AI Article Synopsis

  • Solution-based combustion synthesis was utilized to study how bismuth (Bi) can dissolve in thoria (ThO2), allowing up to 50 mol % substitution for thorium while maintaining its structure, which increased the material's surface area and defect density.
  • Analysis techniques such as X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy revealed that incorporating bismuth leads to changes in lattice parameters and defect bands, indicating higher oxygen vacancy concentrations related to the amount of bismuth used.
  • The resulting materials demonstrated enhanced catalytic properties for transforming nitroaromatics and decolorizing organic dyes, showing a correlation between oxygen vacancy concentrations and their effectiveness as catalysts.

Article Abstract

Recognizing immense advantages of solution-based combustion synthesis, its applicability to determine the extent of dissolution of Bi in fluorite-structured thoria has been examined to generate high-surface-area samples with massive defects. Up to 50 mol % of thorium could be substituted with bismuth retaining fluorite structure beyond which phase separation occurred. The lattice parameters from Le-Bail refinements of their powder X-ray diffraction patterns showed marginal increase with increase in bismuth content, suggesting the competing effect between the size of the cation and the oxygen vacancy concentration. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry analysis and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy measurements have also confirmed the composition and structure of the limiting composition. With progressive bismuth content, the band due to the fluorite (at 460 cm) diffused and a defect band in the region 570-600 cm emerged in the Raman spectra. From these changes, the oxygen vacancy concentrations in these samples have been determined, which increased with increase in bismuth content. Absorbance in the visible region was noticed for bismuth-containing samples, and band gap values determined from the Kubelka-Munk function were in the range 2.34-3.24 eV. In addition to the blue emission from oxygen vacancies, P → S transition of Bi was noticed in the photoluminescence spectrum. From Brunauer-Emmett-Teller measurements, the surface area of ThBiO obtained by solution combustion synthesis was measured to be 265.74 m g, higher than the value (39.00 m g) for the sample prepared by solid-state synthesis. All of these factors combined with oxygen vacancies as defect centers have been found to play critical control over their use as catalyst for the reductive transformation of nitroaromatics and oxidative decolorization of organic dye molecules (methyl orange and xylenol orange). A nice correlation between oxygen vacancy concentration and pseudo first-order rate constants of these catalytic conversions has been arrived. The catalyst was found to retain its efficiency up to four cycles without undergoing any structural change during these experiments.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6644670PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.8b00528DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

oxygen vacancies
12
combustion synthesis
12
bismuth content
12
oxygen vacancy
12
solution combustion
8
increase bismuth
8
vacancy concentration
8
oxygen
6
catalytic application
4
application oxygen
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!