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Mesoporous silica/polymer nanocompositesLiu, Yi. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D)--Polymer, Textile and Fiber Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2010. / Committee Chair: Jacob. Karl; Committee Member: Griffin. Anselm; Committee Member: Tannenbaum. Rina; Committee Member: Thio. Yonathan S; Committee Member: Yao. Donggang. Part of the SMARTech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Collection.
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The rechargeable lithium/air battery and the application of mesoporous Fe₂O₃ in conventional lithium battery /Bao, Jianli. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of St Andrews, June 2009. / Restricted until 1st June 2011.
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Investigation of optical properties of one-dimensional nanostructures with engineerable heliciity and surface modificationBai, Fan 23 June 2017 (has links)
In this work, the optical properties of two kinds of one-dimensional (1D) nanomaterials, mesoporous silicon nanowires (mpSiNWs) and plasmonic nanospirals (NSs), were studied. These emerging nanomaterials are of great interest because of their fundamental structure-derived properties and potential practical applications. Four aspects of these materials were analyzed in this work. First, although the fabrication mechanism of mpSiNWs has been studied previously via metal-assisted chemical etching, the porosification-induced disturbance to the etching direction, which plays a vital role in controlling the surface crystallinity of mpSiNWs, has not been characterized. In Chapter 2, I discuss the porosification etching mechanism of n-Si(111), which proceeds along the intrinsic back bond etching direction of [111] at room temperature. The porosification substantially weakens the back bonds under the sinking particles, resulting in the deviation of etching from [111]. The preferred direction of etching changes to that with a small angle α, because the direction-switching barrier increases with α and intrinsic back-bond etching is thermodynamically preferential. Second, mpSiNWs typically generate red photoluminescence (PL), but the PL mechanism is still under debate. A laser was used to oxidize the surfaces of mpSiNWs and tune the PL from red to greenish-blue (GB), as described in Chapter 3. The laser oxidation was tuned as a function of laser power, and a complex model of the laser-induced surface modification was proposed to account for the laser-power and post-annealing effect. The laser-induced modification of the PL of mpSiNWs may be useful for data encryption. Third, the fabrication of plasmonic NSs and the study of their optical activities are in their infancy. In Chapter 4, I describe the use of glancing-angle deposition (GLAD) to fabricate silver NSs (AgNSs) with controllable helicity and demonstrate that AgNSs have intrinsic optical responses that originate from their structural helicity. The optical activity of an AgNSs dispersion was characterized by circular dichroism (CD), and systematic engineering of the helicity revealed that their UV and visible optical activities have two different origins. Fourth, physical limits prohibit the sensitive differentiation of enantiomers. In Chapter 5, I describe the grafting of chiral molecules onto AgNSs, which dramatically enhanced the differentiation of L- and D-glutathione (GSH). AgNSs have very strong optical activities that are weakened by GSH adsorption. The severity of the chiroptical weakening effect varies with the absolute configuration of GSH, resulting in enantiomeric differentiation with an anisotropic g-factor of approximately 0.5. This chiral nanoplasmon-induced anisotropy g-factor is superior by 2 to 4 orders of magnitude to those obtained with other methods and about one-fourth of the theoretical value. This proposed method can be adapted to differentiate chiral drugs, which is highly desirable in the pharmaceutical industry for the production of single-enantiomer drugs.
