2008 Annual Meeting
(304b) Templated Directed Electrodeposition of SnO2-Nanotubes
Authors
Lai, M. - Presenter, University of California, Riverside
Mubeen, S., Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of California-Riverside
Lim, J. H., UC, Riverside
Mulchandani, A., University of California, Riverside
Deshusses, M. A., University of California, Riverside
Myung, N. V., University of California Riverside
Templated electrosynthesis has widely been employed to prepare solids of defined dimension.[1] Here we illustrate how electrochemistry can be employed to manage the pH within the pores of a template and demonstrate that controlled growth of continuous SnO2 nanotubes can be achieved. A gold electrode modified with a porous polycarbonate membrane was immersed in an aqueous tin dichloride solution. Electrochemistry was employed to control the local pH within the pores and drive a precipitation reaction. Removal of the gold and dissolution of the membrane yielded polycrystalline tin oxide nanotubes. The crystallinity of the as-deposited material was enhanced by annealing in ambient. It is proposed that the formation of nanotubes results from continuous side-wall precipitation along a reaction front. The nanotube size was controlled by using templates with different diameters and deposition time. Metal@SnO2 core-shell nanostructures were fabricated after a further electrodeposition of metals within the SnO2 nanotubes. We formed 1-D metal oxide composites by annealing as-prepared materials in air.
[1] J.C. Hulteen, C.R. Martin, J. Mater. Chem. 7 (1997) 1075.