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To improve the activity of Co/Al2O3 catalysts in selective catalytic oxidation of ammonia (NH3-SCO), valence state and size of active centers of Al2O3-supported Co catalysts were adjusted by conducting H2 reduction pretreatment. The NH3-SCO activity of the adjusted 2Co/Al2O3 catalyst was substantially improved, outperforming other catalysts with higher Co-loading. Fresh Co/Al2O3 catalysts exhibited multitemperature reduction processes, enabling the control of the valence state of the Co-active centers by adjusting the reduction temperature. Changes in the state of the Co-active centers also led to differences in redox capacity of the catalysts, resulting in different reaction mechanisms for NH3-SCO. However, in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectra revealed that an excessive O2 activation capacity caused overoxidation of NH3 to NO and NO2. The NH3-SCO activity of the 2Co/Al2O3 catalyst with low redox capacity was successfully increased while controlling and optimizing the N2 selectivity by modulating the active centers via H2 pretreatment, which is a universal method used for enhancing the redox properties of catalysts. Thus, this method has great potential for application in the design of inexpensive and highly active catalysts.
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Óxido de Aluminio , Amoníaco , Cobalto , Oxidación-Reducción , Amoníaco/química , Catálisis , Óxido de Aluminio/química , Cobalto/química , Modelos Químicos , Contaminantes Atmosféricos/químicaRESUMEN
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate (HCQ) is extensively utilized due to its numerous therapeutic effects. Because of its properties of high solubility, persistence, bioaccumulation, and biotoxicity, HCQ can potentially affect water bodies and human health. In this study, the LaCo0.95Mo0.05O3-CeO2 material was successfully prepared by the sol-gel process, and it was applied to the experiment of degrading HCQ by activating peroxymonosulfate (PMS). The results of characterization analysis showed that LaCo0.95Mo0.05O3-CeO2 material had good stability, and the problem of particle agglomeration had been solved to some extent. Compared with LaCo0.95Mo0.05O3 material, it had a larger specific surface area and more oxygen vacancies, which was helpful to improve the catalytic activity for PMS. Under optimal conditions, the LaCo0.95Mo0.05O3-CeO2/PMS system degraded 95.5 % of HCQ in 10 min. The singlet oxygen, superoxide radicals, and sulfate radicals were the main radicals for HCQ degradation. The addition of Mo6+/Mo4+ and Ce4+/Ce3+ promoted the redox cycle of Co3+/Co2+ and enhanced the degradation rate of HCQ. Based on density functional theory and experimental analysis, three HCQ degradation pathways were proposed. The analysis of T.E.S.T software showed that the toxicity of HCQ was obviously reduced after degradation. The LaCo0.95Mo0.05O3-CeO2/PMS system displayed excellent reusability and the ability to remove pollutants in a wide range of real-world aqueous environments, with the ability to treat a wide range of pharmaceutical wastewater. In summary, this study provides some ideas for developing heterogeneous catalysts for advanced oxidation systems and provide an efficient, simple, and low-cost method for treating pharmaceutical wastewater that has good practical application potential.
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Cerio , Cobalto , Hidroxicloroquina , Peróxidos , Cerio/química , Cobalto/química , Peróxidos/química , Hidroxicloroquina/química , Hidroxicloroquina/farmacología , Óxidos/química , Tamaño de la Partícula , Propiedades de Superficie , CatálisisRESUMEN
In this study, the activity and stability of Fenton-like reactions are enhanced by constructing a low-crystallinity FeCo bimetallic metal-organic framework (FeCox-BDC (BDC denotes as terephthalic acid)) through interface electron reconstruction. However, the specific origins and mechanisms of their enhanced activity, particularly in Fenton-like reactions, remains unclear. Systematic analysis revealed that the isomorphic substitution of Co (II) reduces the coordination number and d-electron count at local Fe (III) sites, shifting the d-band centers (-1.59 eV) closer to the Fermi level. Additionally, Co 3d-orbitals can accept electrons, improving the occupation of antibonding orbitals. Notably, Fe (III) and Co (II) sites exhibit a synergistic effect: Fe (III) sites strongly adsorbed the Oα point of the peroxy bond (lOαOß), while Co (II) sites efficiently activated Oß. Within 5 min, FeCo1/3-BDC achieved a 98 % reduction in Rhodamine-B (RhB), surpassing Fe-BDC by a factor of 76 and homogeneous Fenton catalytic systems (Co (II)/peroxymonosulfate (PMS) and Fe (III)/Co (II)/PMS). This work provides a profound understanding of interface electron reconstruction, offering valuable insights into guiding Fenton-like mechanisms.
