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Intensive research on improving the catalytic properties of zeolites is focused on modulating their acidity and the distribution of associated Al sites. Herein, by studying a series of ZSM-5 zeolites over a broad range of Al content, we demonstrate how the nature of the mineralizing agent (F- or OH- ) used in hydrothermal syntheses directly impacts Al sites distribution. The proportions of Al sites, probed by 27 Al NMR, depend on the Si/Al ratio for F- , but remain identical for OH- (from Si/Al=30 to 760). This leads to contrasting variations in weak and strong acidities. Such opposite effect of mineralizers is explained by the spatial location of negative charges and the resulting balance between short- and long-range electrostatic interactions. This understanding paves the way for additional and simple opportunities to control zeolites' acidity.
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Crystallization of oxide glasses rich in Zn2+, Ga3+, and Ge4+ is of interest for the synthesis of new transparent ceramics. In this context, we report the identification and detailed structural characterization of a new solid solution Ca3Ga2-2xZnxGe4+xO14 (0 ≤ x ≤ 1). These compounds adopt the trigonal langasite structure type, offering three possible crystallographic sites for the coordination of isoelectronic Zn2+, Ga3+, and Ge4+. We used neutron diffraction to determine distributions of Ga3+/Ge4+ and Zn2+/Ge4+ in the simpler end members Ca3Ga2Ge4O14 and Ca3ZnGe5O14, while for the complex intermediate member Ca3GaZn0.5Ge4.5O14, we used an original approach combining quantitative 2D analysis of atomic-resolution STEM-EDS maps with neutron diffraction. This revealed that, across the solid solution, the tetrahedral D sites remain fully occupied by Ge4+, while Zn2+, Ga3+, and the remaining Ge4+ are shared between octahedral B- and tetrahedral C sites in proportions that depend upon their relative ionic radii. The adoption of the trigonal langasite structure by glass-crystallized Ca3ZnGe5O14, a compound that was previously observed only in a distorted monoclinic langasite polymorph, is attributed to substantial disorder between Zn2+ and Ge4+ over the B and C sites. The quantitative 2D refinement of atomic-resolution STEM-EDS maps is applicable to a wide range of materials where multiple cations with poor scattering contrast are distributed over different crystallographic sites in a crystal structure.
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The study of ionic dynamics in solids is essential to understanding and developing modern energy technologies. Here we study the ionic dynamics of orthorhombic Na2MgSiO4, an interesting case of a polar stuffed-cristobalite-type structure that contains two inequivalent Na sites within the channels of the magnesium silicate tetrahedral framework. Its preparation by a solid-state reaction method favors the presence of â¼2% of Na vacancies, converting it into a pure Na ionic conductor with an optimized ionic conductivity of â¼10-5 S cm-1 at 200 °C. The macroscopic migration has been characterized through impedance spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulation, which proves the pure Na ionic character of the compound through hopping between Na1 and Na2 sites, forming three-dimensional migration zigzag-shaped paths. High-resolution solid-state 23Na magic-angle-spinning (MAS) NMR spectroscopy is employed to characterize the local structure and microscopic dynamics of Na-ion transport in Na2MgSiO4. Remarkably, variable-temperature 23Na MAS NMR and two-dimensional exchange spectroscopy evidence for the first time a Na site exchange phenomenon at room temperature, which further triggers Na ionic conduction at elevated temperatures.
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Across the evolutionary history of insects, the shift from nitrogen-rich carnivore/omnivore diets to nitrogen-poor herbivorous diets was made possible through symbiosis with microbes. The herbivorous turtle ants Cephalotes possess a conserved gut microbiome which enriches the nutrient composition by recycling nitrogen-rich metabolic waste to increase the production of amino acids. This enrichment is assumed to benefit the host, but we do not know to what extent. To gain insights into nitrogen assimilation in the ant cuticle we use gut bacterial manipulation, 15N isotopic enrichment, isotope-ratio mass spectrometry, and 15N nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to demonstrate that gut bacteria contribute to the formation of proteins, catecholamine cross-linkers, and chitin in the cuticle. This study identifies the cuticular components which are nitrogen-enriched by gut bacteria, highlighting the role of symbionts in insect evolution, and provides a framework for understanding the nitrogen flow from nutrients through bacteria into the insect cuticle.
