592 research outputs found
Water-Assisted Oxygen Activation During Selective Oxidation Reactions
The selective functionalization of hydrocarbons with oxygen to produce valuable commodity chemicals is inherently challenging, because of the thermodynamic stability of the complete combustion products. Emerging green synthesis routes and sustainable energy production also rely on the success of selective oxidation reactions. As one of the unselective by-products, water is always present under reaction conditions and numerous studies indicate that the catalytic activity and selectivity of selective oxidation reactions may be tuned by judiciously controlling the water content during the reaction. Some experimentally verified examples include the preferential oxidation of carbon monoxide, direct hydrogen peroxide synthesis, propene epoxidation and alcohol oxidation. Finally, it has been predicted that the direct conversion of methane to methanol can benefit from the right amount of water near the active site during oxygen activation
The Critical Role of Water at the Gold-titania Interface in Catalytic CO Oxidation
We provide direct evidence of a water-mediated reaction mechanism for room-temperature CO oxidation over Au/TiO2 catalysts. A hydrogen/deuterium kinetic isotope effect of nearly 2 implicates O-H(D) bond breaking in the rate-determining step. Kinetics and in situ infrared spectroscopy experiments showed that the coverage of weakly adsorbed water on TiO2 largely determines catalyst activity by changing the number of active sites. Density functional theory calculations indicated that proton transfer at the metal-support interface facilitates O2 binding and activation; the resulting Au-OOH species readily reacts with adsorbed Au-CO, yielding Au-COOH. Au-COOH decomposition involves proton transfer to water and was suggested to be rate determining. These results provide a unified explanation to disparate literature results, clearly defining the mechanistic roles of water, support OH groups, and the metal-support interface
Microwave spectroscopic detection of flame-sampled combustion intermediates
Hansen N, Wullenkord J, Obenchain DA, Graf I, Kohse-Höinghaus K, Grabow J-U. Microwave spectroscopic detection of flame-sampled combustion intermediates. RSC Advances. 2017;7(60):37867-37872
NaBr Poisoning of Au/TiO\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3e Catalysts: Effects on Kinetics, Poisoning Mechanism, and Estimation of the Number of Catalytic Active Sites
Sodium bromide was used to intentionally poison a commercial Au/TiO2 catalyst with the goals of understanding the nature of halide poisoning and evaluating the number and nature of the catalytic active sites. A series of eight poisoned catalysts were prepared by impregnating the parent catalyst with methanolic solutions of NaBr. Each catalyst was tested with CO oxidation catalysis under differential reactor conditions; O2 reaction orders and Arrhenius activation energies were determined for each material. All of the kinetic data, including a Michaelis−Menten analysis, indicated that the primary effect of adding NaBr was to reduce the number of catalytically active sites. Density functional theory calculations, employed to evaluate likely binding sites for NaBr, showed that NaBr binds more strongly to Au corner and edge atoms than it does to the titania support or to exposed Au face atoms. Infrared spectroscopy of adsorbed CO, along with a Temkin analysis of the data, was also used to evaluate changes to the catalyst upon NaBr deposition. These studies suggested that NaBr addition induces some subtle changes in the coverage dependent properties of CO adsorption, but that these did not substantially impact the CO coverage of the CO binding sites. The experimental and computational results are discussed in terms of possible poisoning mechanisms (siteblocking vs off-site binding and modification); the nature and number of active sites are also discussed in the context of the results
H\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3e Oxidation Over Supported Au Nanoparticle Catalysts: Evidence for Heterolytic H\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3e Activation at the Metal-Support Interface
