Synthesis of Submicrometer Hollow Particles with a Nanoscale Double-Layer Shell Structure
Citations Over TimeTop 24% of 2012 papers
Abstract
The morphology of hollow, double-shelled submicrometer particles is generated through a rapid aerosol-based process. The inner shell is an essentially hydrophobic carbon layer of nanoscale dimension (20 nm), and the outer shell is a hydrophilic silica layer of approximately 40 nm, with the shell thickness being a function of the particle size. The particles are synthesized by exploiting concepts of salt bridging to lock in a surfactant (CTAB) and carbon precursors together with iron species in the interior of a droplet. This deliberate negation of surfactant templating allows a silica shell to form extremely rapidly, sealing in the organic species in the particle interior. Subsequent pyrolysis results in a buildup of internal pressure, forcing carbonaceous species against the silica wall to form an inner shell of carbon. The incorporation of magnetic iron oxide into the shells opens up applications in external stimuli-responsive nanomaterials.
Related Papers
- → The Influence of Surfactant on the Deformation and Breakup of a Viscous Drop: The Effect of Surfactant Solubility(1994)99 cited
- → Effect of pH on the interfacial adsorption activity of pulmonary surfactant(1996)18 cited
- → Comparison of Four Surfactants: In Vitro Surface Properties and Responses of Preterm Lambs to Treatment at Birth(1987)68 cited
- → Surfactant as a carrier: influence of immunosuppressive agents on surfactant activity(2006)9 cited
- Rhamnoilpid Bio-surfactant Composite Flooding Test Resuts and Understanding(2006)