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Exoesqueleto/crecimiento & desarrollo , Hormigas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Microbioma Gastrointestinal/fisiología , Herbivoria/fisiología , Simbiosis/fisiología , Aminoácidos/metabolismo , Animales , Hormigas/metabolismo , Hormigas/microbiología , Quitina/biosíntesis , Proteínas de Insectos/biosíntesis , Nitrógeno/metabolismoRESUMEN
We present an algorithm suitable for automatically correcting rolling baseline coming from time-domain truncation induced by the dead time in pulse-acquire one-dimensional MAS NMR spectra. It relies on an iterative estimation of the baseline restricted in the time-domain by the dead time duration combined with a histogram filter allowing adaptive selection of the baseline points. This method does not make any assumption regarding the NMR resonances line shapes or widths and does not modify the acquired free induction decay points. This makes it suitable for accurate deconvolution and quantification of single-pulse MAS NMR spectra. The baseline correction accuracy is evaluated on synthetic solid-state spectra of 19F, 71Ga, and 23Na by comparing the fitted baseline to the theoretical one. The versatility of the algorithm is also exemplified on three additional solid-state spectra of 23Na and 71Ga. The algorithm is made available to the community through a user-friendly standalone Matlab® application.
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The Core Scientific Dataset (CSD) model with JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) serialization is presented as a lightweight, portable, and versatile standard for intra- and interdisciplinary scientific data exchange. This model supports datasets with a p-component dependent variable, {U0, , Uq, , Up-1}, discretely sampled at M unique points in a d-dimensional independent variable (X0, , Xk, , Xd-1) space. Moreover, this sampling is over an orthogonal grid, regular or rectilinear, where the principal coordinate axes of the grid are the independent variables. It can also hold correlated datasets assuming the different physical quantities (dependent variables) are sampled on the same orthogonal grid of independent variables. The model encapsulates the dependent variables' sampled data values and the minimum metadata needed to accurately represent this data in an appropriate coordinate system of independent variables. The CSD model can serve as a re-usable building block in the development of more sophisticated portable scientific dataset file standards.
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Bases de Datos Factuales , Modelos Estadísticos , Ciencia/estadística & datos numéricosRESUMEN
We report the study of high-temperature melts (1600-2300 °C) and related glasses in the SrO-Al2O3-SiO2 phase diagram considering three series: (i) depolymerized ([SrO]/[Al2O3] = 3); (ii) fully polymerized ([SrO]/[Al2O3] = 1); and (iii) per-aluminous ([SrO]/[Al2O3] < 1). By considering the results from high-temperature 27Al NMR and high-temperature neutron diffraction, we demonstrate that the structure of the polymerized melts is controlled by a close-to-random distribution of Al and Si in the tetrahedral sites, while the depolymerized melts show smaller rings with a possible loss of non-bridging oxygens on AlO4 units during cooling for high-silica compositions. A few five-fold coordinated VAl sites are present in all compositions, except per-aluminous ones where high amounts of high-coordinated aluminium are found in glasses and melts with complex temperature dependence. In high-temperature melts, strontium has a coordination number of 8 or less, i.e. less than in the corresponding glasses. The dynamics of high-temperature melts were studied from 27Al NMR relaxation and compared to macroscopic shear viscosity data. These methods provide correlation times in close agreement. At very high temperatures, the NMR correlation times can be related to the oxygen self-diffusion coefficient, and we show a decrease of the latter with increasing Si/(Al + Si) ratios for polymerized melts with no compositional dependence for depolymerized ones. The dominant parameter controlling the temperature dependence of the aluminum environment of all melts is the distribution of Al-(OSi)p(OAl)(4-p) units.
