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1.
Nanoscale ; 16(20): 9659-9679, 2024 May 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38683667

RESUMO

Emerging photocatalytic applications of cerium dioxide (CeO2) include green hydrogen production, CO2 conversion to fuels, and environmental remediation of various toxic molecules. These applications leverage the oxygen storage capacity and tunable surface chemistry of CeO2 to photocatalyze the chosen reaction, but many open questions remain regarding the fundamental physics of photocatalysis over CeO2. The commonly ascribed 'bandgap' of CeO2 (∼3.1 eV) differs fundamentally from other photocatalytic oxides such as TiO2; UV light excites an electron from the CeO2 valence band into a 4f state, generating a polaron as the lattice distorts around the localized charge. Researchers often disregard the distinction between the 4f state and a traditional, delocalized conduction band, resulting in ambiguity regarding mechanisms of charge transfer and visible-light absorption. This review summarizes modern literature regarding CeO2 photocatalysis and discusses commonly reported photocatalytic reactions and visible light-sensitization strategies. We detail the often misunderstood fundamental physics of CeO2 photocatalysis and supplement previous work with original computational insights. The exceptional progress and remaining challenges of CeO2-based photocatalysts are highlighted, along with suggestions for further research directions based on the observed gaps in current understanding.

2.
Nanoscale ; 15(42): 16924-16932, 2023 Nov 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37591812

RESUMO

To reach energy density demands greater than 3 mA h cm-2 for practical applications, the electrode structure of lithium-sulfur batteries must undergo an architectural redesign. Freestanding carbon nanofoam papers derived from resorcinol-formaldehyde aerogels provide a three-dimensional conductive mesoporous network while facilitating electrolyte transport. Vapor-phase sulfur infiltration fully penetrates >100 µm thick electrodes and conformally coats the carbon aerogel surface providing areal capacities up to 4.1 mA h cm-2 at sulfur loadings of 6.4 mg cm-2. Electrode performance can be optimized for energy density or power density by tuning sulfur loading, pore size, and electrode thickness.

3.
J Phys Chem B ; 125(7): 1735-1745, 2021 02 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33576630

RESUMO

We previously described how thousands of the heme protein cytochrome c (cyt.c) self-organize into multilayered, roughly spherical superstructures as initiated by nucleation around one colloidal gold or silver nanoparticle. Within these superstructures, the protein is stabilized to unfolding in buffered media and survives superstructure encapsulation within silica gels and processing to form bioaerogels. We now report that Au∼cyt.c superstructures in buffered media are not simply static groupings of proteins, but that the Au core and protein corona exhibit dynamic electron-transfer reactions within the superstructure as verified by UV-visible and resonance Raman spectroscopy. Within the superstructure, hundreds to thousands of ferricytochrome c (FeIII-cyt.c) are reduced to ferrocytochrome c (FeII-cyt.c) following first-order kinetics with an average apparent forward rate constant of 1.9 ±0.4 × 10-5 s-1. The reducing power in the microheterogeneous medium is derived from two multielectron reductants: tannic acid used to stabilize the commercial gold sol and the Au nanoparticle at the center of the protein superstructure. Fluorescence monitoring of guanidinium chloride-induced unfolding reveals that superstructure-associated cyt.c is stabilized to unfolding before and after chemical reduction of FeIII-cyt.c to form FeII-cyt.c, indicating that the superstructures remain intact during microheterogeneous redox reactions. Smaller nucleating Au nanoparticles or lower ionic strength in the buffered medium yields a greater extent of cyt.c reduction. Partial oxidation of the cyt.c-associated nanoparticulate Au is verified by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The Au nanoparticle at the heart of the superstructure functions as a direct electron donor to the heme with oxidized Au atoms being recycled back to Au(0) as long as residual tannic acid, derived from the Au sol mother liquor, is present in the aqueous microheterogeneous medium.