Water adsorbed at the metal-support interface (MSI) plays an important role in multiple reactions. Due to its importance in CO preferential oxidation (PrOx), we examined H2 oxidation kinetics in the presence of water over Au/TiO2 and Au/Al2O3 catalysts, reaching the following mechanistic conclusions: (i) O2 activation follows a similar mechanism to that proposed in CO oxidation catalysis; (ii) weakly adsorbed H2O is a strong reaction inhibitor; (iii) fast H2 activation occurs at the MSI, and (iv) H2 activation kinetics are inconsistent with traditional dissociative H2 chemisorption on metals. Density function theory (DFT) calculations using a supported Au nanorod model suggest H2 activation proceeds through a heterolytic dissociation mechanism, resulting in a formal hydride residing on the Au and a proton bound to a surface TiOH group. This potential mechanism was supported by infrared spectroscopy experiments during H2 adsorption on a deuterated Au/TiO2 surface, which showed rapid H-D scrambling with surface hydroxyl groups. DFT calculations suggest that the reaction proceeds largely through proton-mediated pathways and that typical Brønstednsted-Evans Polanyi behavior is broken by introducing weak acid/base sites at the MSI. THe kinetics data were successfully reinterpreted in the context of the heterolytic H2 activation mechanism, tying together the experimental and computational evidence and rationalizing the observed inhibition by physiorbed water on the support as blocking the MSI sites required for heterolytic H2 activation. In addition to providing evidence for the unusual H2 activation mechanism, these results offer additional insight into why water dramatically improves CO PrOx catalysis over Au
FT-MW AND MILLIMETER WAVE SPECTROSCOPY OF PANHs: PHENANTHRIDINE, ACRIDINE, AND 1,10-PHENANTHROLINE
ABSTRACT The pure rotational spectra of phenanthridine, acridine, and 1,10-phenanthroline, small polycyclic aromatic nitrogen heterocycle molecules (PANHs), have been measured and assigned from 2 to 85 GHz. An initial spectral assignment, guided by ab initio molecular orbital predictions, employed broadband Stark modulated millimeter wave absorption spectroscopy of a supersonic rotationally cold molecular beam, yielding a preliminary set of rotational and centrifugal distortion constants. Subsequent spectral analysis employed Fourier transform microwave (FT-MW) spectroscopy of a supersonic rotationally cold molecular beam. The extremely high spectral resolution of the FT-MW instrument yielded improved rotational constants and centrifugal distortion constants, together with nitrogen quadrupole coupling constants, for all three species. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations at the B3LYP level of theory employing the cc-pVTZ and 6-311+G ÃÃ basis sets are shown to closely predict rotational constants and to be useful in predicting quadrupole coupling constants and dipole moments for such PANH species. The data presented here will be useful for deep radio astronomical searches for PANHs employing large radio telescopes
Genetic Studies of Sulfadiazine-resistant and Methionine-requiring \u3cem\u3eNeisseria\u3c/em\u3e Isolated From Clinical Material
Deoxyribonucleate (DNA) preparations were extracted from Neisseria meningitidis (four isolates from spinal fluid and blood) and N. gonorrhoeae strains, all of which were resistant to sulfadiazine upon primary isolation. These DNA preparations, together with others from in vitro mutants of N. meningitidis and N. perflava, were examined in transformation tests by using as recipient a drug-susceptible strain of N. meningitidis (Ne 15 Sul-s Met+) which was able to grow in a methionine-free defined medium. The sulfadiazine resistance typical of each donor was introduced into the uniform constitution of this recipient. Production of p-aminobenzoic acid was not significantly altered thereby. Transformants elicited by DNA from the N. meningitidis clinical isolates were resistant to at least 200 μg of sulfadiazine/ml, and did not show a requirement for methionine (Sul-r Met+). DNA from six strains of N. gonorrhoeae, which were isolated during the period of therapeutic use of sulfonamides, conveyed lower degrees of resistance and, invariably, a concurrent methionine requirement (Sul-r/Met−). The requirement of these transformants, and that of in vitro mutants selected on sulfadiazine-agar, was satisfied by methionine, but not by vitamin B12, homocysteine, cystathionine, homoserine, or cysteine. Sul-r Met+ and Sul-r/Met− loci could coexist in the same genome, but were segregated during transformation. On the other hand, the dual Sul-r/Met− properties were not separated by recombination, but were eliminated together. DNA from various Sul-r/Met− clones tested against recipients having nonidentical Sul-r/Met− mutant sites yielded Sul-s Met+ transformants. The met locus involved is genetically complex, and will be a valuable tool for studies of genetic fine structure of members of Neisseria, and of genetic homology between species