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An injectable purely apatitic calcium phosphate cement (CPC) was successfully combined to a water-soluble radiopaque agent (i.e., Xenetix® ), to result in an optimized composition that was found to be as satisfactory as poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) formulations used for vertebroplasty, in terms of radiopacity, texture and injectability. For that purpose, the Xenetix dosage in the cement paste was optimized by injection of the radiopaque CPC in human cadaveric vertebrae under classical PMMA vertebroplasty conditions, performed by interventional radiologists familiar with this surgical procedure. When present in the cement paste up to 70 mg I mL-1 , Xenetix did not influence the injectability, cohesion, and setting time of the resulting composite. After hardening of the material, the same observation was made regarding the microstructure, mechanical strength and alpha-tricalcium phosphate to calcium deficient apatite transformation rate. Upon implantation in bone in a small animal model (rat), the biocompatibility of the Xenetix-containing CPC was evidenced. Moreover, an almost quantitative release of the contrast agent was found to occur rapidly, on the basis of in vitro static and dynamic quantitative studies simulating in vivo implantation. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 106B: 2786-2795, 2018.
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Apatitas , Cementos para Huesos , Medios de Contraste , Ensayo de Materiales , Columna Vertebral , Vertebroplastia/métodos , Animales , Apatitas/química , Apatitas/farmacología , Cementos para Huesos/química , Cementos para Huesos/farmacología , Medios de Contraste/química , Medios de Contraste/farmacología , Humanos , Masculino , Polimetil Metacrilato/química , Polimetil Metacrilato/farmacología , Ratas , Ratas Endogámicas Lew , Columna Vertebral/diagnóstico por imagen , Columna Vertebral/cirugíaRESUMEN
Understanding the links between chemical composition, nano-structure and the dynamic properties of silicate melts and glasses is fundamental to both Earth and Materials Sciences. Central to this is whether the distribution of mobile metallic ions is random or not. In silicate systems, such as window glass, it is well-established that the short-range structure is not random but metal ions cluster, forming percolation channels through a partly broken network of corner-sharing SiO4 tetrahedra. In alumino-silicate glasses and melts, extensively used in industry and representing most of the Earth magmas, metal ions compensate the electrical charge deficit of AlO4- tetrahedra, but until now clustering has not been confirmed. Here we report how major changes in melt viscosity, together with glass Raman and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance measurements and Molecular Dynamics simulations, demonstrate that metal ions nano-segregate into percolation channels, making this a universal phenomenon of oxide glasses and melts. Furthermore, we can explain how, in both single and mixed alkali compositions, metal ion clustering and percolation radically affect melt mobility, central to understanding industrial and geological processes.
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In this work, we show that it is possible to overcome the limitations of solid-state MRI for rigid tissues due to large line broadening and short dephasing times by combining Magic Angle Spinning (MAS) with rotating pulsed field gradients. This allows recording ex vivo 31P 3D and 2D slice-selected images of rigid tissues and related biomaterials at very high magnetic field, with greatly improved signal to noise ratio and spatial resolution when compared to static conditions. Cross-polarization is employed to enhance contrast and to further depict spatially localized chemical variations in reduced experimental time. In these materials, very high magnetic field and moderate MAS spinning rate directly provide high spectral resolution and enable the use of frequency selective excitation schemes for chemically selective imaging. These new possibilities are exemplified with experiments probing selectively the 3D spatial distribution of apatitic hydroxyl protons inside a mouse tooth with attached jaw bone with a nominal isotropic resolution nearing 100 µm.
