Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.40, No.10, 2240-2245, 2001
Rapid solid-state synthesis of tantalum, chromium, and molybdenum nitrides
Solid-state metathesis (exchange) reactions can be used to synthesize many different transition-metal nitrides under ambient conditions including TIN, ZrN, and NbN. Typical metathesis reactions reach temperatures of greater than 1300 degreesC in a fraction of a second to produce these refractory materials in highly crystalline form. Likely due to the large amount of heat produced in these solid-state reactions, some transition-metal nitrides such as TaN, CrN, and gamma -Mo2N cannot easily be synthesized under ambient conditions. Here metathesis It actions are demonstrated to produce the cubic nitrides TaN, CrN, and gamma -Mo2N when sufficient pressure is applied before the reaction is initiated. By pressing a pellet of TaCl5 and LIN with an embedded iron wire. crystalline cubic TaN forms under 45 kbar of pressure after a small current is used to initiate the chemical reaction. Crystalline cubic CrN is synthesized from CrCl3 and Li3N initiated under 49 kbar of pressure. Crystalline gamma -Mo2N is produced from MoCl5 and Ca3N2 (since MoCl5 and Li3N self-detonate) initiated under 57 kbar of pressure. The addition of ammonium chloride to these metathesis reactions drastically lowers the pressure requirements for the synthesis of these cubic nitrides. For example, when 3 mol of NH4Cl is added to CrCl3 and Li3N, crystalline CrN forms when the reaction is initiated with a resistively heated wire under ambient conditions. Cubic gamma -Mo2N also forms at ambient pressure when 3 mol of NH4Cl is added to the reactants MoCl5 and Ca3N2 and ignite with a resistively heated wire. A potential advantage of synthesizing gamma -Mo2N under ambient conditions is the possibility of forming high-surface-area materials, which could prove useful for catalysis. Nitrogen adsorption (BET) indicates a surface area of up to 30 m(2)/g using a Langmuir model for gamma -Mo2N produced by a metathesis It action at ambient pressure. The enhanced surface area is confirmed using scanning electron microscopy.