Shinya Odaa,
Shinji Koharab,
Ryo Tsutsuia,
Mamoru Kasasakua and
Hiromitsu Kozuka*c
aGraduate School of Science and Engineering, Kansai University, Suita, Osaka 564-8680, Japan
bSynchrotron X-ray Group, Light/Quantum Beam Field Research Center for Advanced Measurement and Characterization, NIMS, 1-1-1 Kouto, Sayo-cho, Sayo-gun, Hyogo 679-5148, Japan
cFaculty of Chemistry and Materials Engineering, Kansai University, Suita, Osaka 564-8680, Japan. E-mail: kozuka@kansai-u.ac.jp
First published on 21st April 2020
Titanium-n-butoxide was hydrolyzed in the presence of benzoylacetone, and the resulting solution was concentrated and dried at 120 or 140 °C to obtain transparent amorphous materials. High-energy X-ray diffraction measurement was conducted at the SPring-8 facility, and the reduced pair distribution function, G(r) was calculated by Fourier transform of the total structure factor, S(Q). The G(r) value suggested that the materials are composed of TiO6 octahedra linked by corner- and edge-sharing. Low temperature thermomechanical analysis (TMA) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) were conduced on the materials, where a deflection was detected both in the TMA and DSC curves, revealing the glass transition of the materials. Combined with the previous work based on infrared absorption spectroscopy and gel permeation chromatography, the materials are demonstrated to be a new class of glassy materials composed of linked metal-oxygen polyhedra chelated with organic molecules. The materials are innovative due to the high refractive indices that originate in the metal-oxo oligomers and to the shapability given by their thermoplastic properties.
Recently we have demonstrated that the hydrolysis of metal alkoxides in the presence of specific β-diketones, followed by concentration and drying, produces optically transparent materials that exhibit thermoplasticity. The specific β-diketones include 1-phenylbutane-1,3-dione (benzoylacetone, bzac), 1-(morpholin-4-yl)butane-1,3-dione and 1,3-diphenylpropane-1,3-dione.8–10 Acetylacetone (acac), a different type of β-diketone, has often been used in the field of sol–gel technology to control the rate of hydrolysis of transition metal alkoxides.11,12 However, the gels prepared from acac-containing alkoxide solutions do not show such thermoplasticity, and are just hardened when heated, which results from the loss of acac followed by condensation reaction to allow metal-oxo bridges to be developed. In other words, thermoplastic properties have never been expected before our discovery of such gels derived from β-diketone-containing alkoxide solutions.
We have made some characterizations on the transparent, thermoplastic products obtained from titanium alkoxide solutions containing benzoylacetone (bzac) in previous works.9,10 X-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements showed that the products are amorphous.9 Infrared (IR) absorption spectroscopy evidenced the chelation of the titanium atoms by bzac.9,10 We also studied the molecular weight of the constituent species by gel permeation chromatography (GPC), finding that the polystyrene-based weight average molecular weight ranging from 150 to 630 increases with increasing water content and with decreasing bzac content in the starting solutions.10 It was also found that the materials composed of larger molecular weight oligomers exhibit higher softening temperatures in thermomechanical analysis (TMA) curves.9,10 These results strongly suggest that the materials are composed of titanium-oxo oligomers that are formed via hydrolysis and condensation of titanium alkoxides modified with bzac. The surface of the titanium-oxo oligomers may be covered with the hydrophobic segment of bzac, which leads to weak interaction between the oligomers, allowing thermoplasticity.
In spite of the results and discussions mentioned above, we still do not have direct experimental evidences that guarantee the titanium-oxo oligomers as the constituents of the materials. We do not know their structure either, i.e. the coordination number of the titanium atoms and the type of the linkage of the coordination polyhedra. Then the first purpose of the work is to clarify the structure of the constituents of the thermoplastic materials that are prepared from bzac-containing titanium alkoxide solutions. The structure was studied by high energy X-ray diffraction (HEXRD) measurement at SPring-8 and pair distribution function analyses.