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Campos Magnéticos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Isótopos de Fósforo , Protones , Materiales Biocompatibles , Imagenología Tridimensional , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Especificidad de Órganos , Fantasmas de ImagenRESUMEN
The description of the structure of aluminosilicate glasses is more often centered on its cationic constituents, and oxygen ions determine their connectivity, directly impacting the physical properties of those disordered materials. A very powerful approach to ascertain this short- to medium-range order is to use 17O NMR, but up to now the speciation of the chemical bonds was only ambiguously achieved for multicomponent glasses. Here, we propose to directly probe the very scarcely explored through-bond correlations using 17O{27Al} and 17O{23Na} solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) double-resonance experiments. Our approach allows quantifying the strongly overlapping components of the 17O NMR spectra of a quaternary aluminosilicate glass. We observe a cooperative location of alkali and aluminum ions in the neighborhood of bridging oxygens, which is consistent with the modified random network model where the glass structure is composed of two regions: network structure and breakage region (i.e., channel).
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The room temperature structure of Ba5AlF13 has been investigated by coupling electron, synchrotron and neutron powder diffraction, solid-state high-resolution NMR (19F and 27Al) and first principles calculations. An initial structural model has been obtained from electron and synchrotron powder diffraction data, and its main features have been confirmed by one- and two-dimensional NMR measurements. However, DFT GIPAW calculations of the 19F isotropic shieldings revealed an inaccurate location of one fluorine site (F3, site 8a), which exhibited unusual long F-Ba distances. The atomic arrangement was reinvestigated using neutron powder diffraction data. Subsequent Fourier maps showed that this fluorine atom occupies a crystallographic site of lower symmetry (32e) with partial occupancy (25%). GIPAW computations of the NMR parameters validate the refined structural model, ruling out the presence of local static disorder and indicating that the partial occupancy of this F site reflects a local motional process. Visualisation of the dynamic process was then obtained from the Rietveld refinement of neutron diffraction data using an anharmonic description of the displacement parameters to account for the thermal motion of the mobile fluorine. The whole ensemble of powder diffraction and NMR data, coupled with first principles calculations, allowed drawing an accurate structural model of Ba5AlF13, including site-specific dynamical disorder in the fluorine sub-network.
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Boron heteroatom distributions are shown to be significantly different in two closely related layered borosilicates synthesized with subtly different alkylammonium surfactant species. The complicated order and disorder near framework boron sites in both borosilicates were characterized at the molecular level by using a combination of multi-dimensional solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy techniques and first-principles calculations. Specifically, two-dimensional (2D) solid-state J-mediated (through-bond) (11)B{(29)Si} NMR analyses provide direct and local information on framework boron sites that are covalently bonded to silicon sites through bridging oxygen atoms. The resolution and identification of correlated signals from distinct (11)B-O-(29)Si site pairs reveal distinct distributions of boron heteroatoms in layered borosilicate frameworks synthesized with the different C16H33N(+)Me3 and C16H33N(+)Me2Et structure-directing surfactant species. The analyses establish that boron atoms are distributed non-selectively among different types of silicon sites in the layered C16H33N(+)Me3-directed borosilicate framework, whereas boron atoms are preferentially incorporated into incompletely condensed Q(3)-type sites in the C16H33N(+)Me2Et-directed borosilicate material. Interestingly, framework boron species appear to induce framework condensation of their next-nearest-neighbor silicon sites in the C16H33N(+)Me3-directed borosilicate. By comparison, the incorporation of boron atoms is found to preserve the topology of the C16H33N(+)Me2Et-directed borosilicate frameworks. The differences in boron site distributions and local boron-induced structural transformations for the two surfactant-directed borosilicates appear to be due to different extents of cross-linking of the siliceous frameworks. The molecular-level insights are supported by density functional theory (DFT) calculations, which show the distinct influences of boron atoms on the C16H33N(+)Me3- and C16H33N(+)Me2Et-directed borosilicate frameworks, consistent with the experimental observations.