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The chemistry of sulfur cycle contributes significantly to the atmospheric nucleation process, which is the first step of new particle formation (NPF). In the present study, cycloaddition reaction mechanism of sulfur trioxide (SO3) to hydrogen sulfide (H2S) which is a typical air pollutant and toxic gas detrimental to the environment were comprehensively investigate through theoretical calculations and Atmospheric Cluster Dynamic Code simulations. Gas-phase stability and nucleation potential of the product thiosulfuric acid (H2S2O3, TSA) were further analyzed to evaluate its atmospheric impact. Without any catalysts, the H2S + SO3 reaction is infeasible with a barrier of 24.2 kcal/mol. Atmospheric nucleation precursors formic acid (FA), sulfuric acid (SA), and water (H2O) could effectively lower the reaction barriers as catalysts, even to a barrierless reaction with the efficiency of cis-SA > trans-FA > trans-SA > H2O. Subsequently, the gas-phase stability of TSA was investigated. A hydrolysis reaction barrier of up to 61.4 kcal/mol alone with an endothermic isomerization reaction barrier of 5.1 kcal/mol under the catalytic effect of SA demonstrates the sufficient stability of TSA. Furthermore, topological and kinetic analysis were conducted to determine the nucleation potential of TSA. Atmospheric clusters formed by TSA and atmospheric nucleation precursors (SA, ammonia NH3, and dimethylamine DMA) were thermodynamically stable. Moreover, the gradually decreasing evaporation coefficients for TSA-base clusters, particularly for TSA-DMA, suggests that TSA may participate in NPF where the concentration of base molecules are relatively higher. The present new reaction mechanism may contributes to a better understanding of atmospheric sulfur cycle and NPF.
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Contaminantes Atmosféricos , Sulfuro de Hidrógeno , Modelos Químicos , Sulfuro de Hidrógeno/química , Contaminantes Atmosféricos/química , Reacción de Cicloadición , Atmósfera/química , Óxidos de Azufre/química , Cinética , Azufre/químicaRESUMEN
Solar-driven photo-thermal dry reforming of methane (DRM) is an environmentally friendly production route for high-value-added chemicals. However, the lack of thorough understanding of the mechanism for photo-thermal reaction has limited its further development. Here, we systematically investigated the mechanism of photo-thermal DRM reaction with the representative of Ru/CeO2 catalyst. Through in situ DRIFTs and transient experiments, comprehensive investigation into the reaction steps and their reactive sites in the process of DRM reaction were conducted. Besides, the excitation and migration direction of photo-electron was determined by ISI-XPS experiments, and the change of surface defect structure induced by light was characterized by ISI-EPR experiments. Based on the above results, the photo-enhancement effect on each micro-reaction step was determined. This study provides a theoretical basis for the industrialization of photo-thermal DRM reaction and its development of catalysts.
