Recycling Nanowire Templates for Multiplex Templating Synthesis: A Green and Sustainable Strategy |
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Authors: | Jin‐Long Wang Dr Jian‐Wei Liu Bing‐Zhang Lu Yi‐Ruo Lu Jin Ge Zhen‐Yu Wu Zhi‐Hua Wang Dr Muhammad Nadeem Arshad Prof Dr Shu‐Hong Yu |
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Institution: | 1. Division of Nanomaterials and Chemistry, Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at Microscale, Collaborative Innovation Center of Suzhou Nano Science and Technology, Department of Chemistry, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230026 (P.R. China);2. Center of Excellence for Advanced Materials Research, Chemistry Department, Faculty of Science, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah 21589 (Saudi Arabia);3. Institute of Solid State Physics, Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hefei 230031 (China) |
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Abstract: | Template‐directed synthesis of nanostructures has been emerging as one of the most important synthetic methodologies. A pristine nanotemplate is usually chemically transformed into other compounds and sacrificed after templating or only acts as an inert physical template to support the new components. If a nanotemplate is costly or toxic as waste, to recycle such a nanotemplate becomes highly desirable. Recently, ultrathin tellurium nanowires (TeNWs) have been demonstrated as versatile chemical or physical templates for the synthesis of a diverse family of uniform 1D nanostructures. However, ultrathin TeNWs as template are usually costly and are discarded as toxic waste in ionic species after chemical reactions or erosion. To solve the above problem, we conceptually demonstrate that such a nanotemplate can be economically recycled from waste solutions and repeatedly used as template. |
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Keywords: | functional nanomaterials recycling materials science tellurium templating synthesis |
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