4.7 Article

A Simple Method for the Synthesis of a Coral-like Boron Nitride Micro-/Nanostructure Catalyzed by Fe

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano13040753

Keywords

boron nitride; coral-like; micro-; nanostructure; ball milling and annealing; mechanism

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A coral-like boron nitride (BN) micro-/nanostructure was synthesized from B2O3 using a ball milling and annealing process catalyzed by Fe. The structure consists of bamboo-shaped BN nanotubes as the stem and h-BN nanoflakes growing outward on the surface of the nanotube. The morphology of the BN nanotube was found to be dependent on the annealing time, developing from smooth nanotubes to rough, coral-like structures.
Catalyzed by Fe, novel a coral-like boron nitride (BN) micro-/nanostructure was synthesized from B2O3 by a ball milling and annealing process. Observations of the morphology of the product indicated that the coral-like BN micro-/nanostructure consists of a bamboo-shaped nanotube stem and dense h-BN nanoflakes growing outward on the surface of the nanotube. Experimental results showed that the morphology of the BN nanotube was greatly dependent on the anneal process parameters. With the annealing time increasing from 0.5 h to 4 h, the morphology developed from smooth BN nanotubes, with a diameter size of around 100 nm, to rough, coral-like boron nitride with a large diameter of 3.6 mu m. The formation mechanism of this coral-like BN micro-/nanostructure is a two-stage growth process: bamboo-shaped BN nanotubes are first generated through a vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) mechanism and then nanoflakes grow surrounding the surface of the nanotube. Acid pickling and a hydrolysis process were carried out to remove Fe, iron nitrogen and unreacted B2O3 impurities.

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