This invention relates to novel undoped and doped nanometer-scale metal oxide particles as well as a novel method for directly synthesizing doped and undoped nanometer-scale CeO2 particles having a controlled particle size ranging from 3–100 nanometers.
Cerium dioxide (CeO2) based materials have been studied for use in various applications including 1) fast ion conductors; 2) oxygen storage capacitors; 3) catalysts; 4) UV blockers; and 5) polishing materials. Pure and doped CeO2 exhibits the cubic fluorite structure, similar to ZrO2. Doping CeO2 with lanthanide series elements (e.g. Gd3+) results in the formation of oxygen vacancies ([Gd3+]=2[Vooo]), and a high ionic conductivity, σi. In particular, Ce0.9Sm0.1O1.95 exhibits a σ1=0.025 (Ω*cm)−1 at 600° C., which is more than five times that of ZrO2 based materials. As such Ce0.9Sm0.1O1.95 is an attractive choice for use as a low temperature electrolyte and as an anode component in solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC).
Ceria particles can also be used as catalysts, such as three-way catalysts to purify exhaust gases, such as for automobiles. This application requires a high oxygen storage content (OSC). In order to improve the OSC, the ceria may be doped with lanthanide elements. The use of high surface area, nanocrystalline powder could benefit all of these applications.
Typically, processes for preparing nanocrystalline CeO2 involve simple oxidation of Ce metal clusters to form CeO2, or solution processes that take advantage of the small solubility product of Ce(OH)3(10−23). In addition, such processes involve reaction temperatures of 100° C. or higher. This results in larger particle sizes and lower surface area of the crystals. The particle size is inversely related to the specific surface area (“SSA”).
An example process is found in, U.S. Pat. No. 5,017,352 which discloses ceria having a SSA of at least 85±5 m2/g. The ceria particles are made from the hydrolization of cerium (IV) nitrate solution in an acidic medium and followed by calcining the washed and dried precipitate in the temperature range of 300° to 600° C. for a period of 30 minutes to ten hours. This basic process can also be used to produce ceria having a SSA of at least 130 m2/g as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,080,877. The ceria is formed by reacting an aqueous solution of cerium (IV) salt with an aqueous solution of sulfate ions to precipitate a basic ceric sulfate, washing the precipitate with ammonia and then calcined in a furnace at 400° C. for 6 hours.
It is also possible to generate single crystal grains ranging in size from 10 to 80 nm of cerium oxide that have a uniform particle size and shape. This is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,938,837 as being accomplished by mixing cerous nitrate with a base to keep the pH from 5 to 10 and then rapidly heating the mixture to 70° to 100° C. and maintaining the mixture at that temperature from about 30 minutes to 10 hours.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,786,325 discloses a method for the production of a solid solution of cerium oxide and a lanthanide series metal. This is achieved by combining a cerium salt, a basic solution, and a lanthanide salt. The mixture is reacted at either 10–25° C. or 40–95° C., filtered, dried, and calcinated at 600 to 1200° C. for a period of time of 30 minutes to 10 hours. The particles are ground so that their mean particle size is from 0.5 to 1.5 μm and the resulting SSA is from 2 to 10 m2/g.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,712,218 discloses a method for producing a solid solution of cerium/zirconium mixed oxides that optionally can include yttrium. The method involves mixing stoichiometric amounts of soluble compounds of cerium, zirconium and optionally yttrium, heating the mixture to at least 100° C., and filtering out the product. Optionally the product can be further calcinated at between 200° to 1000° C. However, it is disclosed that the calcinations process will reduce the surface area of the solid solution. The SSA of the uncalcinated solid solution can reach over 150 m2/g.
The present invention involves the use of a semi-batch reactor process to synthesize metal oxide particles with controllable particle size between 3 to 100 nm and with uniform particle size and shape. The invention will be described in detail with respect to the use of cerium, however the invention is applicable to the use of iron, chromium, manganese, niobium, copper, nickel, and titanium in place of or in combination with cerium. The basic process involves mixing a cerium salt and an alkali metal or ammonium hydroxide, which operates as a precipitant, to form a precipitate, and then filtering and drying the precipitate. The mixture is preferably constantly stirred at a rate that ensures turbulent conditions to enhance the mixing.
