art method depicted schematically in Figure 1;
- Figure 4 shows the heating profile used in Example 1
- Figure 5 shows a schematic diagram of particles produced by the method of the present invention
- Figure 6 shows x-ray diffraction traces for several metal oxides described in Example 2;
- Figure 7 shows small angle x-ray scattering data for gels obtained during the method for producing the particles described in Example 2;
- Figure 8 shows the pore size distribution of CeO 2 powder made using Brij 35 surfactant;
- Figure 9 shows a typical pore size distribution for particles made according to prior at surfactant-templating methods
- Figure 10 is a TEM photomicrograph of the ceria pwder made in Example 1;
- Figure 11 is an x-ray diffraction trace for the metal oxide powder made in accordance with Example 3;
- Figure 12 is a graph showing small angle x-ray scattering data for the powder made in Example 3.
- Figure 13 shows some exemplary heating profiles used ot produce aria powder in accordance with the present invention.
- step (b) creation of a micellar liquid - the solution from step (a) is mixed with a surfactant at a temperature where the mixture forms a micellar liquid;
- Step 1 A cerium nitrate solution containing 2.5 moles/litre cerium nitrate was prepared.
- Step 2 16g Brij 56 surfactant and 20mls cerium -nitrate solution were heated to ⁇ 80°C. At this temperature the surfactant is a liquid. The solution was added slowly to the surfactant liquid while stirring, to create a micellar liquid.
- Step 3 The micellar liquid was cooled to room temperature. During the cooling the liquid transformed to a clear gel.
- Step 4 The gel was heat treated according to temperature history presented in Figure 4. In this example, an extended drying stage at 83°C was used prior to further heating.
- the resulting CeO 2 powder had a surface area of ⁇ 253m 2 /g, and was comprised of grains that ranged between ⁇ 2 and ⁇ 8nm in diameter.
- Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) suggests that the final powder consisted of lightly sintered aggregates of very fine grains. This is shown schematically in Figure 5, and a TEM photomicrograph of the product is shown as
- CeO 2 and other mixed oxides containing cerium and one or more of samarium, copper and zirconium Ce 0 . 6 Sm 0 . 4 O x , Ce 0 .6 5 Sm 0 . 2 Cu o .i 5 O x , and Ce 0 . 6 Zr 0 . 2 Smo. ⁇ Cuo. ⁇ O x have been produced.
- the oxygen content is represented by x since the exact content is dependent upon composition and is not precisely known at this stage.
- compositions should exhibit the basic crystal structure of CeO 2 if the different metal components are evenly distributed throughout the material. This is because the additional elements can be incorporated into the CeO 2 crystal structure. However, inhomogeneous distribution of elements may result in pockets of material that may have much higher concentrations of one or more particular elements. Such pockets can form different crystal structures (or phases).
- X-ray diffraction has been used to determine whether the materials are single-phase CeO 2 crystal structure (evenly distributed elements), or contain additional crystal structures that would indicate poor mixing of elements. The surface areas and grain sizes of several materials have also been measured.
- Figure 6 shows XRD traces from CeO 2 , Ceo.6Smo. 4 O-., Ce 0 . 65 Sm o.2 Cuo.i 5 ⁇ x , and
- Ce 0.6 Zr o.2 Sm o. ⁇ Cu o . ⁇ O x that were made using our process.
- the XRD traces showed that the correct CeO 2 crystal structure was obtained in all materials, even the four component system. This strongly suggests a very uniform distribution of elements. The width of the peaks indicates that the grain size is extremely small in all these materials.
- FIG. 7 shows small angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) data for gels comprised of cerium nitrate solutions and Brij 35, Issue 56 and Pluronic F127 surfactants. Also shown are SAXS data for the powders produced from these gels. Significant peaks on the data from all three gels indicate the presence of ordered surfactant structures. This order is clearly not present in the final powders.