Microbial monitoring of surface water in South Africa: an overview
Infrastructural problems force South African households to supplement their drinking water consumption from water resources of inadequate microbial quality. Microbial water quality monitoring is currently based on the Colilert®18 system which leads to rapidly available results. Using Escherichia coli as the indicator microorganism limits the influence of environmental sources on the reported results. The current system allows for understanding of long-term trends of microbial surface water quality and the related public health risks. However, rates of false positive for the Colilert®18-derived concentrations have been reported to range from 7.4% to 36.4%. At the same time, rates of false negative results vary from 3.5% to 12.5%; and the Colilert medium has been reported to provide for cultivation of only 56.8% of relevant strains. Identification of unknown sources of faecal contamination is not currently feasible. Based on literature review, calibration of the antibiotic-resistance spectra of Escherichia coli or the bifidobacterial tracking ratio should be investigated locally for potential implementation into the existing monitoring system. The current system could be too costly to implement in certain areas of South Africa where the modified H2S strip test might be used as a surrogate for the Colilert®18
Conformational steering in dicarboxy acids: the native structure of succinic acid
Succinic acid, a dicarboxylic acid molecule, has been investigated spectroscopically with computational support to elucidate the complex aspects of its conformational composition. Due to the torsional freedom of the carbon backbone and hydroxy groups, a large number of potentially plausible conformers can be generated with an indication that the gauche conformer is favored over the trans form. The microwave and millimeter wave spectra have been analyzed and accurate spectroscopic constants have been derived that correlate best with those of the lowest energy gauche conformer. For an unambiguous conformational identification measurements were extended to the monosubstituted isotopologues, precisely determining the structural properties. Besides bond distances and angles, particularly the dihedral angle has been determined to be 67.76(11)°, confirming the anomalous tendency of the methylene units to favor gauche conformers when a short aliphatic segment is placed between two carbonyl groups.Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation/CTQ2011-22923Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation/CGL2011-2244
Search for corannulene (C20H10) in the Red Rectangle
Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) are widely accepted as the carriers of the Aromatic Infrared Bands (AIBs), but an unambiguous identification of any specific interstellar PAH is still missing. For polar PAHs, pure rotational transitions can be used as spectral fingerprints for identification. Combining dedicated experiments, detailed simulations and observations, we explore d the mm wavelength domain to search for specific rotational transitions of corannulene (C20H10). We performed high-resolution spectroscopic measurements and a simulation of the emission spectrum of ultraviolet-excited C20H10 in the environment of the Red Rectangle (RR), calculating its synthetic rotational spectrum. Based on these results, we conducted a first observational campaign at the IRAM 30-m telescope towards this source to search for several high-J rotational transitions of C20H10. The laboratory detection of the J = 112 ← 111 transition of corannulene showed that no centrifugal splitting is present up to this line. Observations with the IRAM 30-m telescope towards the RR do not show any corannulene emission at any of the observed frequencies, down to a rms noise level of Tmb= 8 mK for the J =135 → 134 transition at 137.615 GHz. Comparing the noise level with the synthetic spectrum, we are able to estimate an upper limit to the fraction of carbon locked in corannulene of about 1.0 × 10−5 relative to the total abundance of carbon in PAHs. The sensitivity achieved in this work shows that radio spectroscopy can be a powerful tool to search for polar PAHs. We compare this upper limit with models for the PAH size distribution, emphasizing that small PAHs are much less abundant than predicted. We show that this cannot be explained by destruction but is more likely related to the chemistry of their formation in the environment of the R
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