Project description:Silver nanoparticles and silver-graphene oxide nanocomposites were fabricated using a rapid and green microwave irradiation synthesis method. Silver nanoparticles with narrow size distribution were formed under microwave irradiation for both samples. The silver nanoparticles were distributed randomly on the surface of graphene oxide. The Fourier transform infrared and thermogravimetry analysis results showed that the graphene oxide for the AgNP-graphene oxide (AgGO) sample was partially reduced during the in situ synthesis of silver nanoparticles. Both silver nanoparticles and AgGO nanocomposites exhibited stronger antibacterial properties against Gram-negative bacteria (Salmonella typhi and Escherichia coli) than against Gram-positive bacteria (Staphyloccocus aureus and Staphyloccocus epidermidis). The AgGO nanocomposites consisting of approximately 40 wt.% silver can achieve antibacterial performance comparable to that of neat silver nanoparticles.
Project description:Nickel/iron-layered double hydroxide (NiFe-LDH) tends to undergo an electrochemically induced surface reconstruction during the water oxidation in alkaline, which will consume excess electric energy to overcome the reconstruction thermodynamic barrier. In the present work, a novel ultrasonic wave-assisted Fenton reaction strategy is employed to synthesize the surface reconstructed NiFe-LDH nanosheets cultivated directly on Ni foam (NiFe-LDH/NF-W). Morphological and structural characterizations reveal that the low-spin states of Ni2+ (t2g6eg2) and Fe2+ (t2g4eg2) on the NiFe-LDH surface partially transform into high-spin states of Ni3+ (t2g6eg1) and Fe3+ (t2g3eg2) and formation of the highly active species of NiFeOOH. A lower surface reconstruction thermodynamic barrier advantages the electrochemical process and enables the NiFe-LDH/NF-W electrode to exhibit superior electrocatalytic water oxidation activity, which delivers 10 mA cm-2 merely needing an overpotential of 235 mV. Besides, surface reconstruction endows NiFe-LDH/NF-W with outstanding electrooxidation activities for organic molecules of methanol, ethanol, glycerol, ethylene glycol, glucose, and urea. Ultrasonic-assisted Fenton reaction inducing surface reconstruction strategy will further advance the utilization of NiFe-LDH catalyst in water and organics electrooxidation.
Project description:This work reports on the synthesis of layered manganese oxides (δ-MnO₂) and their possible application as cathode intercalation materials in Al-ion and Zn-ion batteries. By using a one-pot microwave-assisted synthesis route in 1.6 M KOH (MnVII:MnII = 0.33), a pure layered δ-MnO₂ birnessite phase without any hausmannite traces was obtained after only a 14 h reaction time period at 110 °C. Attempts to enhance crystallinity level of as-prepared birnessite through increasing of reaction time up to 96 h in 1.6 M KOH failed and led to decreases in crystallinity and the emergence of an additional hausmannite phase. The influence of MnII:OH- ratio (1:2 to 1:10) on phase crystallinity and hausmannite phase formation for 96 h reaction time was investigated as well. By increasing alkalinity of the reaction mixture up to 2.5 M KOH, a slight increase in crystallinity of birnessite phase was achieved, but hausmannite formation couldn't be inhibited as hoped. The as-prepared layered δ-MnO₂ powder material was spray-coated on a carbon paper and tested in laboratory cells with Al or Zn as active materials. The Al-ion tests were carried out in EMIMCl/AlCl₃ while the Zn-Ion experiments were performed in water containing choline acetate (ChAcO) or a ZnSO₄ solution. Best performance in terms of capacity was yielded in the Zn-ion cell (200 mWh g-1 for 20 cycles) compared to about 3 mAh g-1 for the Al-ion cell. The poor activity of the latter system was attributed to low dissociation rate of tetrachloroaluminate ions (AlCl₄-) in the EMIMCl/AlCl₃ mixture into positive Al complexes which are needed for charge compensation of the oxide-based cathode during the discharge step.
Project description:Microwave (MW) irradiation was used for the grafting of azido-labeled oligo(ethylene oxide) (OEG) on alkynyl-terminated nonoxidized silicon substrates via copper-catalyzed "click" reaction. The "clickable" monolayers were prepared by photografting of an α,ω-alkynene, where the alkynyl terminus was protected by a trimethylgermanyl (TMG) group, onto hydrogen-terminated Si(111) surfaces. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) was primarily employed to characterize the monolayers, and the data obtained were utilized to calculate the surface density of the TMG-alkynyl-functionalized substrate. MW-assisted one-pot deprotection/click reaction was optimized on the surfaces using azido-tagged OEG derivatives. Using MW instead of conventional heating led to a substantial improvement in the rate of the reaction while suppressing the oxidation of the silicon interface and OEG degradation. The antifouling property of the resulting substrates was evaluated using fibrinogen as a model protein. Results show that the OEG-modification reduced the protein adsorption by >90%.
