4.8 Article

A Polymer-Oriented Self-Assembly Strategy toward Mesoporous Metal Oxides with Ultrahigh Surface Areas

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.201801543

Keywords

high crystallinity; mesoporous metal oxides; photocatalytic hydrogen production; polymer-oriented self-assembly strategy; ultrahigh surface area

Funding

  1. Young Thousand Talented Program
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21671073, 21621001, 21671074]
  3. 111 Project of the Ministry of Education of China [B17020]
  4. Project Development Plan of Science and Technology of Jilin Province [20160520126JH]
  5. US Department of Energy, Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Chemical Science, Geoscience, and Bioscience
  6. Program for JLU Science and Technology Innovative Research Team

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Mesoporous metal oxides (MMOs) have attracted comprehensive attention in many fields, including energy storage, catalysis, and separation. Current synthesis of MMOs mainly involve use of surfactants as templates to generate mesopores and organic reagents as solvents to hinder hydrolysis and condensation of inorganic precursors, which is adverse to adjusting the interactions between surfactants and inorganic precursors. The resulting products have uncontrollable pore structure, crystallinity, and relatively lower surface areas. Here, a facile and general polymer-oriented self-assembly strategy to synthesize a series of MMOs (e.g., TiO2, ZrO2, NbO5, Al2O3, Ta2O5, HfO2, and SnO2) by using cationic polymers as porogens and metal alkoxides as metal oxide precursors in a robust aqueous synthesis system are reported. Nitrogen adsorption analysis and transmission electron microscopy confirm that the obtained MMOs have ultrahigh specific surface areas and large pore volumes (i.e., 733 m(2) g(-1) and 0.485 cm(3) g(-1) for mesoporous TiO2). Moreover, the structural parameters (surface area, pore size, and pore volume) and crystallinity can be readily controlled by tuning the interactions between cationic polymers and precursors. The as-synthesized crystalline mesoporous TiO2 exhibits promising performance in photocatalytic water splitting of hydrogen production and a high hydrogen production rate of 3.68 mol h(-1) g(-1).

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