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Copolymerization of CO2 and epoxides mediated by zinc organyls

2018, Wulf, Christoph, Doering, Ulrike, Werner, Thomas

Herein we report the copolymerization of CHO with CO2 in the presence of various zinc compounds R2Zn (R = Et, Bu, iPr, Cy and Ph). Several zinc organyls proved to be efficient catalysts for this reaction in the absence of water and co-catalyst. Notably, readily available Bu2Zn reached a TON up to 269 and an initial TOF up to 91 h-1. The effect of various parameters on the reaction outcome has been investigated. Poly(ether)carbonates with molecular weights up to 79.3 kg mol-1 and a CO2 content of up to 97% were obtained. Under standard reaction conditions (100 °C, 2.0 MPa, 16 h) the influence of commonly employed co-catalysts such as PPNCl and TBAB has been investigated in the presence of Et2Zn (0.5 mol%). The reaction of other epoxides (e.g. propylene and styrene oxide) under these conditions led to no significant conversion or to the formation of the respective cyclic carbonate as the main product.

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Multi-walled carbon nanotube-based composite materials as catalyst support for water–gas shift and hydroformylation reactions

2019, Wolf, Patrick, Logemann, Morten, Schörner, Markus, Keller, Laura, Haumann, Marco, Wessling, Matthias

In times of depleting fossil fuel reserves, optimizing industrial catalytic reactions has become increasingly important. One possibility for optimization is the use of homogenous catalysts, which are advantageous over heterogeneous catalysts because of mild reaction conditions as well as higher selectivity and activity. A new emerging technology, supported ionic liquid phase (SILP), was developed to permanently immobilize homogeneous catalyst complexes for continuous processes. However, these SILP catalysts are unable to form freestanding supports by themselves. This study presents a new method to introduce the SILP system into a support made from multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT). In a first step, SILP catalysts were prepared for hydroformylation as well as low-temperature water–gas shift (WGS) reactions. These catalysts were integrated into freestanding microtubes formed from MWCNTs, with silica (for hydroformylation) or alumina particles (for WGS) incorporated. In hydroformylation, the activity increased significantly by around 400% when the pure MWCNT material was used as SILP support. An opposite trend was observed for WGS, where pure alumina particles exhibited the highest activity. A significant advantage of the MWCNT composite materials is the possibility to coat them with separation layers, which allows their application in membrane reactors for more efficient processes.

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Interconnected electrocatalytic Pt-metal networks by plasma treatment of nanoparticle-peptide fibril assemblies

2019, Bandak, J., Petzold, J., Hatahet, H., Prager, A., Kersting, B., Elsner, Ch., Abel, B.

Noble metal catalysts possess outstanding catalytic behaviors in organic reactions, photocatalysis, electrocatalysis and many other applications. Peptide fibrils are used for the controllable nanostructuring of metal nanoparticles with specific sizes, shapes and high-surface area structures. The degradation of these fibrils with O2-plasma yields interconnected networks of nanoparticles, similar to metallic nanowires. Herein, platinum nanoparticles (Pt-NPs) were synthesized by reduction using VUV excimer radiation. The particle size was characterized by dynamic light scattering (DLS). Due to agglomeration, the metal nanoparticles were stabilized using poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVP) and the same synthesis procedure. The influence of the polymer PVP molecular weight (Mwt), PVP concentration (Cp) and VUV irradiation time on platinum nanoparticle size was investigated. Small (2–3 nm) Pt-NPs are formed in the case of PVP with Mwt = 10 000 g mol−1. With increasing PVP Mwt, decreasing PVP concentration and shorter irradiation times, larger sized nanoparticles appear. The applicability of templated platinum nanoparticles, both the PVP-stabilized and non-stabilized Pt-NPs, immobilized via electrostatic interactions on the solid phase-synthesized aniline-GGAAKLVFF (AFP) peptide fibrils was investigated to serve as possible electrode material. The plasma treatment of the nanoparticle-fibril-assemblies was also studied as a novel technique. The Pt-NPs-AFP fibrils and the PVP-stabilized-Pt-NPs-AFP fibrils nanohybrids were employed to modify electrodes and then subjected to O2-plasma treatment. These O2-plasma treated/modified electrodes exhibited high electrocatalytic activities towards oxygen reduction in cyclic voltammetry measurements. Thus, the aforementioned nanocomposites hold great potential for polymer electrolyte fuel cells and other electrochemical applications in miniature devices and microfluidic chips.

