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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
201

[11C]Carbon Monoxide and Aryl Triflates in Palladium-Mediated Carbonylation Reactions : Synthetic approaches to [11C]Carbonyl Compounds and [11C]Amines

Rahman, Obaidur January 2004 (has links)
The usefulness of low concentrations (typically 10 to 100 µM) of [11C]carbon monoxide and aryl triflates as substrates in 11C-carbonylation using different nucleophiles in the presence of lithium bromide was investigated. The reactions were performed in a micro autoclave of 200 µL volume and catalysed (mediated) by palladium(0). A peripheral type benzodiazepine receptor (PBR) ligand, 1-(2-chlorophenyl)-N-methyl-N-(1-methylpropyl)isoquinoline-3-carboxamide (PK11195) and its structural analogues including an irreversible ligand for PBR, some other amides, ketones and carboxylic acids, were all labelled with 11C using this approach. The [carbonyl-11C]PK11195, analogues and other amides were prepared from aryl triflates and amines, and the [carbonyl-11C]ketones were prepared from aryl triflates and organoboranes. In the synthesis of [carboxyl-11C]carboxylic acids, water was utilised as nucleophile. The decay-corrected radiochemical yields were 10 to 55% for [11C]PK11195 and analogues, 2 to 63% for other [11C]amides, 10 to 75% for [11C]ketones and 25 to 65% for [11C]carboxylic acids. The specific radioactivity of the labelled compounds was in the range of 150 to 900 GBq/µmol. Some [11C]amines were prepared by a reductive amination of the corresponding [carbonyl-11C]ketones. These reactions were performed using different amines in the presence of TiCl4 and NaBH3CN. The radiochemical yields of the [11C]amines varied from 2 to 78% (determined by analytical HPLC). In order to confirm the labelling position, synthesis of selected 13C-substituted compounds were performed. For each substance group/ synthesis method, a selected compound was synthesised using (13C)carbon monoxide and the 13C-substituted compound was then analysed by 13C NMR. A synthetic route was developed for the preparation of 1-(2-chloro-phenyl)-isoquinolin-3-yl trifluoromethanesulfonate used as the precursor in the synthesis of [carbonyl-11C]PK11195 and analogues.
202

Snöskotrar : inventering, användning och utsläpp

Engström, Tobias January 2009 (has links)
The work has been done in cooperation with the Swedish Road Administration.Snowmobiles has been around for many decades, but it wasn’t until the 1960s they got the name snowmobile. There are about 260 000 snowmobiles registered in Sweden today and this paper maps the environmental impact the emissions from those snowmobiles have. The result comes from literature surveys and data from traffic records, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA and The International Snowmobile Manufacturers Association, ISMA. There are three common types of snowmobile engines: conventional two-stroke engines, direct injected two-stroke engines and four-stroke engines. The conventional one has been in use since the beginning, the other two types where employed much later during the beginning of the 21th century. The conventional engine is responsible for the great majority of carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon emissions from snowmobiles in Sweden today. The conventional accounts for 81 % of the total emissions of carbon dioxide and 83 % of the total emissions of hydrocarbon. There should be some form of regulation in order to expedite the phasing out of conventional engines in the future. / Arbetet är utfört i samarbete med Vägverket. Snöskotrar är en terrängfordonstyp som körs på snö. Snöskotrar har funnit sedan 1960 talet, även tidigare, men först under 1960-talet fick de namnet snöskotrar. Det finns ungefär 260 000 snöskotrar registrerade i Sverige. Med detta arbete kartläggs vilken miljöpåverkan från avgasutsläpp från snöskotrar det finns idag i Sverige. Resultatet kommer från litteraturundersökning och data från trafikregister, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA och The International Snowmobile Manufacturers Association, ISMA. Det finns tre olika typer av motorer som användas för snöskotrar: tvåtakts konventionell, tvåtakts direktsprutad och fyrtakts. Konventionell är den motortyp som har funnits allt sedan början; de två andra kommer mycket senare, först i början av 2000-talet. Konventionell motor är den som bidrar till största utsläppet av kolmonoxid och kolväte jämfört med de två andra motorerna som används idag i Sverige. De konventionell står för 81 % av det totala utsläppet av kolmonoxid och 83 % av kolväte. Det bör finnas någon form av reglering för att kunna minska på snöskotrars utsläpp i framtiden, som via styrmedel ta bort den konventionella motortypen
203

