Carbon-supported base metal nanoparticles: cellulose at work.

Jacco Hoekstra, Marjan Versluijs-Helder, Edward J Vlietstra, John W Geus, Leonardus W Jenneskens
Author Information
  1. Jacco Hoekstra: Organic Chemistry&Catalysis Debye Institute for Nanomaterials Science, Utrecht University, Universiteitsweg 99, 3584 CG Utrecht (The Netherlands), Fax: (+31) 30-2523615 http://www.uu.nl/science/occ.

Abstract

Pyrolysis of base metal salt loaded microcrystalline cellulose spheres gives a facile access to carbon-supported base metal nanoparticles, which have been characterized with temperature-dependent XRD, SEM, TEM, ICP-MS and elemental analysis. The role of cellulose is multifaceted: 1) it facilitates a homogeneous impregnation of the aqueous base metal salt solutions, 2) it acts as an efficacious (carbonaceous) support material for the uniformly dispersed base metal salts, their oxides and the metal nanoparticles derived therefrom, and 3) it contributes as a reducing agent via carbothermal reduction for the conversion of the metal oxide nanoparticles into the metal nanoparticles. Finally, the base metal nanoparticles capable of forming metastable metal carbides catalytically convert the carbonaceous support into a mesoporous graphitic carbon material.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Carbon
Cellulose
Hydrogen
Metal Nanoparticles
Metals
Reducing Agents

Chemicals

Metals
Reducing Agents
Carbon
Hydrogen
Cellulose

Word Cloud

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