Unraveling
the Growth Mechanism of Silica Particles
in the Stöber Method: In Situ Seeded Growth Model
Posted on 2017-05-17 - 00:00
In
this work, we investigated the kinetic balance between ammonia-catalyzed
hydrolysis of tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) and subsequent condensation
over the growth of silica particles in the Stöber method. Our
results reveal that, at the initial stage, the reaction is dictated
by TEOS hydrolysis to form silanol monomers, which is denoted as pathway
I and is responsible for nucleation and growth of small silica particles
via condensation of neighboring silanol monomers and siloxane network
clusters derived thereafter. Afterward, the reaction is dictated by
condensation of newly formed silanol monomers onto the earlier formed
silica particles, which is denoted as pathway II and is responsible
for the enlargement in size of silica particles. When TEOS hydrolysis
is significantly promoted, either at high ammonia concentration (≥0.95
M) or at low ammonia concentration in the presence of LiOH as secondary
catalyst, temporal separation of pathways I and II makes the Stöber
method reminiscent of in situ seeded growth. This knowledge advance
enables us not only to reconcile the most prevailing aggregation-only
and monomer-addition models in literature into one consistent framework
to interpret the Stöber process but also to grow monodisperse
silica particles with sizes in the range 15–230 nm simply but
precisely regulated by the ammonia concentration with the aid of LiOH.
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Han, Yandong; Lu, Ziyang; Teng, Zhaogang; Liang, Jinglun; Guo, Zilong; Wang, Dayang; et al. (2017). Unraveling
the Growth Mechanism of Silica Particles
in the Stöber Method: In Situ Seeded Growth Model. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b01140