- SAXS small angle x-ray scattering
- TEM Transmission electron microscopy
- Example 3 Preparation ofLan. ⁇ Ca ⁇ . 2 Ndo.?MnnqNin 7 Q, La o.6 Ca o.2 Ndo. 2 Mn o.9 Ni o.1 O 3 is used as the cathode material in solid oxide fuel cells. It is also an excellent test material for the present invention because the target 'lanthanum manganate' crystal structure is extremely sensitive to chemical composition. Even small variations in composition result in the formation of different crystal structures. Therefore, the five different metal elements need to be evenly distributed on an extremely fine scale to produce small grains with the correct crystal structure.
- Figure 11 shows an XRD trace from Lao. 6 Cao .2 Nd o.2 M1io. 9 Nio. 1 O 3 material produced using the method of the present invention.
- a Pluronic F127- metal nitrate solution gel was used, and the heat treatment consisted of 1 hour at 100°C, followed by 0.5 hour at 300°C.
- the trace indicates that the material is the targeted lanthanum manganate crystal structure. This is an amazing result given the very low temperatures used for heat treatment.
- a surface area of ⁇ 30m 2 /g was obtained for this material. While 30m 2 /g is much lower than the values for CeO 2 -based materials, it is considered very high for this material.
- Mn 3 O 4 surface area ⁇ 120m 2 /g
- LiMn 2 O 4 ⁇ 14m 2 /g
- LiCoO 2 H0m 2 /g LiCoO 2 H0m 2 /g
- Lao. 6 Sr 0 . 4 MnO 3 ⁇ 30m 2 /g
- NiO ⁇ 200m 2 /g
- ZrO 2 ⁇ 100m 2 /g
- CuO/ZnO/ZrO 2 ⁇ 180m 2 /g
- Co 3 O 4 ⁇ 80m 2 /g
- CeO 2 -based compounds with surface areas from ⁇ 170m /g - ⁇ 250m /g have also been synthesised. Examples include Ceo. 62 Zro. 28 Yo. ⁇ O x (surface area ⁇ 200m 2 /g) and Ceo. 46 Zro. 2 ⁇ Yo. ⁇ O x (surface area ⁇ 170m 2 /g). Other CeO 2 based materials have also been prepared.
- Brij-type surfactants have been mixed at high temperatures where they form micellar liquids with aqueous solutions, and can be cooled to form gels. With these surfactants it is possible to heat-treat straight from the micellar liquid stage without forming a gel. In contrast, Pluronic surfactants form micellar liquids in aqueous solutions at low temperatures ( ⁇ 0°C) and form gels upon heating. It is therefore not possible to heat-treat Pluronic F127 mixtures without first forming a gel. For CeO 2 materials, Brij 30, Brij 35 and Brij 56 surfactants produced much higher surface areas (>200m 2 /g) than Pluronic F127 surfactant ( ⁇ 30m 2 /g). The inventors are unsure of the reason for this.
- the present invention does appear to provide the ability to produce materials with different surface areas. This may be a further advantage of the present invention. For example, for many metal oxide applications, it is necessary to manufacture a solid ceramic device with minimal porosity (eg the solid electrolyte in solid oxide fuel cells). In these applications, a high surface area is not important or even desirable. However, fine grains can still be advantageous since they reduce sintering temperatures and may deliver improved physical properties. It appears that the method of the present invention can be tailored to suit these applications, as well as applications that require porous, high surface area materials.
- the present inventors also believe that the concentration of surfactant will certainly affect the resultant materials produced by the method of the present invention. As yet, no experimental work confirming this has been conducted.
- the heat treatment step of the present invention sees the metal oxides and the pore structures both being formed during this stage. hi the experiments conducted by the present inventors to date, which mainly related to the production of metal oxides from nitrate solutions, the inventors have postulated that a high density of finely spaced micelles present in the micellar liquid probably hinders growth of precipitates, which may explain the very small grain sizes that have been obtained. The confined spaces between micelles may also prevent any large scale separation of different metal elements.
- the present inventors are also unsure as to the mechanisms that lead to the high surface area or pore structures being formed.
- the very broad pore size distributions show that the pores are not simply created in spaces that were occupied by the micelles.