Assuntos
Citocromos c , Nanopartículas Metálicas , Elétrons , Compostos Férricos , Ouro , Oxirredução , Substâncias Redutoras , Prata
4.
RSC Adv ; 11(24): 14495-14503, 2021 Apr 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35423958

RESUMO

Cation-defective iron oxides have proven to be effective Li-ion charge-storage hosts in nonaqueous electrolytes, particularly when expressed in disordered, nanoscale forms such as aerogels. Replacing a fraction of Fe sites in ferrites with high-valent cations such as V5+ introduces cation-vacancy defects that increase Li-ion capacity. Herein, we show that compositional substitution with electroinactive Al3+ further increases Li-ion capacity by 30% when incorporated within a disordered VFe2Ox aerogel, as verified by electrochemical tests in a two-terminal Li half-cell. We use electroanalytical techniques to show that both Al-VFe2Ox and VFe2Ox aerogels exhibit many of the hallmarks of pseudocapacitive materials, including fast charge-discharge and surface-controlled charge-storage kinetics. These disordered, substituted ferrites also provide the high specific capacity expected from battery-type electrode materials, up to 130 mA h g-1 for Al-VFe2Ox. Our findings are discussed in the context of related Li-insertion hosts that blur the distinctions between battery-like and capacitor-like behavior.

5.
J Vis Exp ; (163)2020 09 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33074262

RESUMO

We report two methods to create zinc-sponge electrodes that suppress dendrite formation and shape change for rechargeable zinc batteries. Both methods are characterized by creating a paste made of zinc particles, organic porogen, and viscosity-enhancing agent that is heated under an inert gas and then air. During heating under the inert gas, the zinc particles anneal together, and the porogen decomposes; under air, the zinc fuses and residual organic burns out, yielding an open-cell metal foam or sponge. We tune the mechanical and electrochemical properties of the zinc sponges by varying zinc-to-porogen mass ratio, heating time under inert gas and air, and size and shape of the zinc and porogen particles. An advantage of the reported methods is their ability to finely tune zinc-sponge architecture. The selected size and shape of the zinc and porogen particles influence the morphology of the pore structure. A limitation is that resulting sponges have disordered pore structures that result in low mechanical strength at low volume fractions of zinc (<30%). Applications for these zinc-sponge electrodes include batteries for grid-storage, personal electronics, electric vehicles, and electric aviation. Users can expect zinc-sponge electrodes to cycle up to 40% depth of discharge at technologically relevant rates and areal capacities without the formation of separator-piercing dendrites.


Assuntos
Dendritos/metabolismo , Zinco/química , Ar , Fontes de Energia Elétrica , Eletroquímica , Eletrodos , Fenômenos Mecânicos , Porosidade
6.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(37): 41277-41287, 2020 Sep 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32814427

RESUMO

We describe the opportunity to deploy aerogels-an ultraporous nanoarchitecture with co-continuous networks of meso/macropores and covalently bonded nanoparticulates-as a platform to address the nature of the electronic, ionic, and mass transport that underlies catalytic activity. As a test case, we fabricated Au||TiO2 junctions in composite guest-host aerogels in which ∼5 nm Au nanoparticles are incorporated either directly into the anatase TiO2 network (Au "in" TiO2, AuIN-TiO2 aerogel) or deposited onto preformed TiO2 aerogel (Au "on" TiO2, AuON/TiO2 aerogel). The metal-meets-oxide nanoscale interphase as visualized by electron tomography feature extended three-dimensional (3D) interfaces, but AuIN-TiO2 aerogels impose a greater degree of Au contact with TiO2 particles than does the AuON/TiO2 form. Both aerogel variants enable transport of electrons over micrometer-scale distances across the TiO2 network to Au||TiO2 junctions, as evidenced by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and ultrafast visible pump-IR probe time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. The siting of gold nanoparticles in the TiO2 network more effectively disperses trapped electrons. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations find that increased physical contact between Au and TiO2, induced by oxygen vacancies, produces increased hybridization of midgap states and quenches unpaired trapped electrons. We assign the apparent differences in electron-transport capabilities to a combination of the relatively better-wired Au||TiO2 junctions in AuIN-TiO2 aerogels, which have a greater capacity to dilute accumulated charge over a larger interfacial surface area, with an enhanced ability to discharge the accumulated electrons via catalytic reduction of adsorbed O2 to O2- at the interface. Solid-state 1H nuclear magnetic resonance experiments show that proton spin-lattice relaxation times and possibly proton diffusion are strongly coupled to Au||TiO2 interfacial design, likely through spin coupling of protons to unpaired electrons trapped at the TiO2 network. Taken together, our results show that Au||TiO2 interfacial design strongly impacts charge carrier (electron and proton) transport over mesoscale distances in catalytic aerogel architectures.

