Solvothermal Synthesis Routes to Substituted Cerium Dioxide Materials

We review the solution-based synthesis routes to cerium oxide materials where one or more elements are included in place of a proportion of the cerium, i.e., substitution of cerium is performed. The focus is on the solvothermal method, where reagents are heated above the boiling point of the solvent...

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Main Authors: James W. Annis, Janet M. Fisher, David Thompsett, Richard I. Walton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Inorganics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6740/9/6/40
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spelling doaj-9b76208746a640918841918b0c6126d92021-06-01T00:39:54ZengMDPI AGInorganics2304-67402021-05-019404010.3390/inorganics9060040Solvothermal Synthesis Routes to Substituted Cerium Dioxide MaterialsJames W. Annis0Janet M. Fisher1David Thompsett2Richard I. Walton3Department of Chemistry, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UKJohnson Matthey Technology Centre, Sonning Common, Reading RG4 9NH, UKJohnson Matthey Technology Centre, Sonning Common, Reading RG4 9NH, UKDepartment of Chemistry, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UKWe review the solution-based synthesis routes to cerium oxide materials where one or more elements are included in place of a proportion of the cerium, i.e., substitution of cerium is performed. The focus is on the solvothermal method, where reagents are heated above the boiling point of the solvent to induce crystallisation directly from the solution. This yields unusual compositions with crystal morphology often on the nanoscale. Chemical elements from all parts of the periodic table are considered, from transition metals to main group elements and the rare earths, including isovalent and aliovalent cations, and surveyed using the literature published in the past ten years. We illustrate the versatility of this synthesis method to allow the formation of functional materials with applications in contemporary applications such as heterogeneous catalysis, electrodes for solid oxide fuel cells, photocatalysis, luminescence and biomedicine. We pick out emerging trends towards control of crystal habit by use of non-aqueous solvents and solution additives and identify challenges still remaining, including in detailed structural characterisation, the understanding of crystallisation mechanisms and the scale-up of synthesis.https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6740/9/6/40ceriahydrothermalcatalysisnanomaterialscrystallisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James W. Annis
Janet M. Fisher
David Thompsett
Richard I. Walton
spellingShingle James W. Annis
Janet M. Fisher
David Thompsett
Richard I. Walton
Solvothermal Synthesis Routes to Substituted Cerium Dioxide Materials
Inorganics
ceria
hydrothermal
catalysis
nanomaterials
crystallisation
author_facet James W. Annis
Janet M. Fisher
David Thompsett
Richard I. Walton
author_sort James W. Annis
title Solvothermal Synthesis Routes to Substituted Cerium Dioxide Materials
title_short Solvothermal Synthesis Routes to Substituted Cerium Dioxide Materials
title_full Solvothermal Synthesis Routes to Substituted Cerium Dioxide Materials
title_fullStr Solvothermal Synthesis Routes to Substituted Cerium Dioxide Materials
title_full_unstemmed Solvothermal Synthesis Routes to Substituted Cerium Dioxide Materials
title_sort solvothermal synthesis routes to substituted cerium dioxide materials
publisher MDPI AG
series Inorganics
issn 2304-6740
publishDate 2021-05-01
description We review the solution-based synthesis routes to cerium oxide materials where one or more elements are included in place of a proportion of the cerium, i.e., substitution of cerium is performed. The focus is on the solvothermal method, where reagents are heated above the boiling point of the solvent to induce crystallisation directly from the solution. This yields unusual compositions with crystal morphology often on the nanoscale. Chemical elements from all parts of the periodic table are considered, from transition metals to main group elements and the rare earths, including isovalent and aliovalent cations, and surveyed using the literature published in the past ten years. We illustrate the versatility of this synthesis method to allow the formation of functional materials with applications in contemporary applications such as heterogeneous catalysis, electrodes for solid oxide fuel cells, photocatalysis, luminescence and biomedicine. We pick out emerging trends towards control of crystal habit by use of non-aqueous solvents and solution additives and identify challenges still remaining, including in detailed structural characterisation, the understanding of crystallisation mechanisms and the scale-up of synthesis.
topic ceria
hydrothermal
catalysis
nanomaterials
crystallisation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6740/9/6/40
work_keys_str_mv AT jameswannis solvothermalsynthesisroutestosubstitutedceriumdioxidematerials
AT janetmfisher solvothermalsynthesisroutestosubstitutedceriumdioxidematerials
AT davidthompsett solvothermalsynthesisroutestosubstitutedceriumdioxidematerials
AT richardiwalton solvothermalsynthesisroutestosubstitutedceriumdioxidematerials
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