Determination of Metal Dispersion of Pt/CeO2 Catalyst by CO-pulse Method

駒井, 慎一, Komai, Shin'ichi, 矢澤, 義輝, Yazawa, Yoshiteru, 薩摩, 篤, Satsuma, Atsushi, 服部, 忠, Hattori, Tadashi January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
204

Multi-phase Multi-dimensional Analysis of PEM Fuel Cells with Carbon Monoxide Poisoning and Oxygen Bleeding

Li, Yaqun 25 August 2010 (has links)
Polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cells are promising alternative green power source for mobile, portable and stationary applications. However, their cost, durability, and performance are impacted by their sensitivity to impurities in fuel stream. Carbon monoxide (CO), an impurity commonly present in the hydrogen gas produced from hydrocarbon fuels, is known to have a significant degrading effect on PEM fuel cell performance because CO has a strong affinity to the platinum-based catalyst. At present, most studies in literature are limited to either experimental or simplified-dimensional analysis/modeling. In this thesis research, a three-dimensional (3D) multiphase PEM fuel cell model with the CO poisoning and O2 bleeding is developed based on the conservation laws for mass, momentum, energy, and species, and implemented in the commercial software Fluent (6.3.26) through the user-defined functions. Numerical simulations are conducted to simulate a single PEM fuel cell including flow channels, gas diffusion layers, catalyst layers, and PEM. The simulation results are compared with experimental data favorably. The result shows that the reaction rate of hydrogen in the anode catalyst layer is higher near the membrane layer, decreasing towards the gas diffusion layer (GDL) interface, and the reaction rate in general is higher in the inlet region and decreases towards the exit region of the flow channel. It means that the outlet of anode catalyst layer next to the flow channel and GDL has suffered the most significant poisoning effect. The result helps optimize the design of anode catalyst layer by embedding more platinum on the most poisoned area to increase available surface for hydrogen adsorption; similarly, reducing platinum loading on the less poisoned area. The fuel cell performance can be almost fully recovered when switching the anode fuel mixture to pure hydrogen, though it takes a long period of time. The reaction rate of hydrogen decreases significantly along the flow channel when impurity mixture is provided; while there is little change along the channel for pure hydrogen fuel. Adding oxygen into the anode fuel mixture can mitigate CO poisoning, but there is a time delay when the oxygen is introduced into the anode stream and when the performance starts to recover. It is observed that at the beginning of oxygen introduced in the anode stream the recovery rate in the region adjacent to the channel outlet is faster than the rate in the region close to the inlet. This difference in the recovery rate gradually becomes smaller over time. In addition, the influence of CO poisoning and oxygen bleeding on multi-phase water is investigated. The influence on dissolved water is only clearly seen in the anode catalyst layer next to the land area. Finally, response to sudden load changes is simulated by changing cell voltage. It is found that the overshoot and undershoot are more significant at high current densities.
205

Characterization and Reaction Studies of Silica Supported Platinum and Rhodium Model Catalysts

Lundwall, Matthew James 2010 December 1900 (has links)
The physical and catalytic properties of silica supported platinum or rhodium model catalysts are studied under both ultra high vacuum (UHV) and elevated pressure reaction conditions (>1torr). Platinum or rhodium nanoparticles are vapor deposited onto a SiO2/Mo(112) surface and characterized using various surface analytical methods. CO chemisorption is utilized as a surface probe to estimate the concentration of various sites on the nanoparticles through thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) and infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRAS) along with microscopy techniques to estimate particle size. The results are compared with hard sphere models of face centered cubic metals described as truncated cubo-octahedron. Results demonstrate the excellent agreement between chemisorption and hard sphere models in estimating the concentration of undercoordinated atoms on the nanoparticle surface. Surfaces are then subjected to high pressure reaction conditions to test the efficacy of utilizing the rate of a chemical reaction to obtain structural information about the surface. The surfaces are translated in-situ to a high pressure reaction cell where both structure insensitive and sensitive reactions are performed. Structure insensitive reactions (e.g. CO oxidation) allow a method to calculate the total active area on a per atom basis for silica supported platinum and rhodium model catalysts under reaction conditions. While structure sensitive reactions allow an estimate of the types of reaction sites, such as step sites (≤C7) under reaction conditions (e.g. n-heptane dehydrocyclization). High pressure structure sensitive reactions (e.g. ethylene hydroformylation) are also shown to drastically alter the morphology of the surface by dispersing nanoparticles leading to inhibition of catalytic pathways. Moreover, the relationships between high index single crystals, oxide supported nanoparticles, and high surface area technical catalysts are established. Overall, the results demonstrate the utility of model catalysts in understanding the structure-activity relationships in heterogeneous catalytic reactions and the usefulness of high pressure reactions as an analytical probe of surface morphology.
206