8.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(12): 14071-14078, 2020 Mar 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32118405

RESUMO

Electrochemical energy storage arises from processes that are broadly categorized as capacitive, pseudocapacitive, or battery-like. Advanced charge-storing materials that are designed to deliver high capacity at a high rate often exhibit a multiplicity of such mechanisms, which complicates the understanding of their charge-storage behavior. Herein, we apply a "3D Bode analysis" technique to identify key descriptors for fast Li-ion storage processes, where AC impedance data, such as the real capacitance (C') or phase angle (ϕ), are represented versus the frequency (f) and a third independent variable, the applied DC cell voltage. For double-layer processes, a near-constant C' or ϕ is supported across the entire voltage range, and the decrease in these values shows a near-linear decrease at higher f. For pseudocapacitance, an increase in C' is delivered, accompanied by high C' retention at higher f compared to double-layer processes. Interestingly, the lower ϕ values, where C' is highest, suggest that this is a key descriptor for pseudocapacitance, where high-rate charge storage is still facilitated within a kinetically limited regime. For battery-like processes, a high C' is only observed at the voltage at which the material stores charge, while outside that voltage, C' is negligible. The three-dimensional (3D) Bode analysis allows charge-storage dynamics to be mapped out in great detail with more delineation between mechanisms compared to the more frequently deployed kinetic analyses derived from cyclic voltammetry.

9.
Nanoscale Adv ; 2(10): 4547-4556, 2020 Oct 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36132898

RESUMO

Photodeposition of Cu nanoparticles on ceria (CeO2) aerogels generates a high surface area composite material with sufficient metallic Cu to exhibit an air-stable surface plasmon resonance. We show that balancing the surface area of the aerogel support with the Cu weight loading is a critical factor in retaining stable Cu0. At higher Cu weight loadings or with a lower support surface area, Cu aggregation is observed by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Analysis of Cu/CeO2 using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy finds a mixture of Cu2+, Cu+, and Cu0, with Cu+ at the surface. At 5 wt% Cu, Cu/CeO2 aerogels exhibit high activity for heterogeneous CO oxidation catalysis at low temperatures (94% conversion of CO at 150 °C), substantially out-performing Cu/TiO2 aerogel catalysts featuring the same weight loading of Cu on TiO2 (20% conversion of CO at 150 °C). The present study demonstrates an extension of our previous concept of stabilizing catalytic Cu nanoparticles in low oxidation states on reducing, high surface area aerogel supports. Changing the reducing power of the support modulates the catalytic activity of mixed-valent Cu nanoparticles and metal oxide support.

11.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 121(7): 4037-4044, 2017 Feb 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28890744

RESUMO

Thin-film ruthenium dioxide (RuO2) is a promising alternative material as a conductive electrode in electronic applications because its rutile crystalline form is metallic and highly conductive. Herein, a solution-deposition multi-layer technique is employed to fabricate ca. 70 ± 20 nm thick films (nanoskins) and terahertz spectroscopy is used to determine their photoconductive properties. Upon calcining at temperatures ranging from 373 K to 773 K, nanoskins undergo a transformation from insulating (localized charge transport) behavior to metallic behavior. Terahertz time-domain spectroscopy (THz-TDS) indicates that nanoskins attain maximum static conductivity when calcined at 673 K (σ = 1030 ± 330 S·cm-1). Picosecond time-resolved Terahertz spectroscopy (TRTS) using 400 nm and 800 nm excitation reveals a transition to metallic behavior when calcined at 523 K. For calcine temperatures less than 523 K, the conductivity increases following photoexcitation (ΔE < 0) while higher calcine temperatures yield films composed of crystalline, rutile RuO2 and the conductivity decreases (ΔE > 0) following photoexcitation.

