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Direct 17O Isotopic Labeling of Oxides Using Mechanochemistry

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Direct 17O Isotopic Labeling of Oxides Using Mechanochemistry. / Chen, C.-H.; Gaillard, E.; Mentink-Vigier, F. et al.
In: Inorganic Chemistry, Vol. 59, No. 18, 21.09.2020, p. 13050-13066.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Chen, C-H, Gaillard, E, Mentink-Vigier, F, Chen, K, Gan, Z, Gaveau, P, Rebière, B, Berthelot, R, Florian, P, Bonhomme, C, Smith, ME, Métro, T-X, Alonso, B & Laurencin, D 2020, 'Direct 17O Isotopic Labeling of Oxides Using Mechanochemistry', Inorganic Chemistry, vol. 59, no. 18, pp. 13050-13066. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c00208

APA

Chen, C.-H., Gaillard, E., Mentink-Vigier, F., Chen, K., Gan, Z., Gaveau, P., Rebière, B., Berthelot, R., Florian, P., Bonhomme, C., Smith, M. E., Métro, T.-X., Alonso, B., & Laurencin, D. (2020). Direct 17O Isotopic Labeling of Oxides Using Mechanochemistry. Inorganic Chemistry, 59(18), 13050-13066. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c00208

Vancouver

Chen CH, Gaillard E, Mentink-Vigier F, Chen K, Gan Z, Gaveau P et al. Direct 17O Isotopic Labeling of Oxides Using Mechanochemistry. Inorganic Chemistry. 2020 Sept 21;59(18):13050-13066. Epub 2020 Mar 13. doi: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c00208

Author

Chen, C.-H. ; Gaillard, E. ; Mentink-Vigier, F. et al. / Direct 17O Isotopic Labeling of Oxides Using Mechanochemistry. In: Inorganic Chemistry. 2020 ; Vol. 59, No. 18. pp. 13050-13066.

Bibtex

@article{57aaec191de84005b79892bb65dc81de,
title = "Direct 17O Isotopic Labeling of Oxides Using Mechanochemistry",
abstract = "While 17O NMR is increasingly being used for elucidating the structure and reactivity of complex molecular and materials systems, much effort is still required for it to become a routine analytical technique. One of the main difficulties for its development comes from the very low natural abundance of 17O (0.04%), which implies that isotopic labeling is generally needed prior to NMR analyses. However, 17O-enrichment protocols are often unattractive in terms of cost, safety, and/or practicality, even for compounds as simple as metal oxides. Here, we demonstrate how mechanochemistry can be used in a highly efficient way for the direct 17O isotopic labeling of a variety of s-, p-, and d-block oxides, which are of major interest for the preparation of functional ceramics and glasses: Li2O, CaO, Al2O3, SiO2, TiO2, and ZrO2. For each oxide, the enrichment step was performed under ambient conditions in less than 1 h and at low cost, which makes these synthetic approaches highly appealing in comparison to the existing literature. Using high-resolution solid-state 17O NMR and dynamic nuclear polarization, atomic-level insight into the enrichment process is achieved, especially for titania and alumina. Indeed, it was possible to demonstrate that enriched oxygen sites are present not only at the surface but also within the oxide particles. Moreover, information on the actual reactions occurring during the milling step could be obtained by 17O NMR, in terms of both their kinetics and the nature of the reactive species. Finally, it was demonstrated how high-resolution 17O NMR can be used for studying the reactivity at the interfaces between different oxide particles during ball-milling, especially in cases when X-ray diffraction techniques are uninformative. More generally, such investigations will be useful not only for producing 17O-enriched precursors efficiently but also for understanding better mechanisms of mechanochemical processes themselves. ",
author = "C.-H. Chen and E. Gaillard and F. Mentink-Vigier and K. Chen and Z. Gan and P. Gaveau and B. Rebi{\`e}re and R. Berthelot and P. Florian and C. Bonhomme and M.E. Smith and T.-X. M{\'e}tro and B. Alonso and D. Laurencin",
year = "2020",
month = sep,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c00208",
language = "English",
volume = "59",
pages = "13050--13066",
journal = "Inorganic Chemistry",
issn = "0020-1669",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "18",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Direct 17O Isotopic Labeling of Oxides Using Mechanochemistry

AU - Chen, C.-H.

