Soid State Synthesis
Soid State Synthesis
Soid State Synthesis
Lectures
2 and 3
Lecture 2: Outcomes
Conventional Solid State Reaction (SSR) Routes
SYNTHESIS ROUTES
Conventional Routes
Non-conventional Routes
General route = mix components together and heat for extended periods
Shake and Bake
Solid-solid
Solid-liquid
Solid-gas
Liquid-gas
Gas-gas
2 general reaction types:
addition e.g.
exchange e.g.
BaO(s) + TiO2(s)
900 C
ZnS(s) + CdO(s)
BaTiO3(s)
900 C
ZnO(s) + CdS(s)
900 C
24 hrs
SrTiO3
Al2O3
MgO
High temperature
MgAl2O4
MgO
Al2O3
MgAl2O4 spinel
Cl
Na+
Polyhedral representation
NaCl (Rock-Salt)
e.g.
MgO + Al2O3
T=
1400C
2 days
diffusion rate
reaction rate
Making materials from powders
by heating at below their melting
points until the particles adhere to
each other. Common in making
ceramics.
particle size =
b) pelletising =
no. of interfaces
Decomposing precursors
Use precursors that decompose at low T to gen. metal oxide reactants:
I.E: metal carbonates, CO32-; metal hydroxides, OH; metal nitrates, NO3
e.g.
heat
-CO2
BaCO3
BaO
heat
+TiO2
BaTiO3
2AlCl3(s) + 3CO(g)
Volatile gas
Separate with Temp control
A(l) + B(s)
D(s)
Advantage:
Liquid A gives greater contact & mobility and
dissolves some D (product) = prevents reaction blockage.
Make both liquid!
Liquidliquid - extremely homogeneous initial mixture
i) Dissolve mix of reactants in H2O (solvent) - mixing at atomic level
ii) Precipitate precursor by: pH or addition of organic molecule
iii) Heat ppt to remove H2O and/or CO2, leaving MxOy (desired product)
e.g. Zn2+(aq) + 2Fe2+(aq) + 3C2O42-(aq)
ZnFe2(C2O4)3(s)
Why???
Unlike gas phase and solution reactions, the limiting factor in solid-solid
reactions is usually diffusion.
The rate controlling step in a solid state reaction is the diffusion of the
cations through the product layer
dx
kx 1
dt
or
x k 't
1
2
time
k, k '
rate constants
15
1400C
10
MgAl2O4
1500C
1300C
MgO + Al2O3
x2 106 (cm2)
20
100
x = thickness of the product layer
200
time (hours)
Some starting reagents are chemically reactive and / or contain ions that
diffuse easily.
1) Evaporation of a reactant due to high T (e.g. Alkali oxides, Tl2O, PbO, Bi2O3,
HgO).
2) Reaction of a reagent with the container (i.e. Transition metal containing
vessels).
However, SSRs can be (and has been) used to synthesis thousands of solids.
With due care and attention to detail the above problems can be avoided.
BaO + TiO2
BaTiO3
BaCO3 + TiO2
BaTiO3
BaO + CO2(g)
(1200C)
Volatile by
product
Alkaline earth oxides are moisture sensitive and therefore not used as starting reactants
Hydroxides, nitrates, oxalates and carbonates are often used as starting reactants
instead of oxides.
Pestle and mortar
Starting reagents are mixed in
desired stoichiometric
amounts.
a newer version is the ball mill:
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Furnaces (Ovens)
Starting materials (reagents) are
placed inside crucible and put into high
temperature furnace.
Furnaces provide the temperature
to initiate and carry on the reaction.
V2+)
H2 / N2
V2O5 s
VOs
H2 extracts O2
via formation of
H2O
Ni3+)
LaNiO2.5 s LaNiO3 s
O2
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Disadvantages:
Long duration (can take ages!!)
