Ce(Oh)(2)Cl And Lanthanide-Substituted Variants As Precursors To Redox-Active Ceo2 Materials

Alexander J A Dunn, James W Annis,Janet M Fisher,David Thompsett,Richard I Walton

DALTON TRANSACTIONS(2020)

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摘要
The cerium(III) hydroxide chloride Ce(OH)(2)Cl crystallises directly as a polycrystalline powder from a solution of CeCl3 center dot 7H(2)O in poly(ethylene) glycol (M-n = 400) heated at 240 degrees C and is found to be isostructural with La(OH)(2)Cl, as determined from high-resolution synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction (P2(1)/m, a = 6.2868(2) angstrom, b = 3.94950(3) angstrom, c = 6.8740(3) angstrom, beta = 113.5120(5)degrees). Replacement of a proportion of the cerium chloride in synthesis by a second lanthanide chloride yields a set of materials Ce(1-x)Ln(x)(OH)(2)Cl for Ln = La, Pr, Gd, Tb. For La the maximum value of x is 0.2, with an isotropic expansion of the unit cell, but for the other lanthanides a wider composition range is possible, and the lattice parameters show an isotropic contraction with increasing x. Thermal decomposition of the hydroxide chlorides at 700 degrees C yields mixed-oxides Ce(1-x)Ln(x)O(2-delta) that all have cubic fluorite structures with either expanded (Ln = La, Gd) or contracted (Ln = Pr, Tb) unit cells compared to CeO2. Scanning electron microscopy shows a shape memory effect in crystal morphology upon decomposition, with clusters of anisotropic sub-micron crystallites being seen in the precursor and oxide products. The Pr- and Tb-substituted oxides contain the substituent in a mixture of +3 and +4 oxidation states, as seen by X-ray absorption near edge structure spectroscopy at the lanthanide L-III edges. The mixed oxide materials are examined using temperature programmed reduction in 10%H-2 in N-2, which reveals redox properties suitable for heterogeneous catalysis, with the Pr-substituted materials showing the greatest reducibility at lower temperature.
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