300 research outputs found

    Tailoring the oxidation state of cobalt through halide functionality in sol-gel silica

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    The functionality or oxidation state of cobalt within a silica matrix can be tailored through the use of cationic surfactants and their halide counter ions during the sol-gel synthesis. Simply by adding surfactant we could significantly increase the amount of cobalt existing as Co3O4 within the silica from 44% to 77%, without varying the cobalt precursor concentration. However, once the surfactant to cobalt ratio exceeded 1, further addition resulted in an inhibitory mechanism whereby the altered pyrolysis of the surfactant decreased Co3O4 production. These findings have significant implications for the production of cobalt/silica composites where maximizing the functional Co3O4 phase remains the goal for a broad range of catalytic, sensing and materials applications

    Synthesis of Well-Defined, Surfactant-Free Co<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> Nanoparticles:The Impact of Size and Manganese Promotion on Co<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> Reduction and Water Oxidation Activity

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    Abstract: A surfactant-free synthetic route has been developed to produce size-controlled, cube-like cobalt oxide nanoparticles of three different sizes in high yields. It was found that by using sodium nitrite as salt-mediating agent, near-quantitative yields could be obtained. The size of the nanoparticles could be altered from 11 to 22 nm by changing the cobalt concentration and reaction time. These surfactant-free nanoparticles form ideal substrates for facile deposition of further elements such as manganese. The effect of size of the cobalt oxide nanoparticles and the presence of manganese on the reducibility of cobalt oxide to metallic cobalt was investigated. Similarly, the effect of these parameters was investigated with a visible light promoted water oxidation system with cobalt oxide as catalyst, together with [Ru(bpy) 3] 2+ light harvester dye and an electron acceptor. Graphical Abstract: A novel surfactant-free synthetic route has been developed to produce size-controlled, cube shaped cobalt oxide nanoparticles in high yields. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]. </p

    Small Molecule Activation by Uranium Tris(aryloxides): Experimental and Computational Studies of Binding of N-2, Coupling of CO, and Deoxygenation Insertion of CO2 under Ambient Conditions

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    Previously unanticipated dinitrogen activation is exhibited by the well-known uranium tris(aryloxide) U(ODtbp)(3), U(OC6H3-Bu-2(t)-2,6)(3), and the tri-tert-butyl analogue U(OTtbp)(3), U(OC6H2-Bu-3(t)-2,4,6)(3), in the form of bridging, side-on dinitrogen complexes [U(OAr)(3)](2)(mu-eta(2):eta(2)-N-2), for which the tri-tert-butyl N-2 complex is the most robust U-2(N-2) complex isolated to date. Attempted reduction of the tris(aryloxide) complex under N-2 gave only the potassium salt of the uranium(III) tetra(aryloxide) anion, K[U(OAr)(4)], as a result of ligand redistribution. The solid-state structure is a polymeric chain formed by each potassium cation bridging two arenes of adjacent anions in an eta(6) fashion. The same uranium tris(aryloxides) were also found to couple carbon monoxide under ambient conditions to give exclusively the ynediolate [OCCO](2-) dianion in [U(OAr)(3)](2)(mu-eta(1):eta(1)-C2O2), in direct analogy with the reductive coupling recently shown to afford [U{N(SiMe3)(2)}(3)](2)(mu-eta(1):eta(1)-C2O2). The related U-III complexes U{N(SiPhMe2)(2)}(3) and U{CH(SiMe3)(2)}(3) however do not show CO coupling chemistry in our hands. Of the aryloxide complexes, only the U(OC6H2-Bu-3(t)-2,4,6)(3) reacts with CO2 to give an insertion product containing bridging oxo and aryl carbonate moieties, U-2(OTtbp)(4)(mu-O)(mu-eta(1):eta(1)-O2COC6H2-Bu-3(t)-2,4,6)(2), which has been structurally characterized. The presence of coordinated N-2 in [U(OTtbp)(3)](2)(N-2) prevents the occurrence of any reaction with CO2, underscoring the remarkable stability of the N-2 complex. The di-tert-butyl aryloxide does not insert CO2, and only U(ODtbp)(4) was isolated. The silylamide also reacts with carbon dioxide to afford U(OSiMe3)(4) as the only uranium-containing material. GGA and hybrid DFT calculations, in conjunction with topological analysis of the electron density, suggest that the U-N-2 bond is strongly polar, and that the only covalent U -> N-2 interaction is pi backbonding, leading to a formal (U-IV)(2)(N-2)(2-) description of the electronic structure. The N-N stretching wavenumber is preferred as a metric of N-2 reduction to the N-N bond length, as there is excellent agreement between theory and experiment for the former but poorer agreement for the latter due to X-ray crystallographic underestimation of r(N-N). Possible intermediates on the CO coupling pathway to [U(OAr)(3)](2)(mu-C2O2) are identified, and potential energy surface scans indicate that the ynediolate fragment is more weakly bound than the ancillary ligands, which may have implications in the development of low-temperature and pressure catalytic CO chemistry

    Catalysis Research of Relevance to Carbon Management: Progress, Challenges, and Opportunities

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