Preparation of Stabilized Nanosized Tin Oxide Particles by Hydrothermal Treatment |
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Authors: | Nam seok Baik Go Sakai Norio Miura Noboru Yamazoe |
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Affiliation: | Department of Molecular and Material Sciences, Graduate School of Engineering Sciences, and Kyushu University, Kasuga-shi, Fukuoka 816–8580, Japan;Advanced Science and Technology Center for Cooperative Research, Kyushu University, Kasuga-shi, Fukuoka 816–8580, Japan |
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Abstract: | Stable colloidal suspensions of tin oxide (content 0.9–6.1 wt%) were synthesized by subjecting conventionally prepared tin oxide gels to hydrothermal treatment with an ammonia solution (pH 10.5) at 200°C for 3 h in an autoclave. Based on X-ray diffractometry analyses, the tin oxide crystallites after hydrothermal treatment were resistant to thermal growth at elevated temperatures, and this feature became more conspicuous as the tin oxide content of the colloidal suspension decreased. For the powder derived from a 1.8 wt% colloidal suspension, for example, the mean sizes of the tin oxide crystallites were 7.5 and 13 nm after calcination at 600° and 900°C, respectively, in comparison with corresponding values of 13.5 and 29 nm for the untreated gel-derived powder. Thin film spin-coated from the same suspension had good uniformity, packed with tin oxide grains (crystallites) of a mean size of 6 nm after calcination at 600°C. Optical determination of the tin oxide sol particle size, as well as gravimetric analysis of the dehydration from the powder samples, were conducted to determine effects of hydrothermal treatment. |
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Keywords: | gels tin compounds thermal treatment |
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