Development of Methanol-Reforming Catalysts for Fuel Cell Vehicles

Agrell, Johan January 2003 (has links)
<p>Vehicles powered by proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuelcells are approaching commercialisation. Being inherently cleanand efficient sources of power, fuel cells constitute asustainable alternative to internal combustion engines to meetfuture low-emission legislation. The PEM fuel cell may befuelled directly by hydrogen, but other alternatives appearmore attractive at present, due to problems related to theproduction, transportation and handling of hydrogen.</p><p>Fuelling with an alcohol fuel, such as methanol, which isoxidised directly at the anode, offers certain advantages.However, the efficiency of the direct-methanol fuel cell (DMFC)is still significantly lower than that of the conventionalhydrogen-fuelled PEM fuel cell, due to some technical problemsremaining unsolved. Hence, indirect fuelling by a reformedliquid fuel may be the most feasible option in the early stagesof the introduction of fuel cell vehicles.</p><p>The work presented in this thesis concerns the developmentof catalysts for production of hydrogen from methanol bypartial oxidation, steam reforming or a combination thereof.The work contributes to the understanding of how thepreparation route affects catalyst morphology and howphysicochemical properties determine catalytic behaviour andreaction pathways.</p><p>The thesis is a summary of seven papers published inscientific periodicals. The first paper (Paper I) reviews thecurrent status of catalytic hydrogen generation from methanol,focusing on the fuel cell application. Paper II investigatesthe partial oxidation of methanol over Cu/ZnO catalystsprepared in microemulsion and by a conventionalco-precipitation technique. The activity for methanolconversion in the low-temperature regime is found to besignificantly higher over the former materials and the workcontinues by determining the nature of possible Cu-ZnOinteractions in the catalysts by studying their physicochemicalproperties more thoroughly (Paper III). In Paper IV, thepathways for methanol conversion via both partial oxidation andsteam reforming are elucidated.</p><p>In Paper V, partial oxidation of methanol is studied overPd/ZnO catalysts prepared by microemulsion technique and againcompared to conventional materials. This investigationdemonstrates that although possessing high methanol conversionactivity, palladium-based catalysts are not suitable forreforming in fuel cell applications due to the considerableamounts of carbon monoxide formed.</p><p>In Paper VI, methanol reforming is investigated over acommercial Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalyst. The mechanisms for carbonmonoxide formation and strategies for its suppression arediscussed, as well as reactor design aspects. The study alsoincludes some simple kinetic modelling. Finally, Paper VIIdescribes the optimisation of catalyst composition and processconditions to reach high hydrogen production efficiency at lowoperating temperatures and with minimum carbon monoxideformation.</p><p><b>Keywords:</b>PEM fuel cells, hydrogen, methanol, reforming,(partial) oxidation, reaction pathways, carbon monoxide,catalyst, microemulsion, Cu/ZnO, Pd/ZnO, copper, redoxproperties, oxidation state</p>
207

Transport pathways of fire generated tracers to the upper troposphere as determined by A-Train satellite measurements

Huang, Lei, active 2013 15 July 2013 (has links)
Convective and long-range transport of air mass controls the global distributions and impacts of the pollutants generated in limited source regions. However, an observational characterization of such transport based on long-term satellite data has been difficult in part because adequate satellite measurements were not available until recent years and lack of an automated method for identifying the transport pathways. My dissertation addresses this problem through three steps: First, I developed a method to automate the identification of two pathways that are responsible for the transport of biomass burning generated tracers from the surface to the upper troposphere (UT). I focused on carbon monoxide (CO) because it has a relatively long lifetime in the atmosphere, and thus it is commonly used as a tracer of convective and long-range mass transport. Next, I applied this method to investigate the relative importance of the two pathways in determining the seasonal pattern of UT CO distribution. Results show that the seasonality of CO concentrations in the tropical UT mainly reflects the seasonality of the “local convection” pathway, because the “local convection” pathway typically transports significantly more CO to the UT than the “advection within the lower troposphere followed by convective transport” pathway. Then, I investigated the impacts of transport pathways on the interannual variation of tropical UT CO concentration. Results show that the interannual variation of CO in the tropical UT is dominated by UT CO anomaly over Southeast Asia related to the El Niño-Southern Oscillation, and the average mass of CO transported per event of “local convection” is the factor that accounts for the UT CO difference between two El Niño periods. After that, I began to address the transport of more complex pollutants such as aerosols. First, the seasonal and diurnal variations of the vertical distributions of aerosol properties were characterized through a statistical analysis of aerosol profile data. Then, the transport pathways associated with the aerosol layer at the tropopause level over Asian area during boreal summer were investigated through back-trajectory model analyses. Three major pathways were found and the occurrence frequency of each pathway was analyzed and discussed. / text
208