The thermoplastic properties allow us to expect that such materials prepared from β-diketone-containing alkoxide solutions could be a new class of glass materials. Glasses are well known in oxides,13 chalcogenides,14 halides,15 metallic alloys,16 organic polymers,17 and organic molecules (the so-called “molecular liquids”).18 Glassy states have also been reported recently in metal–organic-frameworks (MOF's).19,20 However, glassy states have never been reported in materials composed of metal-oxo oligomers modified with organic ligands. If glass transition is detected, such oxo oligomer-based materials will be recognized as a new class of glasses, which is scientifically interesting and important. The properties based on metal-oxygen polyhedra in conjunction with transparency and thermoplastic properties would also make them attractive from the viewpoint of engineering as novel functional materials that can be shaped near at room temperatures via injection molding or melt casting. For these reasons, the glass transition was examined for the materials prepared from bzac-containing titanium alkoxide solutions.
For the samples for low-temperature TMA and low temperature differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), the concentrated solution was solidified by drying on a sodalime silicate glass plate at 120 °C for 40 min in air. The solidified product was heated again at 120 °C, where the product exhibited fluidity, and was put into a syringe. The sample in the syringe was poured at 120 °C in an aluminum cell 4.5 mm in diameter and 1 mm in depth and in that 5 mm in diameter and 5 mm in depth for TMA and DSC measurements, respectively, and solidified again by cooling down to room temperature. The total time for heating at 120 °C was 120 min including the drying of the concentrated solution. Low temperature TMA was performed using a thermomechanical analyzer (TMA8310, Rigaku, Tokyo, Japan), where the sample was heated from −50 °C at a rate of 5 °C min−1 in flowing N2 gas under a load of 98 mN. Low temperature DSC was conducted using a differential scanning calorimeter (DSC220, Seiko Instruments, Chiba), were the sample in the aluminum cell was sealed with an aluminum lid and heated from −50 °C at a rate of 5 °C min−1.
The HEXRD measurements were carried out at the beamline BL04B2 of SPring-8 facility, Japan. The samples were crushed and placed in a silica glass tube of 2 mm in inner diameter and served for the measurements where an empty silica glass tube was used as the blank. The monochromatic X-rays of 61.4 keV were obtained using a Si(220) monochromator, and the measurement was conducted over the scattering vector, Q, of 0.2–21.0 A−1. The observed diffraction profile was corrected for polarization, absorption, air scattering, and Compton scattering, and was normalized to give a structure factor, S(Q). The reduced pair distribution function, G(r), was calculated by Fourier transform of the S(Q). The details of data analysis as well as the data analysis code are described in ref. 21.
Fig. 1 Photograph of the solidified product that was prepared by dropping the concentrated solution on a square Si(100) substrate, followed by drying at 120 °C. |
The first nearest Ti–O distances reported in literature for titanium–oxygen coordination polyhedra are summarized in Table 1. Prasai et al. reported that TiO6 octahedra have Ti–O distances of 1.91–2.00 Å in rutile, anatase and amorphous titania.23 On the other hand, Kaur et al. reported that TiO4 tetrahedra in amorphous titania nanoparticles have Ti–O distances of 1.63–1.82 Å.24 Cormier et al. reported that TiO5 square pyramids in K2O–TiO2–SiO2 glasses have four and one Ti–O distances of 1.96 and 1.68 Å, respectively.25 Farges et al. also studied the Ti–O distances in the TiO5 square pyramids in (Na2O, K2O)–TiO2–SiO2 glasses, reporting the distances of the four and one Ti–O bonds to be 1.94–1.95 and 1.70 Å, respectively.26 Then the peak detected at 1.94 Å in Fig. 2c is assigned to the first nearest Ti–O distance, and most of the titanium species may be present as TiO6 octahedra in the solidified product.