12.
Nanoscale ; 9(32): 11720-11729, 2017 Aug 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28776054

RESUMO

Ultraporous copper/titanium dioxide (Cu/TiO2) aerogels supporting <5 nm diameter copper nanoparticles are active for surface plasmon resonance (SPR)-driven photocatalysis. The extended nanoscale Cu‖TiO2 junctions in Cu/TiO2 composite aerogels-which arise as a result of photodepositing copper at the surface of the nanoparticulate-bonded TiO2 aerogel architecture-stabilize Cu against oxidation to an extent that preserves the plasmonic behavior of the nanoparticles, even after exposure to oxidizing conditions. The metallicity of the Cu nanoparticles within the TiO2 aerogel is verified by aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy, electron energy-loss spectroscopy, and infrared spectroscopy using CO binding as a probe to distinguish Cu(0) from Cu(i). In contrast, photoreduction of Cu(ii) at a commercial nanoscale anatase TiO2 powder with primary particle sizes significantly larger than those in the aerogel results in a copper oxide/TiO2 composite that exhibits none of the plasmonic character of Cu nanoparticles. We attribute the persistence of plasmonic Cu nanoparticles without the use of ligand stabilizers to the arrangement of Cu and TiO2 within the aerogel architecture where each Cu nanoparticle is in contact with multiple nanoparticles of the reducing oxide. The wavelength dependence of the photoaction spectra for Cu/TiO2 aerogel films reveals visible-light photocatalytic oxidation activity initiated by an SPR-driven process-as opposed to photo-oxidation initiated by excitation of narrow-bandgap copper oxides.

13.
Langmuir ; 33(37): 9444-9454, 2017 09 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28723093

RESUMO

We use plasmonic Au-TiO2 aerogels as a platform in which to marry synthetically thickened particle-particle junctions in TiO2 aerogel networks to Au∥TiO2 interfaces and then investigate their cooperative influence on photocatalytic hydrogen (H2) generation under both broadband (i.e., UV + visible light) and visible-only excitation. In doing so, we elucidate the dual functions that incorporated Au can play as a water reduction cocatalyst and as a plasmonic sensitizer. We also photodeposit non-plasmonic Pt cocatalyst nanoparticles into our composite aerogels in order to leverage the catalytic water-reducing abilities of Pt. This Au-TiO2/Pt arrangement in three dimensions effectively utilizes conduction-band electrons injected into the TiO2 aerogel network upon exciting the Au SPR at the Au∥TiO2 interface. The extensive nanostructured high surface-area oxide network in the aerogel provides a matrix that spatially separates yet electrochemically connects plasmonic nanoparticle sensitizers and metal nanoparticle catalysts, further enhancing solar-fuels photochemistry. We compare the photocatalytic rates of H2 generation with and without Pt cocatalysts added to Au-TiO2 aerogels and demonstrate electrochemical linkage of the SPR-generated carriers at the Au∥TiO2 interfaces to downfield Pt nanoparticle cocatalysts. Finally, we investigate visible light-stimulated generation of conduction band electrons in Au-TiO2 and TiO2 aerogels using ultrafast visible pump/IR probe spectroscopy. Substantially more electrons are produced at Au-TiO2 aerogels due to the incorporated SPR-active Au nanoparticle, whereas the smaller population of electrons generated at Au-free TiO2 aerogels likely originate at shallow traps in the high surface-area mesoporous aerogel.

14.
Langmuir ; 33(37): 9416-9425, 2017 09 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28617602

RESUMO

Platinum is state-of-the-art for fast electron transfer whereas carbon electrodes, which have semimetal electronic character, typically exhibit slow electron-transfer kinetics. But when we turn to practical electrochemical devices, we turn to carbon. To move energy devices and electro(bio)analytical measurements to a new performance curve requires improved electron-transfer rates at carbon. We approach this challenge with electroless deposition of disordered, nanoscopic anhydrous ruthenium oxide at pyrolytic carbon prepared by thermal decomposition of benzene (RuOx@CVD-C). We assessed traditionally fast, chloride-assisted ([Fe(CN)6]3-/4-) and notoriously slow ([Fe(H2O)6]3+/2+) electron-transfer redox probes at CVD-C and RuOx@CVD-C electrodes and calculated standard heterogeneous rate constants as a function of heat treatment to crystallize the disordered RuOx domains to their rutile form. For the fast electron-transfer probe, [Fe(CN)6]3-/4-, the rate increases by 34× over CVD-C once the RuOx is calcined to form crystalline rutile RuO2. For the classically outer-sphere [Fe(H2O)6]3+/2+, electron-transfer rates increase by an even greater degree over CVD-C (55×). The standard heterogeneous rate constant for each probe approaches that observed at Pt but does so using only minimal loadings of RuOx.