Hydrogen-mediated carbon-carbon bond formations: applied to reductive aldol and Mannich reactions

Garner, Susan Amy, 1980- 28 August 2008 (has links)
Hydrogen gas is the cleanest and most cost-effective reductant available to mankind, and the use of hydrogen gas in catalytic hydrogenation reactions is one of the oldest and most utilized organic reactions. Although catalytic hydrogenation has been practiced in industry on enormous scale, the use of hydrogen gas as a terminal reductant in C-C bond forming reactions has been limited to processes involving the migratory insertion of carbon monoxide such as: alkene hydroformylation and the Fischer-Tropsch reaction. A significant advance to the field of synthetic organic chemistry would be the expansion of C-C bond forming reactions beyond reductive coupling via carbon monoxide insertion. Herein, related metal catalyzed reductive couplings to [alpha],[beta]-unsaturated compounds in the presence of reducing agents such as: silane, borane, and hydrogen are reviewed. The following chapters discuss the development of hydrogen-mediated reductive aldol and Mannich reactions. The results from this body of work clearly demonstrate that hydrogen-mediated C-C bond forming reactions are emerging as a powerful tool for synthetic chemists.
209

Geostationary satellite observations of ozone air quality

Zoogman, Peter William 14 October 2013 (has links)
Ozone in surface air is the primary cause of polluted air in the United States. The current ozone observing network is insufficient either to assess air quality or to fully inform our understanding of the factors controlling tropospheric ozone. This thesis investigates the benefit of an instrument in geostationary orbit for observing near surface ozone using Observing System Simulation Experiments (OSSEs). / Earth and Planetary Sciences
210

Multi-phase Multi-dimensional Analysis of PEM Fuel Cells with Carbon Monoxide Poisoning and Oxygen Bleeding

Li, Yaqun 25 August 2010 (has links)
Polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cells are promising alternative green power source for mobile, portable and stationary applications. However, their cost, durability, and performance are impacted by their sensitivity to impurities in fuel stream. Carbon monoxide (CO), an impurity commonly present in the hydrogen gas produced from hydrocarbon fuels, is known to have a significant degrading effect on PEM fuel cell performance because CO has a strong affinity to the platinum-based catalyst. At present, most studies in literature are limited to either experimental or simplified-dimensional analysis/modeling. In this thesis research, a three-dimensional (3D) multiphase PEM fuel cell model with the CO poisoning and O2 bleeding is developed based on the conservation laws for mass, momentum, energy, and species, and implemented in the commercial software Fluent (6.3.26) through the user-defined functions. Numerical simulations are conducted to simulate a single PEM fuel cell including flow channels, gas diffusion layers, catalyst layers, and PEM. The simulation results are compared with experimental data favorably. The result shows that the reaction rate of hydrogen in the anode catalyst layer is higher near the membrane layer, decreasing towards the gas diffusion layer (GDL) interface, and the reaction rate in general is higher in the inlet region and decreases towards the exit region of the flow channel. It means that the outlet of anode catalyst layer next to the flow channel and GDL has suffered the most significant poisoning effect. The result helps optimize the design of anode catalyst layer by embedding more platinum on the most poisoned area to increase available surface for hydrogen adsorption; similarly, reducing platinum loading on the less poisoned area. The fuel cell performance can be almost fully recovered when switching the anode fuel mixture to pure hydrogen, though it takes a long period of time. The reaction rate of hydrogen decreases significantly along the flow channel when impurity mixture is provided; while there is little change along the channel for pure hydrogen fuel. Adding oxygen into the anode fuel mixture can mitigate CO poisoning, but there is a time delay when the oxygen is introduced into the anode stream and when the performance starts to recover. It is observed that at the beginning of oxygen introduced in the anode stream the recovery rate in the region adjacent to the channel outlet is faster than the rate in the region close to the inlet. This difference in the recovery rate gradually becomes smaller over time. In addition, the influence of CO poisoning and oxygen bleeding on multi-phase water is investigated. The influence on dissolved water is only clearly seen in the anode catalyst layer next to the land area. Finally, response to sudden load changes is simulated by changing cell voltage. It is found that the overshoot and undershoot are more significant at high current densities.

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