Computational assessment of the potential of cross-catalytic coprecipitating systems for the bottom-up design of nanocomposites
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Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Royal Society of Chemistry
Fecha
2023-10-18Referencia bibliográfica
Rouillard, J. et al. Computational assessment of the potential of cross-catalytic coprecipitating systems for the bottom-up design of nanocomposites. Nanoscale Adv., 2023, 5, 6148. [DOI: 10.1039/d3na00271c]
Patrocinador
Chinese Academy of Sciences Pioneer Hundred Talents ProgramResumen
The production of nanocomposites is often economically and environmentally costly. Silica-witherite
biomorphs, known for producing a wealth of life-like shapes, are nanocomposites entirely formed
through self-organization processes. Behind these precipitates are two precipitation reactions that
catalyze each other. Using a simple computational approach, we show here that this type of chemical
system – defined here as Cross-Catalytic Coprecipitating Systems (CCCSs) – is of great interest to
material design. Provided that cross-catalytic effects are sufficient to overcome the precipitation
thresholds for each phase, all CCCSs can be expected to self-organize into nanocomposite materials
through a one-pot, one-step synthesis protocol. Symmetry-breaking events generating various complex,
ordered textures are predicted in CCCSs involving crystalline phases. While high levels of stochasticity
lead to a loss of ordering, coprecipitation is found to be robust to diffusion or advection in the solution.
This model shows that a couple of chemical reactions can generate a range of complex textures – with
possibly distinct physical/chemical properties. Cross-catalytic coprecipitating systems consequently
represent a promising avenue for producing nanocomposites with complex textures at reduced
economic and environmental costs.