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Herein, three supported catalysts, CuO/Al2O3, CeO2/Al2O3, and CuO-CeO2/Al2O3, were synthesized by the convenient impregnation method to reveal the effect of CeO2 addition on catalytic performance and reaction mechanism for toluene oxidation. Compared with CuO/Al2O3, the T50 and T90 (the temperatures at 50% and 90% toluene conversion, respectively) of CuO-CeO2/Al2O3 were reduced by 33 and 39 °C, respectively. N2 adsorption-desorption experiment, XRD, SEM, EDS mapping, Raman, EPR, H2-TPR, O2-TPD, XPS, NH3-TPD, Toluene-TPD, and in-situ DRIFTS were conducted to characterize these catalysts. The excellent catalytic performance of CuO-CeO2/Al2O3 could be attributed to its strong copper-cerium interaction and high oxygen vacancies concentration. Moreover, in-situ DRIFTS proved that CuO-CeO2/Al2O3 promoted the conversion of toluene to benzoate and accelerated the deep degradation path of toluene. This work provided valuable insights into the development of efficient and economical catalysts for volatile organic compounds.
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Cerio , Cobre , Oxidación-Reducción , Tolueno , Tolueno/química , Catálisis , Cobre/química , Cerio/química , Modelos Químicos , Contaminantes Atmosféricos/químicaRESUMEN
Green hydrogen energy, as one of the most promising energy carriers, plays a crucial role in addressing energy and environmental issues. Oxygen evolution reaction catalysts, as the key to water electrolysis hydrogen production technology, have been subject to durability constraints, preventing large-scale commercial development. Under the high current density and harsh acid-base electrolyte conditions of the water electrolysis reaction, the active metals in the catalysts are easily converted into high-valent soluble species to dissolve, leading to poor structural durability of the catalysts. There is an urgent need to overcome the durability challenges under acidic conditions and develop electrocatalysts with both high catalytic activity and high durability. In this review, the latest research results are analyzed in depth from both thermodynamic and kinetic perspectives. First, a comprehensive summary of the structural deactivation state process of noble metal oxide catalysts is presented. Second, the evolution of the structure of catalysts possessing high durability is discussed. Finally, four new strategies for the preparation of stable catalysts, "electron buffer (ECB) strategy", combination strength control, strain control, and surface coating, are summarized. The challenges and prospects are also elaborated for the future synthesis of more effective Ru/Ir-based catalysts and boost their future application.
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CONTEXT: The negative of the Shannon entropy derivative is proposed to account for electron density contraction as the chemical bonds are breaking and forming during a chemical reaction. We called this property the electron density contraction index, EDC, which allows identifying stages in a reaction that are dominated by electron contraction or expansion. Four different reactions were analyzed to show how the EDC index changes along the reaction coordinate. The results indicate that the rate of change of Shannon entropy is directly related to the rate of change of the electron density at the bond critical points between all the atomic pairs in the molecular systems. It is expected that EDC will complement the detailed analysis of reaction mechanisms that can be performed with the theoretical tools available to date. METHODS: Density functional theory calculations at the B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) level of theory were carried out using Gaussian 16 to analyze the reaction mechanisms of the four reactions studied. The reaction paths were obtained via the intrinsic reaction coordinate method, which served as the reaction coordinate to obtain the reaction force and the EDC profiles in each case. Shannon entropy and electron density at the bond critical points were calculated using the Multiwfn 3.7 package.
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Polyanion phosphates exhibit great potential as calcium-ion battery (CIB) cathodes, boasting high working voltage and rapid ion diffusion. Nevertheless, they frequently suffer from capacity decay with irreversible phase transitions; the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Herein, we report an adaptively layerized structure evolution from discrete NaV2O2(PO4)2F nanoparticles (NPs) to interconnected VOPO4 nanosheets (NSs), triggered by electrochemical (de)calcification, leading to an improvement in Ca2+ storage performance. This electrochemistry-driven self-adapted layerization occurs over approximately 200 cycles, during which NPs undergo a "deform/merge-layerization" process, transitioning from a three-dimensional to a two-dimensional atomic structure, with a distinct 0.68 nm lattice spacing. The transition mechanism is demonstrated to be linked to the gradual separation of structural Na+ and F-. The resultant VOPO4 NSs exhibit exceptional Ca2+ diffusion kinetics (3.19 × 10-9 cm2 s-1, currently the optimal value among inorganic cathode materials for CIBs), enhanced capacity (â¼100 mA h g-1), longevity (over 1000 cycles at 50 mA g-1), and high rate (84% retention rates when increasing current density from 50 to 200 mA g-1). Employing advanced electron microscopy, this study reveals an electrochemical activation-induced structure evolution at the atomic level, providing valuable insights into the design of high-performance CIB cathodes.