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Application of well-defined nanoparticles as catalysts for kinetic studies of model reactions, and their immobilization on mesoporous SBA-15 for olefin oxidationBingwa, Ndzondelelo Sigqibo 26 June 2015 (has links)
M.Sc. (Chemistry) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Synthesis of Long-chain Alkylbenzenes on Superacidic Catalysts Containing Embedded Phosphotungstic AcidKuvayskaya, Anastasia, Garcia, Saul, Vasiliev, Aleksey 12 April 2019 (has links)
Heteropolyacids (HPAs), such as phosphotungstic acid (PTA) and phosphomolybdic acid (PMA), with the Keggin structure are well known as solid superacids with estimated pKa of -13. High acidity of HPAs enabled their use as highly active homogeneous catalysts. However, homogeneous catalysis has many drawbacks, e.g. difficult and expensive separation of the used catalyst from the reaction mixture and its recycling. Application of pure HPAs in heterogeneous catalysis is limited by their low surface area and solubility in polar solvents. For increasing their surface area, HPAs should be immobilized on solid support. The objective of this work is the development of an active and stable HPA-containing catalyst for synthesis of long chain alkylbenzenes, which are essential precursors in the manufacture of surfactants. To prevent leachability of HPA from the support, it was covalently bonded into the silica matrix via Si‑O‑W bridges. The catalysts were obtained by co-condensation of tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) with PTA using sol-gel method in the presence of various surfactants as pore-forming agents. The synthesis was conducted by simultaneous addition of 20% HCl and ethanol solution of a mixture of TEOS and PTA to a solution of a surfactant. The reaction mixture was refluxed for 24 h. The obtained product was filtered, washed, air-dried, and calcined for total removal of a surfactant from pores. Use of Pluronic P123 as a non-ionic pore-forming agent produced the most acidic material. The synthesized mesoporous materials were tested as heterogeneous catalysts in liquid-phase alkylation of mesitylene by long-chain alkenes. They demonstrated higher activity than well-known zeolite HY. The analysis of catalyst recovered after the alkylation indicated no PTA leaching from silica matrix. Obtained superacidic mesoporous materials can potentially replace hazardous liquid Lewis acids currently used for long-chain alkylbenzene synthesis in petrochemical industry.
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A GENERALIZED METHOD FOR ALIGNMENT OF BLOCK COPOLYMER FILMS AND LARGE-SCALE FABRICATION OF TEMPLATED MESOPOROUS MATERIALSQiang, Zhe January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Preparation and applications of functionalized quantum dots and mesoporous silica nanoparticles. / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collectionJanuary 2011 (has links)
Fang, Qunling. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 168-170). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstract also in Chinese.
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Synthesis and characterization of chromium-doped ordered porous zirconia by polystyrene templateLin, I-chi 25 August 2009 (has links)
Zirconia is a metal oxide with high band gap. It is commonly used as catalysts in many industrial practices. In recent years, its high-energy-gap value and redox properties also render it as an excellent photocatalyst, which can eliminate or reduce a variety of pollutants. The purpose of this work is to prepare and characterize the chromium-doped ordered porous zirconia. The main purpose of doping chromium into the zirconia is to avoid the Martensitic transformation of zirconia under high temperatures by volume change and pore structure change, thus reducing the cracking and inferior mechanical properties.
With emulsion-free polymerization for the synthesis of polystyrene (PS) particles, controlling the particle diameter less than 200 nm is possible. A polystyrene template is thus produced by gravity sedimentation of these PS particles. Final Cr-doped zirconia is obtained by infiltration of a precursor solution, a mixture consisting of zirconium n-propoxide, n-propanol, acetylacetone, and chromium (III) nitrate nonahydrate, into the PS template, followed by drying and calcination at elevated temperatures. A systematic study on the pore structure and physical properties by XRD and Raman is conducted by varying the precursor concentration, the calcination temperature, and the dopant concentration. The results show that, unlike the pure zirconia, the pore structure of Cr-doped zirconia remains stable under higher calcination temperatures. Without any phase transformation, the doped Cr, evidenced from the EDS mapping, tends to help stabilize the zirconia at tetragonal phase. The average surface area and pore diameter of Cr-doped zirconia from BET measurement are 19 ~ 21 m2/g and 25 -45 nm, far better than the bulk zirconia. The improved surface properties are also confirmed by SEM observations.
