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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39031126

RESUMO

The ability to control the porosity of thin oxide films is a key factor determining their properties. Despite the abundance of dry processes for synthesizing oxide porous layers, a high porosity range is typically achieved by spin-coating-based wet chemical methods. Besides, special techniques such as supercritical drying are required to replace the pore liquid with air while maintaining the porous network. In this study, we propose a new method for the fabrication of ultraporous titanium dioxide thin films at room or mild temperatures (T ≤ 120 °C) by a sequential process involving plasma deposition and etching. These films are conformal to the substrate topography even for high-aspect-ratio substrates and show percolated porosity values above 85% that are comparable to those of advanced aerogels. The films deposited at room temperature are amorphous. However, they become partly crystalline at slightly higher temperatures, presenting a distribution of anatase clusters embedded in the sponge-like open porous structure. Surprisingly, the porous structure remains after annealing the films at 450 °C in air, which increases the fraction of embedded anatase nanocrystals. The films are antireflective, omniphobic, and photoactive, becoming superhydrophilic when subjected to ultraviolet light irradiation. The supported, percolated, and nanoporous structure can be used as an electron-conducting electrode in perovskite solar cells. The properties of the cells depend on the aerogel-like film thickness, which reaches efficiencies close to those of commercial mesoporous anatase electrodes. This generic solvent-free synthesis is scalable and applicable to ultrahigh porous conformal oxides of different compositions, with potential applications in photonics, optoelectronics, energy storage, and controlled wetting.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(2): 940-7, 2015 Jan 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25531937

RESUMO

Scanning tunneling microscopy, temperature-programmed reaction, near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy, and density functional theory calculations were used to study the adsorption and reactions of phenylacetylene and chlorobenzene on Ag(100). In the absence of solvent molecules and additives, these molecules underwent homocoupling and Sonogashira cross-coupling in an unambiguously heterogeneous mode. Of particular interest is the use of silver, previously unexplored, and chlorobenzene-normally regarded as relatively inert in such reactions. Both molecules adopt an essentially flat-lying conformation for which the observed and calculated adsorption energies are in reasonable agreement. Their magnitudes indicate that in both cases adsorption is predominantly due to dispersion forces for which interaction nevertheless leads to chemical activation and reaction. Both adsorbates exhibited pronounced island formation, thought to limit chemical activity under the conditions used and posited to occur at island boundaries, as was indeed observed in the case of phenylacetylene. The implications of these findings for the development of practical catalytic systems are considered.

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