41,370 research outputs found
A transformative route to nanoporous manganese oxides of controlled oxidation states with identical textural properties
Nanoporous nanocrystalline metal oxides with tunable oxidation states are crucial for controlling their catalytic, electronic, and optical properties. However, previous approaches to modulate oxidation states in nanoporous metal oxides commonly lead to the breakdown of the nanoporous structure as well as involve concomitant changes in their morphology, pore size, surface area, and nanocrystalline size. Herein, we present a transformative route to nanoporous metal oxides with various oxidation states using manganese oxides as model systems. Thermal conversion of Mn-based metal-organic frameworks (Mn-MOFs) at controlled temperature and atmosphere yielded a series of nanoporous manganese oxides with continuously tuned oxidation states: MnO, Mn3O 4, Mn5O8, and Mn2O3. This transformation enabled the preparation of low-oxidation phase MnO and metastable intermediate phase Mn5O8 with nanoporous architectures, which were previously rarely accessible. Significantly, nanoporous MnO, Mn3O4, and Mn5O8 had a very similar morphology, surface area, and crystalline size. We investigated the electrocatalytic activity of nanoporous manganese oxides for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) to identify the role of oxidation states, and observed oxidation state-dependent activity and kinetics for the ORR.close5
Nanoporous Copper-Nickel - Macroscopic bodies of a strong and deformable nanoporous base metal by dealloying
Uniform macroscopic samples of nanoporous metal with high deformability have
so far been limited to precious metals such as Au, Pd and Pt. Here we propose
nanoporous Copper-Nickel (npCN) as a nanoporous base metal that can be made
with mm dimensions and exhibits significant deformability. NpCN forms a uniform
bicontinous network structure with feature sizes that can be controlled from 13
to 40 nm by thermal annealing. Continuous compression tests confirm ductile
deformation behavior accompanied with a high strength compared to macroporous
Cu- and Ni-foams with similar solid fraction
Field-induced water electrolysis switches an oxide semiconductor from an insulator to a metal
Here we demonstrate that water-infiltrated nanoporous glass electrically
switches an oxide semiconductor from an insulator to metal. We fabricated the
field effect transistor structure on an oxide semiconductor, SrTiO3, using
100%-water-infiltrated nanoporous glass - amorphous 12CaO*7Al2O3 - as the gate
insulator. For positive gate voltage, electron accumulation, water electrolysis
and electrochemical reduction occur successively on the SrTiO3 surface at room
temperature, leading to the formation of a thin (~3 nm) metal layer with an
extremely high electron concentration of 10^15-10^16 cm^-2, which exhibits
exotic thermoelectric behaviour.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figure
Formation of Nanofoam carbon and re-emergence of Superconductivity in compressed CaC6
Pressure can tune material's electronic properties and control its quantum
state, making some systems present disconnected superconducting region as
observed in iron chalcogenides and heavy fermion CeCu2Si2. For CaC6
superconductor (Tc of 11.5 K), applying pressure first Tc increases and then
suppresses and the superconductivity of this compound is eventually disappeared
at about 18 GPa. Here, we report a theoretical finding of the re-emergence of
superconductivity in heavily compressed CaC6. The predicted phase III (space
group Pmmn) with formation of carbon nanofoam is found to be stable at wide
pressure range with a Tc up to 14.7 K at 78 GPa. Diamond-like carbon structure
is adhered to the phase IV (Cmcm) for compressed CaC6 after 126 GPa, which has
bad metallic behavior, indicating again departure from superconductivity.
Re-emerged superconductivity in compressed CaC6 paves a new way to design
new-type superconductor by inserting metal into nanoporous host lattice.Comment: 31 pages, 12 figures, and 4 table
Switchable Imbibition in Nanoporous Gold
Spontaneous imbibition enables the elegant propelling of nano-flows because
of the dominance of capillarity at small length scales. The imbibition kinetics
are, however, solely determined by the static geometry of the porous host, the
capillarity, and the fluidity of the imbibed liquid. This makes active control
particularly challenging. Here, we show for aqueous electrolyte imbibition in
nanoporous gold that the fluid flow can be reversibly switched on and off
through electric potential control of the solid-liquid interfacial tension,
i.e. we can accelerate the imbibition front, stop it, and have it proceed at
will. Simultaneous measurements of the mass flux and the electrical current
allow us to document simple scaling laws for the imbibition kinetics, and to
explore the charge flow dynamics in the metallic nanopores. Our findings
demonstrate that the high electric conductivity along with the pathways for
ionic and/or fluid transport render nanoporous elemental gold a versatile,
accurately controllable electro-capillary pump and flow sensor for minute
amounts of liquids with exceptionally low operating voltages.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Nanoporous silica-based protocells at multiple scales for designs of life and nanomedicine.
Various protocell models have been constructed de novo with the bottom-up approach. Here we describe a silica-based protocell composed of a nanoporous amorphous silica core encapsulated within a lipid bilayer built by self-assembly that provides for independent definition of cell interior and the surface membrane. In this review, we will first describe the essential features of this architecture and then summarize the current development of silica-based protocells at both micro- and nanoscale with diverse functionalities. As the structure of the silica is relatively static, silica-core protocells do not have the ability to change shape, but their interior structure provides a highly crowded and, in some cases, authentic scaffold upon which biomolecular components and systems could be reconstituted. In basic research, the larger protocells based on precise silica replicas of cells could be developed into geometrically realistic bioreactor platforms to enable cellular functions like coupled biochemical reactions, while in translational research smaller protocells based on mesoporous silica nanoparticles are being developed for targeted nanomedicine. Ultimately we see two different motivations for protocell research and development: (1) to emulate life in order to understand it; and (2) to use biomimicry to engineer desired cellular interactions
Nanoporous PMMA: A novel system with different acoustic properties
The acoustic properties of closed cell nanoporous and microporous poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) foams have been well characterized, showing that nanoporous PMMA exhibit a different absorption coefficient and transmission loss behavior in comparison with microporous PMMA. Experimental differences may be explained by the different wave propagation mechanism in the micro and nanoscale, which is determined by the confinement of both the gas (Knudsen regime) and the solid phases. These results place nanoporous materials as a new class of polymeric porous material with potential properties in the field of acoustics, especially in multifunctional systems requiring a certain degree of soundproofing
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