AU - Gaillard, E.

AU - Mentink-Vigier, F.

AU - Chen, K.

AU - Gan, Z.

AU - Gaveau, P.

AU - Rebière, B.

AU - Berthelot, R.

AU - Florian, P.

AU - Bonhomme, C.

AU - Smith, M.E.

AU - Métro, T.-X.

AU - Alonso, B.

AU - Laurencin, D.

PY - 2020/9/21

Y1 - 2020/9/21

N2 - While 17O NMR is increasingly being used for elucidating the structure and reactivity of complex molecular and materials systems, much effort is still required for it to become a routine analytical technique. One of the main difficulties for its development comes from the very low natural abundance of 17O (0.04%), which implies that isotopic labeling is generally needed prior to NMR analyses. However, 17O-enrichment protocols are often unattractive in terms of cost, safety, and/or practicality, even for compounds as simple as metal oxides. Here, we demonstrate how mechanochemistry can be used in a highly efficient way for the direct 17O isotopic labeling of a variety of s-, p-, and d-block oxides, which are of major interest for the preparation of functional ceramics and glasses: Li2O, CaO, Al2O3, SiO2, TiO2, and ZrO2. For each oxide, the enrichment step was performed under ambient conditions in less than 1 h and at low cost, which makes these synthetic approaches highly appealing in comparison to the existing literature. Using high-resolution solid-state 17O NMR and dynamic nuclear polarization, atomic-level insight into the enrichment process is achieved, especially for titania and alumina. Indeed, it was possible to demonstrate that enriched oxygen sites are present not only at the surface but also within the oxide particles. Moreover, information on the actual reactions occurring during the milling step could be obtained by 17O NMR, in terms of both their kinetics and the nature of the reactive species. Finally, it was demonstrated how high-resolution 17O NMR can be used for studying the reactivity at the interfaces between different oxide particles during ball-milling, especially in cases when X-ray diffraction techniques are uninformative. More generally, such investigations will be useful not only for producing 17O-enriched precursors efficiently but also for understanding better mechanisms of mechanochemical processes themselves.

AB - While 17O NMR is increasingly being used for elucidating the structure and reactivity of complex molecular and materials systems, much effort is still required for it to become a routine analytical technique. One of the main difficulties for its development comes from the very low natural abundance of 17O (0.04%), which implies that isotopic labeling is generally needed prior to NMR analyses. However, 17O-enrichment protocols are often unattractive in terms of cost, safety, and/or practicality, even for compounds as simple as metal oxides. Here, we demonstrate how mechanochemistry can be used in a highly efficient way for the direct 17O isotopic labeling of a variety of s-, p-, and d-block oxides, which are of major interest for the preparation of functional ceramics and glasses: Li2O, CaO, Al2O3, SiO2, TiO2, and ZrO2. For each oxide, the enrichment step was performed under ambient conditions in less than 1 h and at low cost, which makes these synthetic approaches highly appealing in comparison to the existing literature. Using high-resolution solid-state 17O NMR and dynamic nuclear polarization, atomic-level insight into the enrichment process is achieved, especially for titania and alumina. Indeed, it was possible to demonstrate that enriched oxygen sites are present not only at the surface but also within the oxide particles. Moreover, information on the actual reactions occurring during the milling step could be obtained by 17O NMR, in terms of both their kinetics and the nature of the reactive species. Finally, it was demonstrated how high-resolution 17O NMR can be used for studying the reactivity at the interfaces between different oxide particles during ball-milling, especially in cases when X-ray diffraction techniques are uninformative. More generally, such investigations will be useful not only for producing 17O-enriched precursors efficiently but also for understanding better mechanisms of mechanochemical processes themselves.

U2 - 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c00208

DO - 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c00208

M3 - Journal article

VL - 59

SP - 13050

EP - 13066

JO - Inorganic Chemistry

JF - Inorganic Chemistry

SN - 0020-1669

IS - 18

ER -