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Construction of cost-effective bimetallic nanoparticles on titanium carbides as a superb catalyst for promoting hydrolysis of ammonia borane

2018, Guo, Zhangwei, Liu, Tong, Wang, Qingtao, Gao, Guanhui

Bimetallic cost-effective CoNi nanoparticles (NPs) are conveniently supported on titanium carbides (MXene) by a simple one-step wet-chemical method. The synthesized CoNi/MXene catalysts are characterized by XPS, TEM, STEM-HAADF and ICP-AES. The as-prepared CoNi NPs with a size of 2.8 nm are well dispersed on the MXene surface. It is found that among the CoNi bimetallic system, Co0.7Ni0.3 shows the best performance toward catalyzing ammonia borane (AB) decomposition with a turnover frequency value of 87.6 molH2 molcat−1 min−1 at 50 °C. The remarkable catalytic performance is attributed to the mild affiliation of MXene to NPs, which not only stabilizes NPs to maintain a good dispersion but also leaves sufficient surface active sites to facilitate the catalytic reaction.

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Complex calcium carbonate/polymer microparticles as carriers for aminoglycoside antibiotics

2018, Racovita, Stefania, Vasiliu, Ana-Lavinia, Bele, Adrian, Schwarz, Dana, Steinbach, Christine, Boldt, Regine, Schwarz, Simona, Mihai, Marcela

Composite microparticles of CaCO3 and two pectin samples (which differ by the functional group ratio) or corresponding nonstoichiometric polyelectrolyte complexes with different molar ratios (0.5, 0.9 and 1.2) are obtained, characterized and tested for loading and release of streptomycin and kanamycin sulphate. The synthesized carriers were characterized before and after drug loading in terms of morphology (by SEM using secondary electron and energy selective backscattered electron detectors), porosity (by water sorption isotherms) and elemental composition (by elemental mapping using energy dispersive X-ray and FTIR spectroscopy). The kinetics of the release mechanism from the microparticles was investigated using Higuchi and Korsmeyer-Peppas mathematical models.

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Correction: Direct chemical vapor deposition synthesis of large area single-layer brominated grapheme (RSC Advances (2019) 9 (13527-13532) DOI: 10.1039/C9RA01152H)

2019, Hasan, Maria, Meiou, Wang, Yulian, Liu, Ullah, Sami, Ta, Huy Q., Zhao, Liang, Mendes, Rafael G., Malik, Zahida P., Ahmad, Nasir M., Liu, Zhongfan, R¨ummeli, Mark H.

Correction for ‘Direct chemical vapor deposition synthesis of large area single-layer brominated graphene’ by Maria Hasan et al., RSC Adv., 2019, 9, 13527–13532. In the Acknowledgements section, the attribution “the Czech Republic from ERDF “Institute of Environmental Technology – Excellent Research” (No. CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/15_019/0000853), should read “the Czech Republic from ERDF OP RDE project No. CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000853”. The Royal Society of Chemistry apologises for these errors and any consequent inconvenience to authors and readers.

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Viscoelastic and self-healing behavior of silica filled ionically modified poly(isobutylene-co-isoprene) rubber

2018, Sallat, Aladdin, Das, Amit, Schaber, Jana, Scheler, Ulrich, Bhagavatheswaran, Eshwaran S., Stöckelhuber, Klaus W., Heinrich, Gert, Voit, Brigitte, Böhme, Frank

Rubber composites were prepared by mixing bromobutyl rubber (BIIR) with silica particles in the presence of 1-butylimidazole. In addition to pristine (precipitated) silica, silanized particles with aliphatic or imidazolium functional groups, respectively, were used as filler. The silanization was carried out either separately or in situ during compounding. The silanized particles were characterized by TGA, 1H-29Si cross polarization (CP)/MAS NMR, and Zeta potential measurements. During compounding, the bromine groups of BIIR were converted with 1-butylimidazole to ionic imidazolium groups which formed a dynamic network by ionic association. Based on DMA temperature and strain sweep measurements as well as cyclic tensile tests and stress-strain measurements it could be concluded that interactions between the ionic groups and interactions with the functional groups of the silica particles strongly influence the mechanical and viscoelastic behavior of the composites. A particularly pronounced reinforcing effect was observed for the composite with pristine silica, which was attributed to acid-base interactions between the silanol and imidazolium groups. In composites with alkyl or imidazolium functionalized silica particles, the interactions between the filler and the rubber matrix form dynamic networks with pronounced self-healing behavior and excellent tensile strength values of up to 19 MPa. This new approach in utilizing filler-matrix interactions in the formation of dynamic networks opens up new avenues in designing new kinds of particle-reinforced self-healing elastomeric materials with high technological relevance.