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The Z-scheme heterojunction has been demonstrated to be effective in tuning the photocatalytic performance of photocatalysts. However, there is still a lack of quantitative and in-depth research on how the Z-scheme heterojunction affects the concentration of surface-reaching photoexcited charges. Here, by combining time-resolved spectroscopies and kinetic analysis, the concentration of surface-reaching photoholes (Ch+(surf)) within g-C3N4/TiO2 Z-scheme heterojunctions was quantitatively analyzed for the first time. Quantitative measurements reveal that Ch+(surf) of the prepared Z-scheme photocatalysts is highly dependent on the g-C3N4 content and the induced Z-scheme heterojunctions at the g-C3N4/TiO2 interface. Encouragingly, we found that a properly engineered Z-scheme heterojunction with close coupling of g-C3N4 and TiO2 can significantly increase the Ch+(surf), leading to nearly a 1.7-fold increase compared with pristine TiO2 samples. Furthermore, a distinct hole trap state-mediated Z-scheme charge transfer mechanism was uncovered in which the intrinsic interface defects at the g-C3N4/TiO2 junction act as hole traps, accelerating interface electron-hole recombination, thereby boosting spatial charge separation and ultimately enriching the Ch+(surf). This work provides insights into understanding and controlling electron pathways and Ch+(surf) in Z-scheme photocatalysis, with implications for the screening of different types of direct Z-scheme photocatalysts.
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Designing catalysts with desirable oxygen evolution reaction (OER) performance under pH-universal conditions is of great significance to promote the development of hydrogen production. Herein, we successfully synthesized a crystalline-amorphous IrOx supported on perovskite oxide nanotubes to obtain IrOx@La0.6Ca0.4Fe0.8Ni0.2O3 with superior OER performance in whole pH media. The overpotential of the IrOx@La0.6Ca0.4Fe0.8Ni0.2O3 catalyst in media of pH 14, 7.2, and 1 has been demonstrated to be 120, 400, and 143 mV, respectively, with no significant element dissolution as well as double-layer capacitance decay after the durability test. Through comparative experiments with IrOx@CNT and the physical mixture of IrOx and La0.6Ca0.4Fe0.8Ni0.2O3, it is found that the strong metal-support interaction (SMSI) in IrOx@La0.6Ca0.4Fe0.8Ni0.2O3 makes IrOx exist in an amorphous state rich in Ir3+, which is closely associated with the surface-active species Ir-OH. Through the regulation of Ir by a perovskite oxide support at the heterointerface, the reaction breaks through the limitation of the adsorbate evolution mechanism (AEM) and converts to a lattice-oxygen-mediated mechanism (LOM), which was fully demonstrated by the addition of the probe tetramethylammonium cation (TMA+), a LOM reaction intermediate, to the electrolyte. This work fills the research gap of perovskite oxide supported Ir-based catalysts with heterogeneous structures, providing an excellent strategy for the structural design of efficient pH-universal OER catalysts for hydrogen production systems.
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Fenton-like advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) are commonly used to eliminate recalcitrant organic pollutants as they produce highly reactive oxygen species through the reactions between the catalysts and oxidants. Recently, considerable attention has been directed towards shell-structured Fenton-like catalysts that offer high stability, maximum utilization of active sites, and exceptional catalytic performance. In this review, we have introduced the concept of several typical shell-forming architectures (e.g., hollow structure, core-shell structure, yolk-shell structure, particle-in-tube structure, and multi-shelled structure), elucidating their role in promoting Fenton-like reaction catalysis through the nanoconfinement mechanism. In each aspect, the correlation between the shell-induced effects and the Fenton-like catalytic performance is highlighted. Finally, future challenges and opportunities for the development of shell-structured Fenton-like catalysts towards AOPs are presented, offering bright practical application prospects.