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Different possible options were investigated to combine an apatitic calcium phosphate cement with gallium ions, known as bone resorption inhibitors. Gallium can be either chemisorbed onto calcium-deficient apatite or inserted in the structure of ß-tricalcium phosphate, and addition of these gallium-doped components into the cement formulation did not significantly affect the main properties of the biomaterial, in terms of injectability and setting time. Under in vitro conditions, the amount of gallium released from the resulting cement pellets was found to be low, but increased in the presence of osteoclastic cells. When implanted in rabbit bone critical defects, a remodeling process of the gallium-doped implant started and an excellent bone interface was observed. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: The integration of drugs and materials is a growing force in the medical industry. The incorporation of pharmaceutical products not only promises to expand the therapeutic scope of biomaterials technology but to design a new generation of true combination products whose therapeutic value stem equally from both the structural attributes of the material and the intrinsic therapy of the drug. In this context, for the first time an injectable calcium phosphate cement containing gallium was designed with properties suitable for practical application as a local delivery system, implantable by minimally invasive surgery. This important and original paper reports the design and in-depth chemical and physical characterization of this groundbreaking technology.
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Apatitas/farmacología , Cementos para Huesos/farmacología , Resorción Ósea/prevención & control , Fosfatos de Calcio/farmacología , Galio/farmacología , Animales , Apatitas/química , Cementos para Huesos/química , Resorción Ósea/metabolismo , Resorción Ósea/patología , Fosfatos de Calcio/química , Línea Celular , Galio/química , Ratones , ConejosRESUMEN
We have developed new methods enabling in vivo localization and identification of metabolites through their (1)H NMR signatures, in a drosophila. Metabolic profiles in localized regions were obtained using HR-MAS Slice Localized Spectroscopy and Chemical Shift Imaging at high magnetic fields. These methods enabled measurement of metabolite contents in anatomic regions of the fly, demonstrated by a decrease in ß-alanine signals in the thorax of flies showing muscle degeneration.
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Drosophila/metabolismo , Metaboloma , Espectroscopía de Protones por Resonancia Magnética , Animales , Animales Modificados Genéticamente/metabolismo , Femenino , Masculino , Tórax/metabolismoRESUMEN
The relationship between the experimental (19)F isotropic chemical shift and the (19)F isotropic shielding calculated using the gauge including projector augmented-wave (GIPAW) method with PBE functional is investigated in the case of GaF3, InF3, TlF and several AlF3 polymorphs. It is shown that the linear correlation between experimental and DFT-PBE calculated values previously established on alkali, alkaline earth and rare earth of column 3 basic fluorides (Sadoc et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 13 (2011) 18539-18550) remains valid in the case of column 13 metal fluorides, indicating that it allows predicting (19)F solid state NMR spectra of a broad range of crystalline fluorides with a relatively good accuracy. For the isostructural α-AlF3, GaF3 and InF3 phases, PBE-DFT geometry optimization leads to noticeably overbended M-F-M bond angles and underestimated (27)Al, (71)Ga and (115)In calculated quadrupolar coupling constants. For the studied compounds, whose structures are built of corner shared MF6 octahedra, it is shown that the electric field gradient (EFG) tensor at the cationic sites is not related to distortions of the octahedral units, in contrast to what previously observed for isolated AlF6 octahedra in fluoroaluminates.
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This work reports the development of a relevant and general method based on high frequency impedance measurements, for the in situ monitoring of the alpha-tricalcium phosphate (α-TCP) to calcium-deficient hydroxyapatite (CDA) transformation which is the driving force of the hardening processes of some calcium phosphate cements (CPC) used as bone substitutes. The three main steps of the setting reaction are identified in a non invasive way through the variation of dielectric permittivity and dielectric losses. The method is also likely to characterize the effect of the incorporation of additives (i.e, antiosteoporotic bisphosphonate drugs such as Alendronate) in the CPC formulation on the hydration process. It allows not only to confirm the retarding effect of bisphosphonate by an accurate determination of setting times, but also to assess the phenomena taking place whether alendronate is added in the liquid phase or combined to the solid phase of the cement composition. Compared to the conventional Gillmore needle test, the present method offers the advantage of accurate, user-independent, in situ and real-time determination of the initial and final times of the chemical hardening process, which are important parameters when considering surgical applications.