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Biofunctionalized zinc peroxide (ZnO2) nanoparticles as active oxygen sources and antibacterial agents

2017, Bergs, Christian, Brück, Lisa, Rosencrantz, Ruben R., Conrads, Georg, Elling, Lothar, Pich, Andrij

Oxygen is one of the most important substances for physiological reactions and metabolisms in biological systems. Through the tailored design of oxygen-releasing materials it might be possible to control different biological processes. In this work we synthesized for the first time zinc peroxide nanoparticles with controlled sizes and biofunctionalized surfaces using a one-step reaction procedure. The zinc peroxide nanoparticles were obtained with tunable sizes (between 4.0 ± 1.2 nm and 9.4 ± 5.2 nm) and were decorated with glucose 1-phosphate (Glc-1P). The specific interaction of the phosphate function of Glc-1P with the nanoparticle surface was monitored by solid state 31P-NMR and zeta-potential measurements. Furthermore, using fluorescence measurements we demonstrated that anchored glucose molecules on the nanoparticle surface are accessible for specific interactions with lectins. It could be shown that these interactions strongly depend on the amount of Glc-1P attached to the nanoparticle surface. Additionally it was demonstrated that the oxygen release from biofunctionalized zinc peroxide nanoparticles could be tuned according to the chemical composition of the nanoparticles and the pH of the aqueous solution. The antibacterial efficiency of the synthesized nanoparticles against Enterococcus faecalis, Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Porphyromonas gingivalis and Prevotella intermedia was evaluated by determination of minimal bactericidal concentration (MIC).

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Sulfonated covalent triazine-based frameworks as catalysts for the hydrolysis of cellobiose to glucose

2018, Artz, Jens, Delidovich, Irina, Pilaski, Moritz, Niemeier, Johannes, Kübber, Britta Maria, Rahimi, Khosrow, Palkovits, Regina

Covalent triazine-based frameworks (CTFs) were synthesized in large scale from various monomers. The materials were post-synthetically modified with acid functionalities via gas-phase sulfonation. Acid capacities of up to 0.83 mmol g−1 at sulfonation degrees of up to 10.7 mol% were achieved. Sulfonated CTFs exhibit high specific surface area and porosity as well as excellent thermal stability under aerobic conditions (>300 °C). Successful functionalization was verified investigating catalytic activity in the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of cellobiose to glucose at 150 °C in H2O. Catalytic activity is mostly affected by porosity, indicating that mesoporosity is beneficial for hydrolysis of cellobiose. Like other sulfonated materials, S-CTFs show low stability under hydrothermal reaction conditions. Recycling of the catalyst is challenging and significant amounts of sulfur leached out of the materials. Nevertheless, gas-phase sulfonation opens a path to tailored solid acids for application in various reactions. S-CTFs form the basis for multi-functional catalysts, containing basic coordination sites for metal catalysts, tunable structural parameters and surface acidity within one sole system.

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Different transition metal combinations of LDH systems and their organic modifications as UV protecting materials for polypropylene (PP)

2018, Naseem, Sajid, Lonkar, Sunil P., Leuteritz, Andreas, Labuschagné, Frederick J. W. J.

In this research, the use of layered double hydroxides (LDHs) as ultraviolet (UV) light-protecting additives for PP is explored. Different LDHs, such as ZnTi, ZnSn, ZnGa, ZnCr and CdCr LDHs, were prepared and their UV absorptions were characterized. The ZnTi LDHs showed higher UV absorption than the other four metallic combinations and were further organically modified with dodecylbenzene sodium sulfonate (SDBS) and lauric acid (LA). Nanocomposites of polypropylene (PP) with four different types of LDHs, ZnTi, ZnSn, ZnTi-SDBS and ZnTi-LA, were prepared at concentrations of 5%. The crystallinities and layered structures of all the metallic combinations of LDHs were characterized by wide angle X-ray spectroscopy (WAXS) and ultraviolet visible (UV-vis) absorption spectroscopy, and their crystal morphologies were studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The decomposition and thermal properties of the nanocomposites and pure PP were analyzed by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and by their photo-oxidation behavior. The addition of these organically modified and unmodified LDHs showed significant changes in the thermal decomposition of PP. The thermal stability of PP was increased to around 70 °C by the addition of SDBS-modified ZnTi LDHs (5% by weight), and an increase in induction time of about 300% was determined.