Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications | |
Nanostructured metal oxide@carbon dots through sequential chitosan templating and carbonisation route | |
Sebastien Royer1  Maya Marinova2  Nathalie Marcotte3  Nisrine Hammi4  Khalid Draoui5  Abdelkrim El Kadib6  | |
[1] Corresponding authors.;Laboratory MSI, Faculty of Sciences, Abdel Malek Essaadi University, B.P. 2121, M'hannech II, Tetouan, Morocco;Univ. Lille, CNRS, Centrale Lille, Univ. Artois, UMR 8181 - UCCS - Unité de Catalyse et Chimie du Solide, F-59000 Lille, France;Euromed Research Center, Engineering Division, Euro-Med University of Fes (UEMF), Route de Meknes, Rond-point de Bensouda, 30070 Fès, Morocco;ICGM, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, ENSCM, Montpellier, France;Univ. Lille, CNRS, INRA, Centrale Lille, Univ. Artois, FR 2638 - IMEC - Institut Michel-Eugène Chevreul, F-59000 Lille, France; | |
关键词: Chitosan; Porous carbon; Carbon dots; Sol-gel; Hydrothermal synthesis; | |
DOI : | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
Pyrolytic conversion of biomass stands as one of the most promising sustainable routes to carbon-based nanostructures, including carbon dots (CDs). Yet, molecular composition of functionalized carbon dots is limited to heteroatom doping and the incorporation of few single metal precursors. Besides, most of these modifications were undertaken by strenuous post-grafting procedures, requiring organic solvents for carbon dispersion and excluding a large library of potential reactants because of incompatible experimental conditions. In a significant divergence from the well-established literature, we herein disclose an innovative and highly versatile approach for enriching carbon dot functionalities. This straightforward method merges chitosan as carbon precursor and metal alkoxide as ceramic precursor and explores a twin growth of two dissimilar ''metal oxide@carbon dots'' phases through hydrothermal conversion of the carbohydrate solution. Owing to the structure-directing effect of chitosan toward metal alkoxide precursors, a set of crystalline metal oxides including titanium dioxide, germanium oxide, and iron oxide clusters were intimately fused within the in situ formed nitrogen-containing carbon framework. Distinctively, the following approach uses water as solvent and renewable biomass as carbon source and is expected to shed light on the hidden talent of discarded bio-waste for engineering functional nanomaterials.
【 授权许可】
Unknown