In carrying out the present invention a first solution of a water-soluble cerium salt is mixed with a second solution of an alkali metal or ammonium hydroxide are mixed together to form a reactant solution. While the reactant solution is agitated under turbulent flow conditions, oxygen is passed through the reactant solution. Cerium dioxide particles having a predominant particle size within the range of 3–100 nanometers are precipitated from the reactant solution. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the second aqueous solution is an aqueous solution of ammonium hydroxide with a concentration of ammonium hydroxide in water within the range of 0.1 moles to 1.5 moles per liter. While ammonium hydroxide is preferred, other alkali metal hydroxides, such as sodium or potassium hydroxide, can be employed.
There are a number of variables involved in the mixing step that can be controlled in order to synthesize ceria particles of uniform shape at the desired particle size. First, the amount of oxygen gas that is bubbled through the reactor as the reactants are mixed will affect the particle size. Bubbling oxygen gas through the reactor decreases the particle size of the ceria particles. Using the oxygen gas allows the synthesis of ceria particles that are as small as 3 nm as opposed to particles that are 12 nm when oxygen is omitted. Second, adjusting the temperature at which the reaction takes place will also affect the particle size. This method will result in the synthesis of ceria particles of 15 nm at 20° C. and 50 nm sized particles of ceria at 70° C. In addition, heating the produced ceria particles for one hour will result in their coarsening to larger particle sizes depending on the temperature being used.
Finally, the order with which the two reactants are mixed will affect the pH value at which crystallization takes place. In the case of adding the precipitate into the salt (PIS), the pH starts out low, due to the slightly acidic nature of the cerium salt. As a result, while the primary particle size is approximately 10 nm, the agglomerates are large and non-uniform in shape. On the other hand, in the case of the addition of the salt into the precipitate (SIP), the pH remains higher than 9 during the entire reaction. This results in particle size approximately the same as the primary particle size from the PIS process, however, there is significantly less agglomeration and the particles were of uniform size and shape due to homogenous nucleation.
Consequently, by using this process, it is possible to synthesize ceria particles that have a uniform shape and size and whose size is controllable within the range of 3 nm to 100 nm.
The liquid phase precipitation process of this method includes three mechanisms: chemical reaction, nucleation, and crystal growth. It was found that in most cases these three mechanisms are fast, hence the mixing procedure has a large influence on the product particle size and its distribution. Therefore, control over the nucleation and growth mechanisms are achieved by controlling the mixing conditions.
The prepared precursors for this method are: aqueous solution of ammonium hydroxide (0.1 to 1.5*10−3 mol/g), cerium salt solution, preferably cerium nitrate hexahydrate, Ce(NO3)3.6H2O, (GIF, 99.9%) solution (0.6 to 0.8*10−3 mol/g), and nitrat acetates of lanthanide series metals as the dopant precursor. The use of excessive precipitant is preferred so that the pH value is ≈9 after the reaction is complete. The reaction can be carried out in a system as shown in
Impeller 3 is provided to maintain turbulent conditions in reactor 8. It is powered by motor 2 that preferably has a 0–15000 rpm range and is preferably operated in the 100–5000 rpm range. Motor 2 is controlled by rate controller 1. The stirring rate rapidly distributes the particles and prevents their concentration from being localized at the region near the feed point. This insures that micromixing is occurring as opposed to the slower macromixing that would otherwise occur as a result of the reaction only occurring at the surface of the drops of reactant. The scale of mixing is schematically depicted in
where D is the motor's impeller diameter (m), N is the impeller speed (rpm), ρ is the liquid density (kg/m3) and μ is the liquid viscosity (cp). Returning to
The order the reactants are added also plays an important role in the resulting powder. It appears that the nucleation and growth of the Ce(OH)3 occurs at the droplet:reactant interface. The difference between whether the cerium salt is added to the ammonium hydroxide (SIP feeding) or the ammonium hydroxide is added to the cerium salt (PIS feeding) is the pH value at which crystallization takes place.
