Kinetic analysis of Group 4 Metal Oxide Nanocrystal synthesis in the presence of phosphine oxide ligands

05 February 2025, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Kinetic control is a powerful tool for traversing the chemical landscape towards the intended product. For group 4 metal oxide nanocrystals, the development of complex multimetallic heterostructures is still a challenge, partly due to the lack of kinetic and mechanistic understanding. Here, we study the reaction kinetics of the nonaqueous synthesis of titanium, zirconium, and hafnium oxide nanocrystals, from the decomposition of metal isopropoxide and metal halide, in the presence of tri-n-octylphosphine oxide (TOPO). The reaction rate depends on the metal: Ti >> Zr > Hf. While titanium follows an SN1 substitution mechanism, zirconium and hafnium follow an auto-catalyzed E1 elimination. In both cases, the reaction kinetics can be tuned by varying the amount of TOPO or the chloride content due to their impact on the electronic structure of the transition state of the rate determining step. The proposed mechanism was shown to be consistent with kinetic modelling of the data for different metal concentrations. This deeper understanding of group 4 metal oxide nanocrystal formation will facilitate access to novel heterostructures, relevant for optical, catalytic, and electronic materials.

Keywords

Metal oxide nanocrystals
Kinetic analysis
Quantitative fitting
E1 SN1 mechanisms

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Information
Description
1H NMR spectra of the aliquots, and precursor decomposition curves. Additional fittings and characterization of the final nanoparticles with Bright field TEM and powder XRD.
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