15.
Langmuir ; 33(37): 9390-9397, 2017 09 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28627895

RESUMO

Electrocatalysis of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) was assessed for a series of Ni-substituted ferrites (NiyFe1-yOx, where y = 0.1 to 0.9) as expressed in porous, high-surface-area forms (ambigel and aerogel nanoarchitectures). We then correlate electrocatalytic activity with Ni:Fe stoichiometry as a function of surface area, crystallite size, and free volume. In order to ensure in-series comparisons, calcination at 350 °C/air was necessary to crystallize the respective NiyFe1-yOx nanoarchitectures, which index to the inverse spinel structure for Fe-rich materials (y ≤ 0.33), rock salt for the most Ni-rich material (y = 0.9), and biphasic for intermediate stoichiometry (0.5 ≤ y ≤ 0.67). In the intermediate Ni:Fe stoichiometric range (0.33 ≤ y ≤ 0.67), the OER current density at 390 mV increases monotonically with increasing Ni content and increasing surface area, but with different working curves for ambigels versus aerogels. At a common stoichiometry within this range, ambigels and aerogels yield comparable OER performance, but do so by expressing larger crystallite size (ambigel) versus higher surface area (aerogel). Effective OER activity can be achieved without requiring supercritical-fluid extraction as long as moderately high surface area, porous materials can be prepared. We find improved OER performance (η decreases from 390 to 373 mV) for Ni0.67Fe0.33Ox aerogel heat-treated at 300 °C/Ar, owing to an increase in crystallite size (2.7 to 4.1 nm). For the ORR, electrocatalytic activity favors Fe-rich NiyFe1-yOx materials; however, as the Ni-content increases beyond y = 0.5, a two-electron reduction pathway is still exhibited, demonstrating that bifunctional OER and ORR activity may be possible by choosing a nickel ferrite nanoarchitecture that provides high OER activity with sufficient ORR activity. Assessing the catalytic activity requires an appreciation of the multivariate interplay among Ni:Fe stoichiometry, surface area, crystallographic phase, and crystallite size.

16.
Plasmonics ; 12(3): 743-750, 2017 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28503102

RESUMO

Solution-deposited nanoscale films of RuO2 ("nanoskins") are effective transparent conductors once calcined to 200 °C. Upon heating the nanoskins to higher temperature the nanoskins show increased transmission at 550 nm. Electronic microscopy and X-ray diffraction show that the changes in the optical spectrum are accompanied by the formation of rutile RuO2 nanoparticles. The mechanism for the spectral evolution is clearly observed with ultrafast optical measurements. Following excitation at 400 nm, nanoskins calcined at higher temperatures show increased transmission above 650 nm, consistent with the photobleaching of a surface-plasmon resonance (SPR) band. Calculations based on the optical constants of RuO2 substantiate the presence of SPR absorption. Sheet resistance and transient terahertz photoconductivity measurements establish that the nanoskins electrically de-wire into separated particles. The plasmonic behavior of the nanoskins has implications their use in a range of optical and electrochemical applications.

17.
Science ; 356(6336): 415-418, 2017 04 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28450638

RESUMO

The next generation of high-performance batteries should include alternative chemistries that are inherently safer to operate than nonaqueous lithium-based batteries. Aqueous zinc-based batteries can answer that challenge because monolithic zinc sponge anodes can be cycled in nickel-zinc alkaline cells hundreds to thousands of times without undergoing passivation or macroscale dendrite formation. We demonstrate that the three-dimensional (3D) zinc form-factor elevates the performance of nickel-zinc alkaline cells in three fields of use: (i) >90% theoretical depth of discharge (DODZn) in primary (single-use) cells, (ii) >100 high-rate cycles at 40% DODZn at lithium-ion-commensurate specific energy, and (iii) the tens of thousands of power-demanding duty cycles required for start-stop microhybrid vehicles.