As shown in
Under the basic conditions during SIP feeding, the solubility product of [Ce+3][OH−]3 is much higher than the solubility constant (Ksp), meaning that the supersaturation value,
is very large. This establishes an environment that favors homogenous nucleation.
Returning to the system shown in
This is illustrated by experimental work in which ammonium hydroxide was bubbled with oxygen for 1 minute and then the SIP process was engaged. Adding droplets of the Ce(NO3)3.6H2O immediately turned the slurry purple and then over a period of approximately 30 seconds it transitioned through a dark brown to a light yellow color.
It appears that bubbling the oxygen gas simply maintains the equilibrium concentration of oxygen gas that is dissolved in the solution. This is because the overall results indicate that the nucleation step is the fastest, meaning that Ce(OH)3 formation is immediate and would not be impacted by the presence of an O2 bubble. The oxidation reaction can either take place at the surface of the O2 bubble or with dissolved O2. The equilibrium concentration of oxygen in water-ammonium hydroxide solutions ranges from 10 to 25 ppm. In a 500 ml reactor and a typical batch size of approximately 10 grams of Ce(OH)3, this would not be sufficient fully oxidize all of the Ce(OH)3 to CeO2. The bubbling O2 would replenish the dissolved O2 in the solution and allow this reaction to continue to completion faster. In any case, the use of O2 bubbling during the SIP process yields the finest and least agglomerated CeO2 powder.
In the system shown in
In addition, the particles synthesized with this process will coarsen when heated.
As disclosed above, many of the applications for CeO2 utilize the high ionic conductivity that can be achieved by acceptor doping with lanthanide elements such as La3+, Sm3+, and Gd3+. Of these, Sm3+ yields the highest ionic conductivity. During the SIP process the supersaturation values for Ce3+ ranges from 1.4·1013˜1.4·1010 depending on how much the Ce3+ diffuses through the reactor when it is added to the ammonium hydroxide. Using the Ksp values from Table I, the supersaturation value for Sm3+ is 5.4·1011. The theoretical and calculated values differ somewhat in Table I most likely due to the assumption of equilibrium for the calculated values. As a result of the supersaturation values, during SIP feeding, it appears that Ce3+ and Sm3+ precipitate simultaneously. In addition,
On the other hand, the supersaturation values for PIS feeding (pH=7.3) are 1.1 for Ce3+ and 43.2 for Sm3+, for [Ce3+]=1.0 mol/l and [Sm3+]=0.25 mol/l. These conditions resulted in the successive precipitation of Ce3+ and Sm3+ hydroxides and consequently cation segregation in the dried powder. However due to the fine particle size, it is believed that at relatively low temperatures a solid solution would form.
The particle size and morphology were determined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM, Philips EM420). Samples for the TEM were prepared by ultrasonically dispersing the powders in ethanol, and then droplets were placed on carbon-coated Cu grids. Corresponding electron diffraction patterns (EDF) were used to characterize the particle crystallinity, as well as X-ray diffractometry (XRD; Scintag 2000). The specific surface area (SSA) is inversely related to the particle size and is calculated by the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) method. (Quantachrome; Nova 1000).
where ρ is the density of the powders (g/cm3).
The theoretical density of CeO2 was calculated using the lattice parameters calculated from the XRD pattern. X-ray line broadening (20°≦2θ≧100°) was used to calculate the x-ray coherence length, which corresponds to the particle size after correcting for strain effects using the Lorentz intensity breadth. The theoretical densities ρth, (kg/m3) of the lanthanide doped CeO2 compositions were calculated by
where MCe, MLn and MO are the molecular weights of the sub-species in kg/mole, nA is Avogadro's number (6.023·1023/mole), and ‘a’ (meters) is the XRD lattice parameter. All lanthanide elements were assumed to be in the 3+valance state.
