RESUMEN
Polyoxometalates (POMs) are of great interest to the scientific community, and their reduction and nucleation have been well-established by multi-step techniques. The present study develops an electrochemical approach for simultaneous reduction and nucleation of polyoxometalate-containing solids. Herein we report crystal growth of reduced Preyssler polyoxotungstate-based (anionic formula [NaP5W30O110]14-) new crystalline solids made of Preyssler anions interlinked by Co2+ and Ni2+ ions. Crystal nucleation and in situ reduction were achieved at room temperature using a two silver wire electrode setup in various aqueous solutions under constant applied potentials. The POM material was deposited on the cathode, and its structure was characterized by X-ray diffraction techniques. The primary structure type observed involves POMs decorated by disordered Co2+/Ni2+ octahedra and fused into 1-D pillars by additional Co2+/Ni2+ octahedra. A secondary phase was observed in the Ni-based reactions, where reduced Preyssler anions are decorated by Ni4O4 cubane-like units. To understand the electrochemical process, polarization curves of the electrolyte solutions are presented, suggesting an applied potential best suited for crystal growth. The work highlights the effectiveness of an electrochemical pathway where nucleation and simultaneous reduction of POMs can make novel reduced POM solids.
RESUMEN
Carbon-semiconductor hybrid quantum dots are classical carbon dots with core carbon nanoparticles doped with a selected nanoscale semiconductor. Specifically, on those with the nanoscale TiO2 doping, denoted as CTiO2-Dots, their synthesis and thorough characterization were reported previously. In this work, the CTiO2-Dots were evaluated for their visible light-activated antibacterial function, with the results showing the effective killing of not only Gram-positive but also the generally more resistant Gram-negative bacteria. The hybrid dots are clearly more potent antibacterial agents than their neat carbon dot counterparts. Mechanistically, the higher antibacterial performance of the CTiO2-Dots is attributed to their superior photoexcited state properties, which are reflected by the observed much brighter fluorescence emissions. Also considered and discussed is the possibility of additional contributions to the antibacterial activities due to the photosensitization of the nanoscale TiO2 by its doped core carbon nanoparticles.
Asunto(s)
Puntos Cuánticos , Carbono/farmacología , Antibacterianos/farmacología , Bacterias Gramnegativas , Bacterias GrampositivasRESUMEN
Carbon dots are defined as small carbon nanoparticles with effective surface passivation via organic functionalization. The definition is literally a description of what carbon dots are originally found for the functionalized carbon nanoparticles displaying bright and colorful fluorescence emissions, mirroring those from similarly functionalized defects in carbon nanotubes. In literature more popular than classical carbon dots are the diverse variety of dot samples from "one-pot" carbonization of organic precursors. On the two different kinds of samples from the different synthetic approaches, namely, the classical carbon dots versus those from the carbonization method, highlighted in this article are their shared properties and apparent divergences, including also explorations of the relevant sample structural and mechanistic origins for the shared properties and divergences. Echoing the growing evidence and concerns in the carbon dots research community on the major presence of organic molecular dyes/chromophores in carbonization produced dot samples, demonstrated and discussed in this article are some representative cases of dominating spectroscopic interferences due to the organic dye contamination that have led to unfound claims and erroneous conclusions. Mitigation strategies to address the contamination issues, including especially the use of more vigorous processing conditions in the carbonization synthesis, are proposed and justified.
RESUMEN
Hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) and exfoliated nanosheets (BNNs) not only resemble their carbon counterparts graphite and graphene nanosheets in structural configurations and many excellent materials characteristics, especially the ultra-high thermal conductivity, but also offer other unique properties such as being electrically insulating and extreme chemical stability and oxidation resistance even at elevated temperatures. In fact, BNNs as a special class of 2-D nanomaterials have been widely pursued for technological applications that are beyond the reach of their carbon counterparts. Highlighted in this article are significant recent advances in the development of more effective and efficient exfoliation techniques for high-quality BNNs, the understanding of their characteristic properties, and the use of BNNs in polymeric nanocomposites for thermally conductive yet electrically insulating materials and systems. Major challenges and opportunities for further advances in the relevant research field are also discussed.
Asunto(s)
Grafito , Nanocompuestos , Compuestos de Boro , Conductividad TérmicaRESUMEN
Our work in the area of synthesis of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) based on organic N-oxides led to the crystallization of pyridine-4-carboxamidoxime N-oxide. Herein we report the first crystal structure of the title compound, C6H7N3O2 [systematic name: (Z)-4-(N'-hy-droxy-carbamimido-yl)pyridine N-oxide]. The hy-droxy-carbamimidoyl group is essentially coplanar with the aromatic ring, r.m.s.d. = 0.112â Å. The compound crystallizes in hydrogen-bonding layers built from the formation of strong O-Hâ¯O hydrogen bonds between the oxime oxygen atom and the oxygen atom of the N-oxide, and the formation of N-Hâ¯O hydrogen bonds between one amine nitro-gen atom and the N-oxide oxygen atom. These combined build R 3 4(24) ring motifs in the crystal. The crystal structure has no π-π inter-actions.
RESUMEN
A novel family of four 1-bromo-2,6-bis{[(λ5-phosphanylidene)imino]methyl}benzene ligands has been synthesized and characterized. The phosphiniminomethyl substituents are decorated with either three phenyl groups, two phenyl and one cyclohexyl group, one phenyl and two cyclohexyl groups, or three cyclohexyl groups. Each ligand was metallated using zero-valent nickel through an oxidative addition to form a family of organonickel(II) complexes, namely (2,6-bis{[(triphenyl-λ5-phosphanylidene)imino]methyl}phenyl-κ3N,C1,N')bromidonickel(II) dichloromethane hemisolvate, [NiBr(C44H37N2P2)]·0.5CH2Cl2, (2,6-bis{[(cyclohexyldiphenyl-λ5-phosphanylidene)imino]methyl}phenyl-κ3N,C1,N')bromidonickel(II) diethyl ether hemisolvate, [NiBr(C44H49N2P2)]·0.5C4H10O, (2,6-bis{[(dicyclohexylphenyl-λ5-phosphanylidene)imino]methyl}phenyl-κ3N,C1,N')bromidonickel(II), [NiBr(C44H61N2P2)], and (2,6-bis{[(tricyclohexyl-λ5-phosphanylidene)imino]methyl}phenyl-κ3N,C1,N')bromidonickel(II), [NiBr(C44H73N2P2)]. This family of complexes represents a useful opportunity to investigate the impact of incrementally changing the steric characteristics of a complex on its structure and reactivity.