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Badoga, Sandeep_PhD_thesis_April_20152015 April 1900 (has links)
Bitumen-derived heavy gas oil contains large amounts of sulfur (~4.0 wt.%) and nitrogen (~0.4 wt.%), which need to be lowered before it becomes suitable as a feedstock for refineries. The most widely used upgrading process is hydrotreating, and the conventional catalyst used for hydrotreating is Ni or Co and Mo or W supported on γ-Al2O3. Additionally, environmentally driven regulations impose strict limits on sulfur and nitrogen levels in transportation fuels. Therefore, the main focus of this work was to enhance the activity of a NiMo supported catalyst through its modification and to improve its selectivity to removal of bulky sulfur- and nitrogen-containing compounds from heavy gas oil under industrial hydrotreating conditions. This work was divided into four phases, and this thesis summarizes the research outcomes of each phase.
The first phase examined the effects of chelating ligands, specifically, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), on hydrotreating activity and the sulfidation mechanism. EDTA was seen to have a beneficial effect on hydrotreating activity. Detailed mechanistic aspects of interactions between support and EDTA, EDTA and metallic species, support and metal, support and active phase, and metallic species and metallic species at different reaction conditions, were also studied. Characterization by XANES revealed that the presence of a chelating agent delayed nickel sulfidation, which was the main cause of improvement in hydrodesulfurization (HDS) and hydrodenitrogenation (HDN) activities. It also showed that EDTA plays a role in redistribution of active phases during sulfidation and favors the formation of octahedral molybdenum oxides.
The second phase studied the effects of support modification and combinations of different supports and EDTA. In this phase, several mesoporous materials, including M-SBA-15 (M= Al, Ti and Zr), mesoporous mixed metal oxides (TiO2-Al2O3, ZrO2-Al2O3 andSnO2-Al2O3) and mesoporous metal oxides (ZrO2, Al2O3), were synthesized and used as support materials for a NiMo catalyst. NiMo/M-SBA-15 catalysts showed higher HDS and HDN activities and, the increase in activity is attributed to incorporation of heteroatoms in an SBA-15 matrix, which resulted in increase in metal support interaction, acidic strength and dispersion of active metals. The addition of EDTA to these catalysts helps in the formation of octahedral molybdenum oxide, which are easily reducible during sulfidation. This is evident from the XANES Mo LIII-edge study of the oxide catalysts. The increase in hydrodenitrogenation (HDN), hydrodesulfurization (HDS) and hydrodearomatization (HDA) activities as compared to that shown by the NiMo/γ-Al2O3 catalyst were also observed on addition of EDTA in large-pore, high-surface-area mesoporous zirconia supported NiMo catalysts. The incorporation of different metal oxides in alumina, as in the case of mixed metal oxides, resulted in a change in acidic strength and metal support interactions. It was observed with acridine-FTIR analysis that the catalysts with higher acidic strength tightly held acridine at high temperatures. This implies that catalysts with higher acidity are prone to inhibition by nitrogen-containing compounds present in feed, which will affect catalytic activity. The HDS and HDN activities for hydrotreating of heavy gas oil suggest that mesoporous alumina and titania-alumina supported catalysts perform better as compared to the conventional NiMo/γ-Al2O3 catalyst. Therefore, the effects of EDTA to Ni molar ratio (EDTA/Ni = 0 to 2) on the activities of the NiMo/MesoAl2O3 and NiMo/MesoTiO2-Al2O3 catalysts were studied, and EDTA was observed to have a negative impact on catalytic activity for these catalysts. This is attributed to a decrease in the active metal dispersion in these catalysts caused by the addition of EDTA. The catalysts NiMo/MesoAl2O3 and NiMo/MesoTiO2-Al2O3 without EDTA showed high active metal dispersion due to their high surface area and ordered structure.
The third phase studied the combined effects of phosphorus and EDTA on the hydrotreating activity of NiMo supported catalysts. The effects of method of phosphorus addition (sequential and co-impregnation method) were also studied. When phosphorus was added using a co-impregnation method, as in the catalyst NiMoP/MesoAl2O3(CI), an increase in HDN, HDA and HDS activities was observed. However, the catalysts containing both EDTA and phosphorus showed a decrease in HDS and HDN activities.
