In this paper, we report the complete synthesis and characterization procedures to generate highly organized and oriented mesoporous titania thin films, using poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)-based templates. Controlled conditions in the deposition, postsynthesis, and thermal treatment steps allow one to tailor the final mesostructure (2D hexagonal, p6m, or 3D cubic, Im3m). Various techniques were used to determine the time evolution of the mesostructure. Spectroscopic techniques (UV/vis, (17)O NMR) and EXAFS/XANES have been used to follow the chemical changes in the Ti(IV) environment. Crossing these techniques spanning all ranges permits a complete description of the chemistry all the way from solution to the mesostructured metal oxide. A critical discussion on all important chemical and processing parameters is provided; the understanding of these features is essential for a rational design and the reproducible construction of mesoporous materials.
This article describes hybrid materials and systems in which the core integrity of inorganic
nanobuilding blocks (NBBs) is preserved and reviews the main synthetic procedures
presented in the literature. The relation between the NBB and the resulting hybrid networks
is discussed for several striking examples: silicon and tin oxo clusters, polyoxometalates,
and transition metal−oxo-based clusters. This approach is extended to nanoparticule-based
hybrids. The chemical strategies offered by the coupling of soft chemistry processes and
this approach based on functional NBBs allows, through an intelligent and tuned coding, to
develop a new vectorial chemistry that is able to direct the assembly of a large variety of
structurally well-defined clusters or nanoparticles into complex architectures.
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