Semiconducting Single-Wall Antimony Oxide Nanotubes and Oxidotritelluridoantimonate(V) Anions

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Contributors

Abstract

Black, needle-shaped crystals of K6[Sb12O18](SbOTe3)2·nH2O (n ≈ 5) were grown in high yield from an alkaline medium under hydrothermal conditions. Microporous, single-walled [Sb12O18] nanotubes dominate the hexagonal crystal structure of the cetineite-type. Antimony(III) atoms form the outer and oxygen atoms the inner wall of the nanotube, making it radially dipolar, similar to a cylindrical capacitor. The inner wall is decorated with potassium cations, and water molecules fill the remaining internal volume of the nanotube. Stacks of the hitherto unknown oxidotritelluridoantimonate(V) anion, (SbOTe3)3−, fill the trigonal channels in the packing of the nanotubes. As with other modifications of Sb2O3, the filled bonding and empty antibonding states of the nanotubes are separated by a wide band gap of about 3.6 eV. In this energy gap, the molecular orbitals of the (SbOTe3)3− anions are located. Electronic excitation involves a charge transfer from the anions to the nanotubes, which are thereby heavily n-doped and exhibit semiconducting behavior. Modification of the reaction conditions results in the crystallization of the tellurium-rich cetineite K6[Sb12O18](Te3)2(Te2)3·5H2O or the cetineite K18[Sb36O54](SbOTe3)2(Te2)6·22H2O, which contains [Sb36O54] nanotubes with an even wider diameter.

Details

Original languageEnglish
JournalChemistry - A European Journal
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 11 May 2026
Peer-reviewedYes

Keywords

Keywords

  • antimony(V), cetineites, hydrothermal synthesis, nanotubes, semiconductors