Miriam M.
Unterlass
*abc
aInstitute of Materials Chemistry, Technische Universität Wien, Getreidemarkt 9/165, 1060 Vienna, Austria. E-mail: miriam.unterlass@tuwien.ac.at
bInstitute of Applied Synthetic Chemistry, Technische Universität Wien, Getreidemarkt 9/163, 1060 Vienna, Austria
cCeMM – Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Lazarettgasse 14, AKH BT 25.3, 1090 Vienna, Austria
Miriam M. Unterlass |
Part of the Editor’s collection is an exquisite study by Reeja-Jayan and coworkers that sheds more light on MW-assisted HTS (DOI: 10.1039/D0TA03721D). They study the effect of the electromagnetic (EM) field generated through MW-heating, on the atomic structure of hydrothermally generated SnO2 through in situ synchrotron X-ray pair distribution function (PDF) analysis. Most interestingly, the authors show that the EM field has a distinct impact on oxygen atomic displacement, suggesting that EM field-assisted growth is mediated by changes to the oxygen sublattice. This finding could have great potential in using EM fields for tailoring atomic arrangements during HTS.
Flow synthesis has – with due right – become a shining beacon of hope for more efficient, rapid synthesis, and has also not stopped at HTS. The beginnings of HTS and synthesis in supercritical water already date back to the 1990s.5 Also, part of this collection is a contribution by Kellici and coworkers on HTS in flow (DOI: 10.1039/C9TA11781D). They report the synthesis of blue-luminescent nitrogen-doped carbon quantum dots of ∼3 nm in size from the precursors citric acid and ammonia, and additionally show that these materials can be used for CrVI ion sensing. Another interesting extension of HTS is reported by Yan and coworkers (DOI: 10.1039/D0TA00870B). The authors combine HTS with electrodeposition for synthesizing a variety of hierarchical nanostructures of CoP, one of the cobalt phosphides. By treating carbon cloths at different HTS conditions with a precursor solution, they show that the cloths can be decorated with a wide range of morphologically different Co(OH)2 nanostructures. In subsequent phosphidation of the isolated seeded cloths with PH3, a variety of CoP hierarchical nanostructures is generated. These CoP nanostructures show catalytic activity in water splitting reactions.
HTS is exquisitely well suited for generating various metal oxides. Interesting recent contributions showcase the HTS of manganese oxide-based materials, including a report by Wu and coworkers on the mild (100 °C, 12 h) HTS of Fe-doped MnO2 as a nitrogen reduction electrocatalyst (DOI: 10.1039/C9TA13026H). A report by Xia and coworkers contributes the also relatively mild (150 °C, 24 h) HTS of Cr-doped δ-MnO2 (birnessite) as an electrode material for supercapacitors (DOI: 10.1039/D0TA01480J). Furthermore, several recent works provide new examples of the HTS of core–shell hybrid structures. These include works by Swain and coworkers on Fe(0) nanoparticles (NPs) coated with iron oxides, and Mn(0) NPs coated with manganese oxides (DOI: 10.1039/D0TA00611D); Yu and coworkers on Au(0) NPs coated with CeO2, which are additionally functionalized with Pt(0) NPs ≤5 nm in diameter (DOI: 10.1039/D0TA00811G); and by Tonda and coworkers, who report the synthesis of TiO2 NPs coated with a shell of NiAl-layered double hydroxide (DOI: 10.1039/D0TA00104J). All three examples use NPs synthesized prior to HTS as cores, and hydrothermally deposit the shell of the core–shell NPs, thereby providing nice examples of the use of HTS to deposit materials on premade seeds for the preparation of controlled hybrid NP nanostructures. Aside from the HTS of metal oxide-based materials, several recent reports provide new examples of the amenability of sulfidic materials to HTS. Morán and coworkers report the synthesis of phase-pure polycrystalline Sn1−δS via MW-assisted HTS (DOI: 10.1039/D0MA00301H), and Sangabathula and Sharma report the HTS of Mo-doped nickel sulfide through the HT treatment of a nickel foam with ammonium heptamolybdate tetrahydrate and thiourea (DOI: 10.1039/D0MA00593B). Finally, recent contributions also highlight the synthesis of zerovalent materials, including the Jiang et al. report on the HTS of tellurium nanowires through hydrothermal reduction of sodium tellurite with glucose (DOI: 10.1039/D0MA00220H).
These are just some of the many recent papers published in Journal of Materials Chemistry A and Materials Advances on the topic of hydrothermal synthesis of materials. I hope that you will find them an interesting read!
Sincerely yours,
Miriam Unterlass
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