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Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
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    Coordination chemistry and photoswitching of dinuclear macrocyclic cadmium-, nickel-, and zinc complexes containing azobenzene carboxylato co-ligands
    (Frankfurt, Main : Beilstein-Institut zur Förderung der Chemischen Wissenschaften, 2019) Klose, Jennifer; Severin, Tobias; Hahn, Peter; Jeremies, Alexander; Bergmann, Jens; Fuhrmann, Daniel; Griebel, Jan; Abel, Bernd; Kersting, Berthold
    The synthesis of mixed-ligand complexes of the type [M2L(μ-L')]+, where L represents a 24-membered macrocyclic hexaaza-dithiophenolate ligand, L' is an azobenzene carboxylate co-ligand, and M = Cd(II), Ni(II) or Zn(II), is reported. A series of new complexes were synthesized, namely [M2L(μ-L')]+ (L' = azo-H, M = Cd (1), Ni (2); L' = azo-OH, M = Zn (3), Ni (4); L' = azo-NMe2, M = Zn (5), Cd (6), Ni (7); L' = azo-CO2Me, M = Cd (8), Ni (9)), and characterized by elemental analysis, electro-spray ionization mass spectrometry (ESIMS), IR, UV–vis and NMR spectroscopy (for diamagnetic Zn and Cd complexes) and X-ray single crystal structure analysis. The crystal structures of 3' and 5–8 display an isostructural series of compounds with bridging azobenzene carboxylates in the trans form. The paramagnetic Ni complexes 2, 4 and 7 reveal a weak ferromagnetic exchange interaction with magnetic exchange coupling constant values between 21 and 23 cm−1 (H = −2JS1S2). Irradiation of 1 with λ = 365 nm reveals a photoisomerization of the co-ligand from the trans to the cis form. © 2019 Klose et al.
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    Effect of synthesis catalyst on structure of nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes and electrical conductivity and electromagnetic interference shielding of their polymeric nanocomposites
    (New York, NY [u.a.] : Pergamon Press, 2016) Arjmand, Mohammad; Chizari, Kambiz; Krause, Beate; Pötschke, Petra; Sundararaj, Uttandaraman
    Different catalysts including Co, Fe, and Ni were used to synthesize nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes (N-CNTs) by chemical vapor deposition technique. Synthesized N-CNTs were melt mixed with a polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) matrix using a small scale mixer at different concentrations ranging from 0.3 to 3.5 wt%, and then compression molded. The characterization techniques revealed significant differences in the synthesis yield and the morphological and electrical properties of both N-CNTs and nanocomposites depending on the catalyst type. Whereas Co and Fe resulted in yields comparable to industrial multiwalled CNTs, Ni was much less effective. The N-CNT aspect ratio was the highest for Co catalyst, followed by Ni and Fe, whereas nitrogen content was the highest for Ni. Raman spectroscopy revealed lowest defect number and highest N-CNT crystallinity for Fe catalyst. Characterization of N-CNT/PVDF nanocomposites showed better dispersion for N-CNTs based on Co and Fe as compared to Ni, and the following order of electrical conductivity and electromagnetic interference shielding (from high to low): Co > Fe > Ni. The superior electrical properties of (N-CNT)Co nanocomposites were ascribed to a combination of high synthesis yield, high aspect ratio, low nitrogen content and high crystallinity of N-CNTs combined with a good state of N-CNT dispersion.
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    Development of Active and Stable Low Nickel Content Catalysts for Dry Reforming of Methane
    (Basel : MDPI, 2017-5-16) Ha, Quan Luu Manh; Armbruster, Udo; Atia, Hanan; Schneider, Matthias; Lund, Henrik; Agostini, Giovanni; Radnik, Jörg; Vuong, Huyen Thanh; Martin, Andreas
    Methane dry reforming (DRM) was investigated over highly active Ni catalysts with low metal content (2.5 wt %) supported on Mg-Al mixed oxide. The aim was to minimize carbon deposition and metal sites agglomeration on the working catalyst which are known to cause catalyst deactivation. The solids were characterized using N2 adsorption, X-ray diffraction, temperature-programmed reduction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and UV-Vis diffuse reflectance spectroscopy. The results showed that MgO-Al2O3 solid solution phases are obtained when calcining Mg-Al hydrotalcite precursor in the temperature range of 550–800 °C. Such phases contribute to the high activity of catalysts with low Ni content even at low temperature (500 °C). Modifying the catalyst preparation with citric acid significantly slows the coking rate and reduces the size of large octahedrally coordinated NiO-like domains, which may easily agglomerate on the surface during DRM. The most effective Ni catalyst shows a stable DRM course over 60 h at high weight hourly space velocity with very low coke deposition. This is a promising result for considering such catalyst systems for further development of an industrial DRM technology.