Poor chemical homogeneity (sometimes secondary phases are present, as
BaTi2O5 in the preparation of BaTiO3)
Large grain size (often not mono-disperse)
Use of high temperature (always dangerous and tricky to handle safely)
Lack of control of products formed
Lecture 3: Outcomes
Non conventional synthetic
routes
Soft chemistry methods
Precipitation method
PRECURSOR ROUTES
Sol-gel processes
Inter- and de-intercalation (topotactic process)
Hydrothermal synthesis
Zeolites
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Complementary to SSR:
Aims to improve
homogeneity and particle
size in thermodynamically
stable compounds
Alternative to SSR:
The synthesis
of metastable compounds
which cannot be prepared
by SSR
Co-precipitation
Co-precipitation
Sol-gel
Precursor routes
Sr2CuO2F2+ is a
metastable
compound: cannot be
prepared via solid
state reactions (SSR)
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Soft chemistry reactions are topotactic, i.e. only specific parts of the
starting materials (parent compounds) are targeted.
The use of low temperature does not provide enough energy to build
new structures (conventional SSR), but useful for modification or tuning
of existing structures.
therefore:
Products retains the main structural features of the parent compounds
Advantages
Design of new compounds with targeted structural (physical) properties
Disadvantages
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TiS2 + nBuLi
LixTiS2
+ Li+
Intercalation
LixVS2
VS2
- Li+
deintercalation
TiO2
xn-BuLi in
hexane
(Anatase polymorph)
Insulating solid
LixTiO2
Lithium Titanate superconductor
Tc = 13 K
LixTiO2
+ x/2 octane
Lithiated anatase
(no structural change occurred, still an
insulating white solid)
500 C
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Decomposes on heating
Sol-Gel synthesis
-a wet technique forming the fabrication of a material: (i.e. a metal oxide)
Relatively cheap technique requiring reasonably low T
Dried
(heated)
gradually)
Homogenous
Solution(s) or
colloid
Reagent(s)
Viscous sol
turning to
gel
Fired at
high T
Homogenous amorphous
solid
3-D integrated network
Sol-gel process
Product
The last stage comprises high T heating of the gel (firing) to:
Remove volatile components
Remove any side bonded organics (explained later)
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1) TEOS:
Tetraethylorthosilicate
Si(OCH2CH3)4
2) Ti(OiPr)4:
Titanium isopropoxide
Note:
Si(OCH2CH3)4
Ti(OCH(CH3)2)4
Al(OCH2CH2CH2CH3)3
M(OR)
M(OH)
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Si(OCH2CH3)3(OH) + Si(OCH2CH3)2(OH)2
etc
HO-Si(OR)3
-H2O
(RO)3-Si-O-Si(OR)3
ETC
Cross condensation:
Consider synthesising a material comprising
two (or more cations) M and M'
-M-OH + HO-M-
H2O
-M-O-M-
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Si(OR)4 + H+ + Cl
Si(OR)3(OH) + RCl
Si-(OR)4 + OH
Si(OR)3(OH) + OR
Mg(OCH3)2 +
Al(OCH2CH2CH2CH3)3
(i) Mixing
(ii) Hydrolysis
(iii) Condensation
(iv) Drying
Amorphous GEL
FINAL FIRING at 250C (calcination)
leads to thermal decomposition to very
fine particles of SPINEL
MgAl2O4
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Reaction
Mixture in
H 2O
Teflon
pot
20
Hydrothermal Synthesis
(NOTE: Solvothermal = carried
out in another solvent (not H2O)
SiO2
(solid)
NaOH in H2O
SiO2
Hydrothermal
bomb
(single crystals)
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ZEOLITES
=
AlO4
SiO4
ZEOLITES: structure
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GEL
NawAlxSiyOz zeolite
Particular zeolite formed depends on starting
compostion, temperature and pressure conditions.
The specific zeolite made also depends on the
template used: usually an Alkylammonium cation.
The templates are then calcined or burned off by
heating between 300-400C.
MOLECULAR SIEVES
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ZSM-5
para
meta
Sodium Zeolite A
Water hardness stems from presence of Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions in water
which do not decompose on boiling the water.
The loosely bound Na+ in the cavities / channels are readily replaced by
Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions in aqueous conditions. This process is water softening.
This is why you will find zeolites in commercial washing powders
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H2, NH3
H2
H2
H2
H2
NH3
Cation rich Zeolitic materials are also used as dessicators due to their high affinity
for water
Hydrophobic zeolites (not cation rich) are used in the absorption of organic materials.
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