The crystal grain size was determined by powder x-ray diffraction, analyzing the pattern by simulation based upon the Gaussian and Lorentz distribution after correcting for the strain effect. The equation, which was used, is shown as:
A plot of βtotal(cos θ) vs. sin θ has the intersection of 0.9 λ/t, where λ is the wavelength of generated x-ray and t is the sample x-ray coherence length, i.e. the crystal grain size. This was compared to the particle size calculated above to ensure that each particle was a single grain crystal.
In order to further illustrate the present invention and the advantages thereof, the following specific examples are given, it being understood that same are intended only as illustrative and in no way limiting:
Ammonium hydroxide aqueous solution with a concentration of 1.5·10−3 mol/g was placed in a semi-batch tank reactor. A 0.5·10−3 mol/g solution of cerium nitrate aqueous solution was the fed into the reactor (SIP feeding). There was a 20% excess of the ammonium hydroxide solution. The feeding rate was controlled by a peristaltic pump supplied by Fisher. The ammonium hydroxide solution was constantly stirred at a rate of 300 rpm with the power load of the stirrer being automatically adjusted with the changing viscosity of the slurry in the reactor. The reactor temperature was set at room temperature. Oxygen was bubbled into the reactor at a rate of 20 l/min as controlled by a gas flow-meter. The slurry was vacuum filtered and then vacuum dried at room temperature. The SSA data were found to be about 150 m2/g and the TEM microscopy photos showed that the particle size is around 3–5 nm. This was confirmed to be the same size as a single crystal from the x-ray diffraction pattern.
The same setup as in example 1 is used. This time PIS feeding was used with ammonium hydroxide aqueous solution used as the feeding precursor and cerium nitrate solution in the reactor. The feeding rate was controlled between 0.5 ml/min to 8 ml/min. At a reactor temperature of 70° C. the average synthesized particle size was 50 nm and at a reactor temperature was of 20° C. the average particle size was 15 nm.
PIS feeding was carried out as in example 1 at room temperature, a feeding rate of 5 ml/min and a stirrer rate of 1000 rpm. When oxygen was bubbled through the reactant mixture the smallest particle size obtained was 4 nm. Without the use of oxygen the smallest particle size obtained was 12 nm.
The method used in Example 1 was repeated using double feeding, which is where ammonium hydroxide aqueous solution and cerium nitrate solution are both used as feeding solutions into a reactor that contains distilled water. The feeding rate was kept in the range of 1 ml/min to 8 ml/min. The temperature was 25° C. and the mixture was stirred to establish turbulent conditions. The average particle size is 10 nm. Oxygen was not used in this example.
Solid solutions were observed using the above method with the Lanthanide element in a nitrate or acetate compound that was dissolved in water to form an aqueous solution, which was used as the dopant precursor.
a. Niobium-citric acid aqueous solution was used as the precursor in the double feeding method to form niobium and cerium mixed compounds. These compounds were transferred to solid solution after being sintered.
b. Yttrium nitrate or acetate aqueous solution was used as the lanthanum dopant precursor and mixed with the cerium nitrate solution. This mixed solution was used as the feeding solution in SIP feeding. A solid solution resulted from the reaction.
c. Zirconia hydroxy acetate aqueous solution or the acetate aqueous solution was used as the dopant precursor and mixed with the cerium nitrate aqueous solution. This mixed solution was used as the feeding solution in SIP feeding. A solid solution resulted from the reaction.
d. Double feeding of the doped element precursors from a, b, and c were used as a separate feeding solution in double feeding method. The solution in the reactor was distilled water. The reaction resulted in the formation of a solid solution in each of the cases.
Having described specific embodiments of the invention, it is understood that modifications thereof may be suggested by those skilled in the art, and it is intended to cover all such modifications as filed within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4786325 | Melard et al. | Nov 1988 | A |
5017352 | Chane-Ching et al. | May 1991 | A |
5080877 | Chane-Ching et al. | Jan 1992 | A |
5712218 | Chopin et al. | Jan 1998 | A |
5938837 | Hanawa et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
5962343 | Kasai et al. | Oct 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030215378 A1 | Nov 2003 | US |