RESUMEN
We report the synthesis of anionic diniobium hydride complexes with a series of alkali metal cations (Li+ , Na+ , and K+ ) and the counterion dependence of their reactivity with N2 . Exposure of these complexes to N2 initially produces the corresponding side-on end-on N2 complexes, the fate of which depends on the nature of countercations. The lithium derivative undergoes stepwise migratory insertion of the hydride ligands onto the aryloxide units, yielding the end-on bridging N2 complex. For the potassium derivative, the N-N bond cleavage takes place along with H2 elimination to form the nitride complex. Treatment of the side-on end-on N2 complex with Me3 SiCl results in silylation of the terminal N atom and subsequent N-N bond cleavage along with H2 elimination, giving the nitride-imide-bridged diniobium complex.
RESUMEN
X-ray computed tomography (X-ray CT) has been widely used in the earth sciences, as it is non-destructive method for providing us the three-dimensional structures of rocks and sediments. Rock samples essentially possess various-scale structures, including millimeters to centimeter scales of layering and veins to micron-meter-scale mineral grains and porosities. As the limitations of the X-ray CT scanner, sample size and scanning time, it is not easy to extract information on multi-scale structures, even when hundreds meter scale core samples were obtained during drilling projects. As the first step to overcome such barriers on scale-resolution problems, we applied the super-resolution technique by sparse representation and dictionary-learning to X-ray CT images of rock core sample. By applications to serpentinized peridotite, which records the multi-stage water-rock interactions, we reveal that both grain-shapes, veins and background heterogeneities of high-resolution images can be reconstructed through super-resolution. We also show that the potential effectiveness of sparse super-resolution for feature extraction of complicated rock textures.