Project description:As a model for the energy-efficient aftertreatment of exhaust gas components, we studied microwave-assisted (MW) CO oxidation over a (La,Sr)CoO3-δ (LSC) perovskite oxide catalyst under dry and humidified conditions. We found that the use of a MW-based process can offer multiple advantages over traditional thermocatalysis in this scenario, as the nature of the MW-solid interaction offers quick, adaptive, and energy-efficient heating as well as improved yield and lower light-off temperatures. As found by combined CO and water MW-desorption experiments, the presence of technically relevant amounts of water leads to a competition for surface active sites and thus slows the reaction rate without indications for a fundamental change in the mechanism. Remarkably, the performance loss related to the presence of water was less pronounced in the MW-assisted process. Additionally, while we recorded a temperature-dependent degradation of the reaction rate in extended MW-catalysis experiments both in dry and humidified conditions, it quickly recovered after a short reactivation MW-treatment. Our study confirms that surface reaction can be driven by the use of MW-radiation in a similar magnitude that can be achieved by thermal activation at significantly higher temperatures. The nature of the effect of the MW-treatment on the structural and electronic surface properties of the LSC material was investigated by X-ray absorption (XAS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). We found evidence of a significant structural, chemical, and electronic reorganization of the oxide surface, possibly consistent with the occurrence of overheated surfaces or "hotspots" during MW-exposure, which may explain the increased catalytic and heating properties of the LSC after the MW-pretreatment. The good catalytic performance, quick response to MW-heating, and long-term stability of the catalyst all indicate the promising potential of a MW-based process for the energy-efficient exhaust aftertreatment using noble-metal-free oxide catalysts.
Project description:The manipulation of crystal orientation from the thermodynamic equilibrium states is desired in layered hybrid perovskite films to direct charge transport and enhance the perovskite devices performance. Here we report a templated growth mechanism of layered perovskites from 3D-like perovskites which can be a general design rule to align layered perovskites along the out-of-plane direction in films made by both spin-coating and scalable blading process. The method involves suppressing the nucleation of both layered and 3D perovskites inside the perovskite solution using additional ammonium halide salts, which forces the film formation starts from solution surface. The fast drying of solvent at liquid surface leaves 3D-like perovskites which surprisingly templates the growth of layered perovskites, enabled by the periodic corner-sharing octahedra networks on the surface of 3D-like perovskites. This discovery provides deep insights into the nucleation behavior of octahedra-array-based perovskite materials, representing a general strategy to manipulate the orientation of layered perovskites.
Project description:Representatives of the C-homoaporphine class of alkaloids have shown interesting biological activities. To date the synthesis of these molecules has never been attempted via a direct arylation strategy. We report herein the first Pd-mediated intramolecular direct arylation in the synthesis of C-homoaporphines via the use of microwaves. Use of tricyclohexylphosphine tetrafluoroborate as ligand gave good percentage conversions and suppressed competing debromination with the substrates evaluated. This arylation strategy should be broadly useful in the synthesis of C-homoaporphine alkaloids as demonstrated herein in the synthesis of (±)-homonantenine.
Project description:For more than five decades, alkali niobate-based materials (KxNa1-xNbO3) have been one of the most promising lead-free piezoelectric materials researched to be used in electronics, photocatalysis, energy storage/conversion and medical applications, due to their important health and environmentally friendly nature. In this paper, our strategy was to synthetize the nearest reproductible composition to KxNa1-xNbO3 (KNN) with x = 0.5, placed at the limit of the morphotropic phase boundary (MPB) with the presence of both polymorphic phases, orthorhombic and tetragonal. The wet synthesis route was chosen to make the mix crystal powders, starting with the suspension preparation of Nb2O5 powder and KOH and NaOH alkaline solutions. Hydrothermal microwave-assisted maturation (HTMW), following the parameter variation T = 200-250 °C, p = 47-60 bar and dwelling time of 30-90 min, was performed. All powders therefore synthesized were entirely KxN1-xNbO3 solid solutions with x = 0.06-0.69, and the compositional, elemental, structural and morphological characterization highlighted polycrystalline particle assemblage with cubic and prismatic morphology, with sizes between 0.28 nm and 2.95 μm and polymorphic O-T phase coexistence, and a d33 piezoelectric constant under 1 pC/N of the compacted unsintered and unpoled discs were found.
Project description:Many fluorophores that are widely used in analytical biochemistry and in biological microscopy contain a hydroxyaromatic component. One could also find fascinating chemistries of hydroxyaromatic dyes, especially those capable of excited state proton transfer (ESPT) to produce dual emission, in the literature of materials and physical chemistry. The ESPT-capable compounds have attracted interest based on their fundamental intellectual values in molecular photophysics and their potential utilities as light emitters in organic light-emitting diodes (LEDs) or fluorescent sensors. The hydroxyaromatic dyes could undergo either intra- or intermolecular proton transfer in either electronic ground or excited states. Although having long been applied for various purposes, some of their absorption and emission properties have not always been clearly described because of the insufficient attention given to proton transfer equilibria in either the ground or excited state and the challenges in computationally modeling the true emitters of these dyes under any given conditions. In this article, an attempt is made to summarize the spectroscopic properties of a few common hydroxyaromatic dyes that have been studied for both fundamental and practical purposes, with the help from quantum chemical calculations of the absorption and emission energies of these dyes in neutral and anion forms. The goal of this article is to provide readers some clarity in the optical properties of these compounds and the tools to understand and to predict the photon-initiated behaviors of hydroxyaromatic fluorophores.
Project description:Temperature-dependent dc-magnetization and ac-susceptibility curves have been recorded for series of single and double layered Ruddlesden-Popper multicomponent perovskites with chemical formula A2BO4 and A3B2O7, respectively, with (La, Sr) on A-sites and up to 7 different cations on the B-sites (Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu). The phase purity and chemical homogeneity of the compounds were investigated by X-ray diffraction and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Independently of the composition, spin glassiness is observed in both systems. Scaling analyses suggest the materials undergo spin glass phase transitions at low temperatures. Yet, qualitative differences are observed between the single-layered and double-layered systems, which are discussed in the light of the spatial dimensionality and magnetic interaction in layered oxide perovskites.