The fourth phase included a kinetic study using the Power Law and L-H models. The catalyst, NiMoP/mesoAl2O3(CI), was found to have higher HDN and HDS activities as compared to a conventional γ-Al2O3 supported catalyst containing phosphorus.
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Luminescent nanohybrids based on silica and d-f heterobimetallic silylated complexes: new tools for biological media analysis / Nanohybrides luminescents à base de silice et de complexe hétérobimétalliques d-f silylés: de nouveaux outils d'analyse des milieux biologiquesSábio, Rafael Miguel [UNESP] 13 October 2016 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2016-10-13 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / Le design de complexes luminescents hétérobimétalliques a suscité ces dernières années un intérêt croissant en raison de leurs propriétés photophysiques uniques. Dans ces complexes de lanthanide (Nd (III) et Yb (III)) associé à des chromophores du bloc d, la forte émission des métaux de transition dans le visible est utilisée pour sensibiliser de façon efficace les niveaux f-f des lanthanides(III) qui émettent à leur tour dans le visible ou l’IR selon les terres rares. Plus spécifiquement l’attention s’est focalisée sur le développement de complexes hétérobimétalliques d-f pour l’émission dans le proche infrarouge (NIR). En effet le proche infrarouge, comparé à l’UV, pénètre plus facilement les tissus biologiques humains notamment la peau. Bien que de telles propriétés confèrent à ces complexes bimétalliques un fort potentiel pour le diagnostic médical, aucun complexe hétérobimétallique d-f greffé de façon covalente à une matrice de silice n’a été décrit. Dans ce travail de nouveaux complexes hétérobimétalliques d-f contenant des ligands silylés ont été préparés et greffés sur la silice. Les complexes monomères [Ru(bpy)2(bpmd)]Cl2 (noté Ru), [Ru(bpy)(bpy-Si)(bpmd)]Cl2 (noté RuL) et [Ln(TTA-Si)3] (noté LnL3) et les complexes hétérobimétalliques d-f Ru-LnL3 et Ln-RuL (Ln = Nd3+, Yb3+) ont été préparés. La caractérisation des complexes a été effectuée par spectroscopie Raman, RMN 1H et 13C RMN. Les spectres RMN 1D 1H et 13C NMR ainsi que 2D de corrélation HSQC confirment les structures proposées. L’étude des propriétés photophysiques met en évidence l’émission de l’élément lanthanide dans le proche infrarouge ainsi que l'efficacité du processus de transfert d'énergie Ru-Ln qui est facilité par le ligand (2,2'-bipyrimidine). Les mesures de durée de vie et de rendement quantique (ET) pour le transfert d'énergie indiquent des valeurs remarquables comprises entre 30 et 84 %. La valeur du rendement quantique (ET) du complexe d'Yb-RuL, 73,4 %, est à ce jour la plus grande valeur rapportée pour un complexe hétérobimétallique Ru (II)-Yb (III). Le greffage sur différentes matrices de silice, mésoporeuse SiO2 ou dense SiO2 d, a été réalisé. Les nanohybrides SiO2-RuL, SiO2-NdL3 et SiO2-YbL3 ont été obtenus avec des taux de greffage allant de 0,08 à 0,18 mmol de complexe par gramme de silice. SiO2-RuNd et SiO2- RuYb ont été obtenus par greffage simultané des complexes silylés monomères de ruthénium et de lanthanide, des taux de greffage de 0,10 à 0,16 mmol.g-1 ont été obtenus, respectivement. Les rendements quantiques ET de transfert d’énergie des nanohybrides SiO2-RuNd et SiO2-RuYb sont respectivement de 40 and 27,5 %. La valeur remarquable obtenue pour le nanohybride impliquant le néodyme, SiO2-RuNd, s’explique par bonne adéquation entre les niveaux d’énergie du donneur et de l’accepteur. Les nanohybrides SiO2- RuYbL3, SiO2-YbRuL, SiO2d-YbRuL et SiO2-NdRuL ont été obtenus par greffage des complexes silylés hétérobimétallic d-f élaborés dans ce travail, les taux de greffage, de 0,03 à 0,17 mmol.g-1 permettent d’envisager une fonctionnalisation chimique ultérieure de