- the present inventors believe that it is possible that the segregation of liquid and precipitated nitrates into confined spaces between micelles, and gases released from nitrate decomposition and/or surfactant decomposition, combine to form the high surface area of pore structures. Again, the present inventors have only postulated this mechanism and the present invention should not be construed as being limited to this particular mechanism.
- Heat treatment no. 1 was designed to produce a dried gel, and to combust this dried gel extremely rapidly. Heat treatment no. 2 again produced a dried gel, however the combustion was designed to be much more controlled than for heat treatment no. 1. Heat treatment no. 3 did not produce a dried gel prior to further heating and was the simplest and quickest of the three heat treatments. It is therefore particularly attractive as a commercial process.
- the gel In heat treatment no. 1, during the long, low temperature stage, the gel dried into a hard, yellow mass. A significant number of bubbles evolved and were trapped in the mass at this stage. When placed upon a hot plate at 300°C, the dried gel ignited immediately and violently to form a yellow powder.
- the powder was cerium oxide with a surface area of 170m 2 /g.
- the metal oxides produced have extremely small grain sizes.
- cerium dioxide materials have grain sizes ranging between about 2 and about 10 nanometres;
- the metal oxides produced are highly crystalline, ie they have a high degree of atomic order. This is an important advantage over most surfactant-templated materials, which have almost no atomic crystallinity;
- the process is extremely rapid.
- the inorganic reaction and entire heat treatment may be done in as little as 30 minutes. This compares with conventional techniques that require long heat treatments (in some cases, up to several days).
- the long inorganic reactions that are characteristic of surfactant-templating methods are not used and therefore the present invention is much quicker than surfactant-templating processes;
- the gels consist of ordered surfactant structures.
- this ordered structure is definitely not present in the final materials.
- pore size distributions are very broad, indicating that the pores do not result from simple burn-out of surfactant micelles. The pore structure is therefore significantly different to that in the surfactant-templated materials described previously.
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CA002429412A CA2429412C (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | Production of fine-grained particles |
EP01983334A EP1355853B1 (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | Production of fine-grained particles |
AU1484702A AU1484702A (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | Production of fine-grained particles |
AU2002214847A AU2002214847B2 (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | Production of fine-grained particles |
CN01819270XA CN1476413B (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | Production of fine-grained particles |
KR1020037006874A KR100865422B1 (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | Production of metal oxide particles with nano-sized grains |
DE60138308T DE60138308D1 (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | PRODUCTION OF FINE-GRAIN PARTICLES |
NZ526591A NZ526591A (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | Production of metal oxide particles with nano-sized grains |
JP2002544345A JP5116933B2 (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2001-11-21 | Method for producing metal oxide particles having nano-sized crystal grains |
HK04102767.3A HK1060108A1 (en) | 2000-11-21 | 2004-04-20 | Production of fine-grained particles |
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Also Published As
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EP1355853A4 (en) | 2005-06-08 |
EP1355853A1 (en) | 2003-10-29 |
CN1476413B (en) | 2011-04-13 |
JP5116933B2 (en) | 2013-01-09 |
ES2326623T3 (en) | 2009-10-16 |
DE60138308D1 (en) | 2009-05-20 |
NZ526591A (en) | 2005-03-24 |
US20050025698A1 (en) | 2005-02-03 |
KR100865422B1 (en) | 2008-10-24 |
CA2429412A1 (en) | 2002-05-30 |
EP1355853B1 (en) | 2009-04-08 |
AU2002214847B2 (en) | 2006-11-09 |
US6752979B1 (en) | 2004-06-22 |
TWI243798B (en) | 2005-11-21 |
AU1484702A (en) | 2002-06-03 |
ZA200304743B (en) | 2004-06-28 |
KR20030072549A (en) | 2003-09-15 |
ATE427908T1 (en) | 2009-04-15 |
JP2004513869A (en) | 2004-05-13 |
JP2012229161A (en) | 2012-11-22 |
CA2429412C (en) | 2009-05-12 |
CN1476413A (en) | 2004-02-18 |
HK1060108A1 (en) | 2004-07-30 |
MY138293A (en) | 2009-05-29 |
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