20 research outputs found
catena-Poly[sodium(I)-μ-tetrabutoxyborato]
The title compound, [Na(C16H36BO4)]n, has a fourfold axis passing through the Na and B atoms which both are bound by four O atoms. The tetrabutoxyborate anion provides the bridging to form one-dimensional polymers running along [001], just like those found for the tetraethoxyborate structure. The two butoxy ‘tail’ atoms are disordered over two conformations in a 0.887 (9):0.113 (9) ratio
Redetermination of the borax structure from laboratory X-ray data at 145 K
The title compound, sodium tetraborate decahydrate (mineral name: borax), Na2[B4O5(OH)4]·8H2O, has been studied previously using X-ray [Morimoto (1956). Miner. J.
2, 1–18] and neutron [Levy & Lisensky (1978). Acta Cryst. B34, 3502–3510] diffraction data. The structure contains tetraborate anions [B4O5(OH)4]2− with twofold rotation symmetry, which form hydrogen-bonded chains, and [Na(H2O)6] octahedra that form zigzag chains [Na(H2O)4/2(H2O)2/1]. The O—H bond distances obtained from the present redetermination at 145 K are shorter than those in the neutron study by an average of 0.127 (19) Å
XPS and NEXAFS study of fluorine modified TiO2 nano-ovoids reveals dependence of Ti3+ surface population on the modifying agent
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)Crystalline titanium dioxide was synthesised under mild conditions by the thermal degradation of peroxotitanic acid in the presence of a number of fluoride-containing surface modifying agents (NH4F, NH4BF4, NH4PF6, NBu4F, NBu4BF4, NBu4PF6). The resulting materials were characterised by PXRD, SEM, HRTEM, XPS and NEXAFS. Particle phase, size, and surface area were noticeably affected by the choice of surface modifying agent. Both the cation and anion comprising the modifying agent affect the surface Ti3+ population of the materials, with two apparent trends observed: F− > BF4− > PF6− and NBu4+ > NH4+. All materials displayed evidence of fluorine doping on their surfaces, although no evidence of bulk doping was observed