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The crystal structure of La10W2O21, which has to be reformulated (La5.667W0.333)LaWO14â¡2, is best described, on average, by a 2 × 2 × 2 anion-deficient fluorite-related superstructure cubic cell, with space group F4 3m, Z = 4, and a = 11.17932(6) Å, similar to Y7ReO14--δ. The 32 cations are distributed with lanthanum on the 4a-site, tungsten on the 4b-site, and a partial occupancy of the 24g-site by La (94%) and W. The 56 oxygen atoms occupy four 16e-sites, three of them fully and with an occupancy of 1/2 for the fourth one. Others M10W2O21 (M = Er, Y) adopt a 3 × 2 × 2 fluorite superstructure with W in octahedral sites, whereas W is mainly in tetrahedral sites in La10W2O21. Several powerful techniques such as crystal image furnace synthesis, (139)La nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and convergent beam electron diffraction (CBED) were used to achieve our results. Transmission electron microscopy (microdiffraction, CBED, and Tanaka patterns) brought us the real symmetry, showing that indeed classical cubic twinning along the 3-fold axis does take place. The surprising La/W mixed site is nicely confirmed by (139)La NMR. This compound exhibits interesting fast oxide ion conducting properties, comparable with LAMOX (Lacorre et al. Nature 2000, 404, 856-858) at low temperature. As opposed to many ionic conductors, no temperature structural transition is observed. Its conductivity is about 6.4 × 10(-4) S·cm(-1) at 700 °C.
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Unlike the long-range order of ideal crystalline structures, local order is an intrinsic characteristic of real materials and often serves as the key to the tuning of their properties and their final applications. Although researchers can easily assess local ordering using two-dimensional imaging techniques with resolution that approaches the atomic level, the diagnosis, description, and qualification of local order in three dimensions is much more challenging. Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and its panel of continually developing instruments and methods enable the local, atom-selective characterization of structures and assemblies ranging from the atomic to the nanometer length scales. By making use of the indirect J-coupling that distinguishes chemical bonds, researchers can use solid-state NMR to characterize a variety of materials, ranging from crystalline compounds to amorphous or glassy materials. In crystalline compounds showing some disorder, we describe and distinguish the contributions of topology, geometry, and local chemistry in ways that are consistent with X-ray diffraction and computational approaches. We give examples of materials featuring either chemical disorder in a topological order or topological disorder with local chemical order. For glasses, we show that we can separate geometric and chemical contributions to the local order by identifying structural motifs with a viewpoint that extends from the atomic scale up to the nanoscale. As identified by solid state NMR, the local structure of amorphous materials or glasses consists of well-identified structural entities up to at least the nanometer scale. Instead of speaking of disorder, we propose a new description for these structures as a continuous assembly of locally defined structures, an idea that draws on the concept of locally favored structures (LFS) introduced by Tanaka and coworkers. This idea provides a comprehensive picture of amorphous structures based on fluctuations of chemical composition and structure over different length scales. We hope that these local or molecular insights will allow researchers to consider key questions related to nucleation and crystallization, as well as chemically (spinodal decomposition) or density-driven (polyamorphism) phase separation, which could lead to future applications in a variety of materials.
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Triisobutylaluminum reacts with silica yielding three different Al sites according to high-field aluminum-27 NMR and first principle calculations: a quadruply grafted dimeric surface species and two incorporated Al(O)x species (x = 4 or 5). This result is in stark contrast to the bis-grafted species that forms during Et3Al silica grafting. Thus the isobutyl ligands, which render R3Al monomeric, lead to greater reactivity towards the silica surface.