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    Aldehydes and ketones influence reactivity and selectivity in nickel-catalysed Suzuki-Miyaura reactions
    (Cambridge : RSC, 2020) Cooper, Alasdair K.; Leonard, David K.; Bajo, Sonia; Burton, Paul M.; Nelson, David J.
    The energetically-favorable coordination of aldehydes and ketones-but not esters or amides-to Ni0 during Suzuki-Miyaura reactions can lead either to exquisite selectivity and enhanced reactivity, or to inhibition of the reaction. Aryl halides where the C-X bond is connected to the same π-system as an aldehyde or ketone undergo unexpectedly rapid oxidative addition to [Ni(COD)(dppf)] (1), and are selectively cross-coupled during competition reactions. When aldehydes and ketones are present in the form of exogenous additives, the cross-coupling reaction is inhibited to an extent that depends on the strength of the coordination of the pendant carbonyl group to Ni0. This work advances our understanding of how common functional groups interact with Ni0 catalysts and how these interactions affect workhorse catalytic reactions in academia and industry. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.
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    The Contrasting Character of Early and Late Transition Metal Fluorides as Hydrogen Bond Acceptors
    (Washington, DC : ACS Publications, 2015) Smith, Dan A.; Beweries, Torsten; Blasius, Clemens; Jasim, Naseralla; Nazir, Ruqia; Nazir, Sadia; Robertson, Craig C.; Whitwood, Adrian C.; Hunter, Christopher A.; Brammer, Lee; Perutz, Robin N.
    The association constants and enthalpies for the binding of hydrogen bond donors to group 10 transition metal complexes featuring a single fluoride ligand (trans-[Ni(F)(2-C5NF4)(PR3)2], R = Et 1a, Cy 1b, trans-[Pd(F)(4-C5NF4)(PCy3)2] 2, trans-[Pt(F){2-C5NF2H(CF3)}(PCy3)2] 3 and of group 4 difluorides (Cp2MF2, M = Ti 4a, Zr 5a, Hf 6a; Cp*2MF2, M = Ti 4b, Zr 5b, Hf 6b) are reported. These measurements allow placement of these fluoride ligands on the scales of organic H-bond acceptor strength. The H-bond acceptor capability β (Hunter scale) for the group 10 metal fluorides is far greater (1a 12.1, 1b 9.7, 2 11.6, 3 11.0) than that for group 4 metal fluorides (4a 5.8, 5a 4.7, 6a 4.7, 4b 6.9, 5b 5.6, 6b 5.4), demonstrating that the group 10 fluorides are comparable to the strongest organic H-bond acceptors, such as Me3NO, whereas group 4 fluorides fall in the same range as N-bases aniline through pyridine. Additionally, the measurement of the binding enthalpy of 4-fluorophenol to 1a in carbon tetrachloride (−23.5 ± 0.3 kJ mol–1) interlocks our study with Laurence’s scale of H-bond basicity of organic molecules. The much greater polarity of group 10 metal fluorides than that of the group 4 metal fluorides is consistent with the importance of pπ–dπ bonding in the latter. The polarity of the group 10 metal fluorides indicates their potential as building blocks for hydrogen-bonded assemblies. The synthesis of trans-[Ni(F){2-C5NF3(NH2)}(PEt3)2], which exhibits an extended chain structure assembled by hydrogen bonds between the amine and metal-fluoride groups, confirms this hypothesis.