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Bisfunctional benzoxazine and polyether diamine-based polymers show Arrhenius-like stress-relaxation varying with stoichiometry and polymerization temperatures proving vitrimeric behavior. Molecular structural investigations reveal the presence of different aminoalkylated phenols occurring at varying ratios depending on polymer composition and polymerization conditions. The vitrimeric mechanism is found to involve an amine exchange reaction of aminoalkylated phenols in an equilibrium reaction like a nucleophilic substitution reaction. As determined by molecular studies and dissolution experiments in reactive solvents, aliphatic and aromatic primary as well as aliphatic secondary amines in the polybenzoxazine structure can act as nucleophiles in reaction with electrophilic methylene bridges. Thus, aminoalkylated phenols proved to be a relevant structural motif resulting in a vitrimeric polybenzoxazine due to amine exchange reaction.
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With Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) widely promoted, MnCe-based catalysts have received extensive attention under the advantages of high efficiency, stability and economy for refractory organic pollutants present in urban wastewater. Driven by multiple factors such as environmental pollution, technological development, and policy promotion, a systematic review of MnCe-based catalysts is urgently needed in the current research situation. This research provides a critical review of MnCe-based catalysts for removal of organic pollutants in urban wastewater by AOPs. It is found that co-precipitation and sol-gel methods are more appropriate methods for catalyst preparation. Among a host of influence factors, catalyst composition and pH are crucial in the catalytic oxidation processes. The synergistic effect of the free radical pathway and surface catalysis results in better pollutants degradation. It is more valuable to utilize multiple systems for oxidation (e.g., photo-Fenton technology) to improve the catalytic efficiency. This review provides theoretical guidance for MnCe-based catalysts and offers a reference direction for future research in the AOPs of organic pollutants removal from urban wastewater.
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Red mud, as a solid waste with high alkalinity, had a detrimental impact on the environment and required urgent attention. Currently, the mass processing and consumption of red mud were typically conducted under thermal conditions, so it was essential to gain a comprehensive understanding of the oxidative pyrolysis process. The thermogravimetric experiments were conducted at multiple heating rates in air and exhibited three obvious stages. The activation energy and reaction mechanism of three oxidative pyrolysis stages were explored using model-free and model-fitting methods, revealing the activation energies of 162.2, 265.8, 214.1 kJ/mol and the most suitable reaction mechanisms of g(α)=[-ln(1-α)]³, g(α)=1-(1-α)1/4, g(α)=[-ln(1-α)]1/2 for each stage, respectively. Furthermore, the estimated kinetic parameters and reaction mechanisms were applied to extra heating rate to verify the accuracy. More important, the effect of air on the pyrolysis process of red mud was examined by comparing the results with those obtained from pure nitrogen pyrolysis. The obtained oxidative pyrolysis characteristics of red mud could provide valuable insights of its co-pyrolysis or combustion for resources recycling.
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Intermolecular interactions and adsorbate coverage on a metal electrode's surface/interface play an important role in CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR). Herein, the activity and selectivity of CO2RR on bimetallic electrode, where a full monoatomic Cu layer covers on Ag surface (CuML/Ag) are investigated by using density functional theory calculations. The surface geometric and electronic structure results indicate that there is high electrocatalytic activity for CO2RR on the CuML/Ag electrode. Specifically, the CuML/Ag surface can accelerate the H2O and CO2 adsorption and hydrogenation while lowering the reaction energy of the rate-determining step. The structure parameters of chemisorbed CO2 with and without H2O demonstrate that activated H2O not only promotes the C-O dissociation but also provides the protons required for CO2RR on the CuML/Ag electrode surface. Furthermore, the various reaction mechanism diagrams indicate that the CuML/Ag electrode has high selectivity for CO2RR, and the efficiency of products can be regulated by modulating the reaction's electric potential.