18.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(3): 2387-2395, 2017 Jan 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28006096

RESUMO

Using a solution-based, non-line-of sight synthesis, we electrolessly deposit ultrathin films of RuO2 ("nanoskins") on planar and 3D substrates and benchmark their activity and stability for oxygen-evolution reaction (OER) in acid electrolyte under device-relevant conditions. When an electrically contiguous ∼9 nm thick RuO2 nanoskin is expressed on commercially available, insulating SiO2 fiber paper, the RuO2@SiO2 electrode exhibits high current density at low overpotential (10 mA cm-2 @ η = 280 mV), courtesy of a catalyst amplified in 3D; however, the mass-normalized activity falls short of that achieved for films deposited on planar, metallic substrates (Ti foil). By wrapping the fibers with a <100 nm thick graphitic carbon layer prior to RuO2 deposition (RuO2@C@SiO2), we retain the high mass activity of the RuO2 (40-60 mA mg-1 @ η = 330 mV) and preserve the desirable macroscale properties of the 3D scaffold: porous, lightweight, flexible, and inexpensive. The RuO2@C@SiO2 anodes not only achieve the 10 mA cm-2 figure of merit at a low overpotential (η = ∼270 mV), but more importantly they do so while (1) minimizing the mass of catalyst needed to achieve this metric, (2) incorporating the catalyst into a practical electrode design, and (3) improving the long-term stability of the catalyst. Our best-performing anodes achieve state-of-the-art or better performance on the basis of area and mass, and do so with a catalyst density 300-580× less than that of bulk RuO2. By limiting the oxidizing potential required to evolve O2 at the electrode, even at 10 mA cm-2, we achieve stable activity for 100+ h.

19.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1504: 149-163, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27770420

RESUMO

Sol-gel-derived aerogels are three-dimensional, nanoscale materials that combine large surface area with high porosity. These traits make them useful for any rate-critical chemical process, particularly sensing or electrochemical applications, once physical or chemical moieties are incorporated into the gels to add their functionality to the ultraporous scaffold. Incorporating biomolecules into aerogels, other than such rugged species as lipases or cellulose, has been challenging due to the inability of most biomolecules to remain structurally intact within the gels during the necessary supercritical fluid (SCF) processing. However, the heme protein cytochrome c (cyt.c) forms self-organized superstructures around gold (or silver) nanoparticles in buffer that can be encapsulated into wet gels as the sol undergoes gelation. The guest-host wet gel can then be processed to form composite aerogels in which cyt.c retains its characteristic visible absorption. The gold (or silver) nanoparticle-nucleated superstructures protect the majority of the protein from the harsh physicochemical conditions necessary to form an aerogel. The Au~cyt.c superstructures exhibit rapid gas-phase recognition of nitric oxide (NO) within the bioaerogel matrix, as facilitated by the high-quality pore structure of the aerogel, while remaining viable for weeks at room temperature. More recently, careful control of synthetic parameters (e.g., buffer concentration, protein concentration, SCF extraction rate) have allowed for the preparation of cyt.c-silica aerogels, sans nucleating nanoparticles; these bioaerogels also exhibit rapid gas-phase sensing while retaining protein structural stability.


Assuntos
Citocromos c/química , Enzimas Imobilizadas/química , Géis/química , Dióxido de Silício/química , Animais , Estabilidade Enzimática , Ouro/química , Cavalos , Nanopartículas Metálicas/química , Nanopartículas Metálicas/ultraestrutura , Óxido Nítrico/análise , Transição de Fase , Prata/química
20.
Nanotechnology ; 27(17): 174002, 2016 Apr 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26987282

RESUMO

The ability to effectively screen and validate gas-diffusion electrodes is critical to the development of next-generation metal-air batteries and regenerative fuel cells. The limiting electrode in a classic two-terminal device such as a battery or fuel cell is difficult to discern without an internal reference electrode, but the flooded electrolyte characteristic of three-electrode electroanalytical cells negates the prime function of an air electrode-a void volume freely accessible to gases. The nanostructured catalysts that drive the energy-conversion reactions (e.g., oxygen reduction and evolution in the air electrode of metal-air batteries) are best evaluated in the electrode structure as-used in the practical device. We have designed, 3D-printed, and characterized an air-breathing, thermodynamically referenced electroanalytical cell that allows us to mimic the Janus arrangement of the gas-diffusion electrode in a metal-air cell: one face freely exposed to gases, the other wetted by electrolyte.

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