Coordination number | Ti–O distance (1st nearest neighbor)/Å |
---|---|
4 | 1.63–1.82 |
5 | 1.68, 1.96 |
6 | 1.70, 1.94–1.95 |
7 | 191–2.00 |
Table 2 summarizes the Ti–Ti, Ti–O and O–O distance in anatase and rutile calculated using VESTA program.27 It is seen that rutile has the second nearest Ti–Ti distances of 2.96 and 3.57 Å while anatase has those of 3.04 and 3.78 Å. The shorter and longer distances correspond to those in edge- and corner-shared octahedra, respectively. Then it is reasonable to assign the G(r) peaks at 2.94 and 3.53 Å to the Ti–Ti distances in edge- and corner-shared TiO6 octahedra, respectively. Other atomic pair peaks possibly overlap with those of such Ti–Ti pairs. Rutile has an O–O distance of 2.96 Å and Ti–O distances of 3.49 and 3.56 Å (Table 2), which can overlap with the Ti–Ti distances. The nearest Ti–C distance in a titanium complex with chelating bzac is ca. 3.0 Å,28 which can also overlap with the Ti–Ti distance of 2.94 Å (Table 3). The Ti–Ti peak at 3.53 Å has a shoulder at 3.81 Å. Kaur et al. reported that the second nearest Ti–O distance is 3.78 Å in amorphous titania nanoparticles composed of ca. 55% TiO6, 32% TiO5, 7% TiO4 and 5% TiO7 polyhedra.24 Then one possibility of the shoulder at 3.81 Å is that of the second nearest Ti–O distance.
Crystals | Atomic distance/Å | ||
---|---|---|---|
Ti–Ti | Ti–O | O–O | |
Anatase | |||
1st nearest neighbor | 3.04 | 1.93, 1.98 | 2.47, 2.79, 3.04 |
2nd nearest neighbor | 3.78 | 3.86 | 3.70, 3.78 |
3rd nearest neighbor | 4.85 | 4.25, 4.27 | 3.96 |
4th nearest neighbor | 5.35, 5.46 | 4.75 | 4.52 |
Rutile | |||
1st nearest neighbor | 2.96 | 1.95, 1.98 | 2.54, 2.78, 2.96 |
2nd nearest neighbor | 3.57 | 3.49, 3.56 | 3.32 |
3rd nearest neighbor | 4.59 | 4.08 | 3.90, 3.96 |
4th nearest neighbor | 5.46, 5.50 | 4.52, 4.57, 4.62 | 4.45, 4.59 |
Atomic pair | Atomic distance (1st nearest neighbor)/Å |
---|---|
Ti–O | 1.98–2.08 |
Ti–C | 3.00–3.05 |
O–C | 1.27–1.31 |
The titanium atoms are chelated by bzac in the solidified product as the authors' group clarified based on infrared absorption spectroscopy in previous papers.9,10 GPC measurements suggested that the solidified product prepared from the solution of Ti(OC4H9n)4:bzac:H2O:CH3COCH3 = 1:2:1:20 in mole ratios has two peaks in molecular weight distribution; one at ca. 22000 and the other at ca. 8000.10 The molecular weights of 22000 and 8000 correspond to polymerized species composed of ca. sixty and twenty TiO6 octahedra, respectively, on the assumption that one bzac chelates one titanium atom. Then a structural model of the solidified product can be drawn as shown in Fig. 3, where several tens TiO6 octahedra chemically modified with bzac are linked by corner- and edge-sharing.
Fig. 3 Structure model for the solidified product prepared from the titanium-n-butoxide solution containing bzac. |
Fig. 4a and b show the TMA and DSC curves, respectively, of the solidified product. Both curves clearly show a deflection around 10–30 °C, which is attributed to glass transition. Then the amorphous materials that are composed of bzac-modified TiO6 octahedra linked by corner- and edge-sharing are now demonstrated to be a new class of glass materials.
Several studies have been conducted on glasses prepared by quenching the molten lead acetate.29–33 Venkatasubbaiah et al.31 and Murali et al.32 studied the local structure of lead acetate glasses using probe ions, reporting that the probe ions are present as octahedra. Ingram et al.30 and Murali et al.32 classified ordinary oxide glasses as polymeric glasses and nitrate and sulfate glasses as ionic glasses, recognizing that such lead acetate glasses as an intermediate between polymeric and ionic glasses. Acetate glasses obtained via thermal decomposition of magnesium acetate tetrahydrate are also reported, where glass transition was detected.34,35 Although no information is given on the linkages of the polyhedra in such acetate glasses, there is a possibility that they are composed of metal-oxo oligomers chemically modified by acetate ions. It should be noted, however, that the present route based on the hydrolysis of metal alkoxides in the presence of chelating agents may enlarge the possibilities to widen the compositions of such a class of glasses because of the flexible choices of metal elements and chelating agents.
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