831 research outputs found
Synthesis and catalytic performance of CeOCl in Deacon reaction
Surface chlorinated CeO2 is an efficient material for HCl oxidation, which raises the question whether an oxychloride phase could be also active in the same reaction. CeOCl was synthesized by solid state reaction of cerium oxide with anhydrous cerium chloride and tested in HCl oxidation using various feed compositions at 703 K. X-ray diffraction of post-reaction samples revealed that CeOCl is unstable, in both oxygen-rich and -lean conditions. Applying oxygen over-stoichiometric feeds led to complete transformation of CeOCl into CeO2. Considerable HCl conversions were obtained only after this transformation, which confirms the essential role of bulk cerium oxide in this catalytic system
Alloys in catalysis: phase separation and surface segregation phenomena in response to the reactive environment
Alloys play a crucial role in several heterogeneous catalytic processes, and their applications are expected to rise rapidly. This is essentially related to the vast number of configurations and type of surface sites that multi-component materials can afford. It is well established that the chemical composition at the surface of an alloy usually differs from that in the bulk. This phenomenon, referred to as surface segregation, is largely controlled by the surface free energy. However, surface energy alone cannot safely predict the active surface state of a solid catalyst, since the contribution of other parameters such as size and support effects, as well as influence of the adsorbates, play a major role. This can lead to numerous surface configurations as for example over the length of a catalytic reactor, as the chemical potential of the gas phase changes continuously over the catalyst bed and hence different reactions may prevail at different catalyst bed segments. Thanks to the rapid improvement of the analytical surface science characterization techniques and theoretical methodologies, the potential effects induced by alloyed catalysts are better understood. For catalysis, the relevance of measurements performed on well-defined surfaces under idealized ultrahigh vacuum conditions has been questioned and studies in environments that closely resemble conditions of working alloy catalysts are needed. In this review we focus on experimental and theoretical studies related to in situ (operando) observations of surface segregation and phase separation phenomena taking place on the outermost surface layers of alloy catalysts. The combination of first principles theoretical treatment and in situ observation opens up new perspectives of designing alloy catalysts with tailored properties
Irregular singularities in Liouville theory
Motivated by problems arising in the study of N=2 supersymmetric gauge
theories we introduce and study irregular singularities in two-dimensional
conformal field theory, here Liouville theory. Irregular singularities are
associated to representations of the Virasoro algebra in which a subset of the
annihilation part of the algebra act diagonally. In this paper we define
natural bases for the space of conformal blocks in the presence of irregular
singularities, describe how to calculate their series expansions, and how such
conformal blocks can be constructed by some delicate limiting procedure from
ordinary conformal blocks. This leads us to a proposal for the structure
functions appearing in the decomposition of physical correlation functions with
irregular singularities into conformal blocks. Taken together, we get a precise
prediction for the partition functions of some Argyres-Douglas type theories on
the four-sphere.Comment: 84 pages, 6 figure
Loop and surface operators in N=2 gauge theory and Liouville modular geometry
Recently, a duality between Liouville theory and four dimensional N=2 gauge
theory has been uncovered by some of the authors. We consider the role of
extended objects in gauge theory, surface operators and line operators, under
this correspondence. We map such objects to specific operators in Liouville
theory. We employ this connection to compute the expectation value of general
supersymmetric 't Hooft-Wilson line operators in a variety of N=2 gauge
theories.Comment: 60 pages, 11 figures; v3: further minor corrections, published
versio
Strings in AdS_3 and the SL(2,R) WZW Model. Part 3: Correlation Functions
We consider correlation functions for string theory on AdS_3. We analyze
their singularities and we provide a physical interpretation for them. We
explain which worldsheet correlation functions have a sensible physical
interpretation in terms of the boundary theory. We consider the operator
product expansion of the four point function and we find that it factorizes
only if a certain condition is obeyed. We explain that this is the correct
physical result. We compute correlation functions involving spectral flowed
operators and we derive a constraint on the amount of winding violation.Comment: 87 pages, 7 figures; minor change
On the relation between quantum Liouville theory and the quantized Teichm"uller spaces
We review both the construction of conformal blocks in quantum Liouville
theory and the quantization of Teichm\"uller spaces as developed by Kashaev,
Checkov and Fock. In both cases one assigns to a Riemann surface a Hilbert
space acted on by a representation of the mapping class group. According to a
conjecture of H. Verlinde, the two are equivalent. We describe some key steps
in the verification of this conjecture.Comment: Contribution to the proceedings of the 6th International Conference
on CFTs and Integrable Models, Chernogolovka, Russia, September 2002; v2:
Typos corrected, typographical change
FZZ Scattering
We study the duality between the two dimensional black hole and the
sine-Liouville conformal field theories via exact operator quantization of a
classical scattering problem. The ideas are first illustrated in Liouville
theory, which is dual to itself under the interchange of the Liouville
parameter b by 1/b. In both cases, a classical scattering problem does not
determine uniquely the quantum reflection coefficient. The latter is only fixed
by assuming that the dual scattering problem has the same reflection
coefficient. We also discuss the relation of this approach to the method that
exploits the parafermionic symmetry of the model to compute the reflection
coefficient.Comment: 19 pages, JHEP style. v2: Minor changes in the proposed field of
sine-Liouville type, new section discussing the relation with parafermionic
symmetry, references adde
Rolling Tachyons from Liouville theory
In this work we propose an exact solution of the c=1 Liouville model, i.e. of
the world-sheet theory that describes the homogeneous decay of a closed string
tachyon. Our expressions are obtained through careful extrapolation from the
correlators of Liouville theory with c > 25. In the c=1 limit, we find two
different theories which differ by the signature of Liouville field. The
Euclidean limit coincides with the interacting c=1 theory that was constructed
by Runkel and Watts as a limit of unitary minimal models. The couplings for the
Lorentzian limit are new. In contrast to the behavior at c > 1, amplitudes in
both c=1 models are non-analytic in the momenta and consequently they are not
related by Wick rotation.Comment: 22 page
Electrocatalytic Oxygen Evolution Reaction in Acidic Environments – Reaction Mechanisms and Catalysts
The low efficiency of the electrocatalytic oxidation of water to O2 (oxygen evolution reaction-OER) is considered as one of the major roadblocks for the storage of electricity from renewable sources in form of molecular fuels like H2 or hydrocarbons. Especially in acidic environments, compatible with the powerful proton exchange membrane (PEM), an earth-abundant OER catalyst that combines high activity and high stability is still unknown. Current PEM-compatible OER catalysts still rely mostly on Ir and/or Ru as active components, which are both very scarce elements of the platinum group. Hence, the Ir and/or Ru amount in OER catalysts has to be strictly minimized. Unfortunately, the OER mechanism, which is the most powerful tool for OER catalyst optimization, still remains unclear. In this review, we first summarize the current state of our understanding of the OER mechanism on PEM-compatible heterogeneous electrocatalysts, before we compare and contrast that to the OER mechanism on homogenous catalysts. Thereafter, an overview over monometallic OER catalysts is provided to obtain insights into structure-function relations followed by a review of current material optimization concepts and support materials. Moreover, missing links required to complete the mechanistic picture as well as the most promising material optimization concepts are pointed out
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