Catalysis of silica sol–gel reactions using a PdCl2 precursor

This work shows for the first time that palladium chloride, PdCl 2 , can influence the sequencing of sol–gel reactions involving tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS). A three-step procedure was utilised to create porous silica materials: liquid-phase sol reaction, drying and calcination. Evidence from 1...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of sol-gel science and technology 2020-08, Vol.95 (2), p.456-464
Hauptverfasser: Ballinger, Benjamin, Motuzas, Julius, Smart, Simon, Ismail, Suzylawati, Zubir, Nor Aida, Abd Jalil, Siti Nurehan, da Costa, Joao C. Diniz
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This work shows for the first time that palladium chloride, PdCl 2 , can influence the sequencing of sol–gel reactions involving tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS). A three-step procedure was utilised to create porous silica materials: liquid-phase sol reaction, drying and calcination. Evidence from 1 H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy revealed that PdCl 2 had negligible influence on liquid-phase sol–gel reactions. During drying, 29 Si NMR data showed that the silica sols doped with PdCl 2 underwent more condensation reactions than those without. Variations in parameters known to effect sol–gel reactions could not account for the magnitude of the observed changes. Evidence from differential scanning calorimetry indicates that palladium catalyses silica hydrolysis during the drying stage, which promotes condensation reactions. Despite being more condensed after drying, 29 Si NMR analysis revealed that the palladium silica structure became less condensed (compared with non-doped silica) after calcination. It is hypothesised that the interaction between palladium oxide and silanol groups inhibits condensation during the calcination process. The differences in sol–gel bonding seems to have minimal influence on the porosity of the calcined materials, though the presence of palladium nanoparticles reduced the total pore volume. This work has important implications for the design and optimisation of porous palladium silica materials. It also challenges the common assumption that metal dopants do not interact with silica sol–gel reactions. Differential scanning calorimetry analysis of silica (Si06) and palladium doped silica (PdSi06) xerogels prepared via sol–gel. The PdSi06 material exhibits no exothermic peak between 300 and 500 °C. This is indicative of the catalytic effect of aqueous palladium species on sol–gel hydrolysis reactions. Highlights Palladium chloride catalyses the silica sol–gel reaction with tetraethyl orthosilicate. 29 Si NMR shows that catalysis occurs during solvent evaporation. During calcination, palladium dopant inhibits the formation of siloxane bonds. It is hypothesised that palladium stabilises silanol bonds, preventing their condensation. Despite influencing sol–gel reactions, palladium did not alter material pore size distribution.
ISSN:0928-0707
1573-4846
DOI:10.1007/s10971-020-05241-y