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Molybdenum trioxide (MoO3) is a promising positive electrode material for aqueous aluminum-ion batteries due to its high theoretical capacity. However, MoO3 faces several challenges in an aqueous electrolyte, such as easy dissolution of reaction products, volume expansion, and low conductivity, which severely limit its application in aqueous batteries. In this work, we effectively increased the overall conductivity of the electrode by in-situ growing MoO3 on the Mo2C MXene layer. MXene can effectively inhibit the dissolution and structural loss of MoO3 reaction products. Additionally, the coordination effect of Mo2C and MoO3 achieves a stable near-surface reaction on the MXene laminates, resulting in the Mo2C/MoO3 composite exhibiting excellent aluminum storage properties (123.5 mAh/g after 200 cycles at 0.4 A/g). The energy storage mechanism of H+/Al3+ co-insertion/extraction was elucidated through non-in-situ characterization, and the promotion effect of Mo2C on MoO3 reaction kinetics was verified by density functional theory calculations. This work provides new insights into improving the stability of AAIB cathodes and extends the application of Mo-based MXene in aqueous batteries.
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Dry reforming of methane (DRM), a pivotal process for converting greenhouse gases into syngas is demanding rationally designed catalysts with high stability and ideal catalytic performance for industrial applications due to its stability of reactant molecules and characteristic of carbon deposition. However, the mechanistic understanding of how the coordination environment of the metal in a single-atom catalytic system may influence the catalytic performance remains limited. In this work, high- and low-coordinating Ru-based (RuHC and RuLC) catalysts with distinct Ru-O coordination numbers are prepared using one-pot and two-step methods. The difference in the stability (12.3% and negligible deactivation during 20 h test for RuLC and RuHC catalysts respectively) and selectivity (0.57 and 0.37 of H2/CO ratio) brought by the coordination environment signified the structure-function relationship of single-atom catalysts in DRM. The impact of the structure on the properties is systematically investigated by thorough structural and operando characterization as well as density functional theory (DFT) calculation. The findings contribute to the optimal design of single-atom catalysts for DRM, offering a theoretical basis for industrial catalyst development and the potential to improve the process's environmental impact.
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Sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) are considered one of the promising candidates for energy storage devices due to the low cost and low redox potential of sodium. However, their implementation is hindered by sluggish kinetics and rapid capacity decay caused by inferior conductivity, lattice deterioration, and volume changes of conversion-type anode materials. Herein, we report the design of a multicore-shell anode material based on manganese selenide (MnSe) nanoparticle encapsulated N-doped carbon (MnSe@NC) nanorods. Benefiting from the conductive multicore-shell structure, the MnSe@NC anodes displayed prominent rate capability (152.7 mA h g-1 at 5 A g-1) and long lifespan (132.7 mA h g-1 after 2000 cycles at 5 A g-1), verifying the essence of reasonable anode construction for high-performance SIBs. Systematic in situ microscopic and spectroscopic methods revealed a highly reversible conversion reaction mechanism of MnSe@NC. Our study proposes a promising route toward developing advanced transition metal selenide anodes and comprehending electrochemical reaction mechanisms toward high-performance SIBs.
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Iron and 2-oxoglutarate dependent (Fe/2OG) enzymes exhibit an exceedingly broad reaction repertoire. The most prevalent reactivity is hydroxylation, but many other reactivities have also been discovered in recent years, including halogenation, desaturation, epoxidation, endoperoxidation, epimerization, and cyclization. To fully explore the reaction mechanisms that support such a diverse reactivities in Fe/2OG enzyme, it is necessary to utilize a multi-faceted research methodology, consisting of molecular probe design and synthesis, in vitro enzyme assay development, enzyme kinetics, spectroscopy, protein crystallography, and theoretical calculations. By using such a multi-faceted research approach, we have explored reaction mechanisms of desaturation and epoxidation catalyzed by a bi-functional Fe/2OG enzyme, AsqJ. Herein, we describe the experimental protocols and computational workflows used in our studies.