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Mesoporous Oxide Materials by Soft Micelle Templating

Mesoporous Oxide Materials by Soft Micelle Templating [Pg.703]

even after more than 20 years, almost all developed methods related to the synthesis of mesoporous materials by surfactant soft templates still use knowledge based on mesoporous silica materials. The synthesis of mesoporous oxides of TMs (i.e., Ti, Zr, and Mn), metalloids (i.e., Ge), posttransition metals (i.e., A1 and Ga), and lanthanides (i.e., Ce) has been adapted from the methods developed in mesoporous silica synthesis [44-49]. In other words, one can easily find a silica analog of any procedure for the synthesis of non-silicious mesoporous oxides. Flexible Si—O bonds made via well-known and easily manageable sol-gel chemistry, allow one to use various solvents or solvent mixtures (i.e., aqueous or alcoholic), pH (1-7), temperatures, and pressures to synthesize numerous mesoporous silica materials [50]. However, sol-gel chemistry of other elements especially TMs requires more controlled reaction conditions. The sol-gel chemistry (hydrolysis and condensation) of early (group I-IV) TMs can be controlled in alcoholic solutions with proper pH, temperature, and humidity adjustments [2,4,10,46,47,50]. Typical TM sources are either commercially available alkoxides (i.e., titanium isopropox-ide) or can be formed in situ by the reaction between anhydrous TM chloride salts and alcohols (i.e., WClg + EtOH W(OCH2CH3)6). [Pg.703]

The mesoporous materials by soft micelle templating, shortly, are formed by controlled condensation of inorganic sols around (or in) the surfactant micelles. [Pg.703]




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Mesoporous materials

Mesoporous oxides

Micelle templating

Micelle-soft-templates

Micelle-templated materials

Micelles materials

Oxidation materials

Oxide materials

Oxidized material

Oxidizing material

Soft Templating

Soft materials

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