ces nanoobjets. Les propriétés de luminescence de ces nanohybrides sont similaires à celles des complexes non greffés hormis pour SiO2-YbRuL and SiO2d-YbRuL qui présentent des profils de luminescence différents comparés au complexe libre Yb—RuL. Le greffage à l'intérieur des pores de la silice pourrait éviter le processus de désactivation de la luminescent contrairement au greffage sur la matrice de silice dense. Les propriétés photophysiques associées à la morphologie et à la stabilité de la matrice de silice mésoporeuse permettent d’envisager l’utilisation de ces nouveaux nanohybrides luminescents dans le proche infrarouge comme nanosondes ou nanomarqueurs de systèmes biologiques. / The design of heterobimetallic luminescent complexes has gained growing interest in recent years due to their unique photophysical properties. More specifically, the development of heterobimetallic complexes using d-block chromophores to sensitize the near-infrared (NIR) emission of lanthanide complexes (such as Nd(III) and Yb(III)) has received significant attention taking into account their longer emission wavelengths and the interest of the NIR emission which penetrates human tissue more effectively than UV light. These properties give them potential applications in medical diagnostics or biomedical assays. Transitions to excited state levels of transition metal complexes occurring in the visible and characterized by large absorption coefficients, could efficiently sensitize f-f levels of Ln(III) ions. In this work new d-f heterobimetallic complexes containing silylated ligands were prepared supported on silica materials. [Ru(bpy)2(bpmd)]Cl2 (labeled Ru), [Ru(bpy)(bpy-Si)(bpmd)]Cl2 (labeled RuL) and [Ln(TTA-Si)3] (labeled LnL3) and d-f heterobimetallic complexes, Ru—LnL3 and Ln—RuL (Ln = Nd3+, Yb3+) were prepared. Structural characterization was carried out by Raman Scattering, 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopies. Results obtained from 1H-13C HMBC and HSQC correlation NMR spectra confirm the formation of proposed complexes. Photophysical properties studies highlight the efficiency of Ru—Ln energy transfer processes in NIR-emitting lanthanide complexes mediated by conjugated bridging ligand (2,2'-bipyrimidine). Lifetime measurements were carried out and values of quantum yield for energy transfer (ET) between 30 and 84 % could be evaluated. ET of 73.4 % obtained for the Yb—RuL complex is the largest value reported for Ru(II)—Yb(III) heterobimetallic complexes so far. Grafting on different silica matrix was also demonstrated. SiO2-Ru, SiO2-NdL3 and SiO2-YbL3 nanohybrids were obtained with grafting efficiencies from 0.08 to 0.18 mmol g-1 of silica. SiO2-RuNd and SiO2-RuYb were performed from simultaneous grafting of ruthenium and lanthanides silylated complexes. Grafting efficiencies from 0.10 to 0.16 were obtained. ET of 40 and 27.5 % were obtained from SiO2-RuNd and SiO2-RuYb, respectively. The higher values observed for the Nd(III) nanohybrid is well explained by the matching of donor and acceptor energy levels. SiO2-RuYbL3, SiO2-YbRuL, SiO2 d-YbRuL and SiO2-NdRuL were carried out from grafting of d-f heterobimetallic silylated complexes. Grafting efficiencies from 0.03 to 0.17 were obtained. Luminescent properties from these nanohybrids were similar to the free complexes. However the SiO2-YbRuL and SiO2 d-YbRuL showed distinct luminescent profiles compared with the free Yb—RuL. The grafting inside the mesoporous channels may prevent luminescent desactivation processes comparing to the dense silica matrix. The photophysical properties associated with the morphology and stability of the mesoporous silica matrix allow suggesting these new NIR luminescent nanohybrids as nanoprobes or nanomarkers in biomedicine.
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