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1.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 13(16)2023 Aug 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37630865

ABSTRACT

Efficient CO2 capture materials must possess a high adsorption capacity, suitable CO2 adsorption enthalpy and resistance to water vapor. We have recently reported that Ca2+ cations exchanged in FAU zeolite can attach up to three CO2 molecules. Here we report the effect of water on the adsorption of CO2. Formation of Ca2+(H2O)(CO2), Ca2+(H2O)(CO2)2 and Ca2+(H2O)2(CO2) mixed ligand complexes were established. The Ca2+(H2O)(CO2) species are readily formed even at ambient temperature and are characterized by ν(12CO2) and ν(13CO2) infrared bands at 2358 and 2293 cm-1, respectively. The Ca2+(H2O)(CO2)2 species are produced at low temperature and are identified by a ν(13CO2) band at 2291 cm-1. In the presence of large amounts of water, Ca2+(H2O)2(CO2) complexes were also evidenced by ν(12CO2) and ν(13CO2) bands at 2348 and 2283 cm-1, respectively. The results demonstrate that, although it has a negative effect on CO2 adsorption uptake, water in moderate amounts does not block CO2 adsorption sites.

2.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 13(10)2023 May 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37242091

ABSTRACT

Three UiO-66 samples were prepared by solvothermal synthesis using the defect engineering approach with benzoic acid as a modulator. They were characterized by different techniques and their acidic properties were assessed by FTIR spectroscopy of adsorbed CO and CD3CN. All samples evacuated at room temperature contained bridging µ3-OH groups that interacted with both probe molecules. Evacuation at 250 °C leads to the dehydroxylation and disappearance of the µ3-OH groups. Modulator-free synthesis resulted in a material with open Zr sites. They were detected by low-temperature CO adsorption on a sample evacuated at 200 °C and by CD3CN even on a sample evacuated at RT. However, these sites were lacking in the two samples obtained with a modulator. IR and Raman spectra revealed that in these cases, the Zr4+ defect sites were saturated by benzoates, which prevented their interaction with probe molecules. Finally, the dehydroxylation of all samples produced another kind of bare Zr sites that did not interact with CO but formed complexes with acetonitrile, probably due to structural rearrangement. The results showed that FTIR spectroscopy is a powerful tool for investigating the presence and availability of acid sites in UiO-66, which is crucial for its application in adsorption and catalysis.

3.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(6): 1564-1569, 2023 Feb 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36745575

ABSTRACT

To design efficient CO2 capture materials, it is necessary to ensure a high adsorption capacity. We recently reported that one Na+ site in NaY zeolite can attach two CO2 molecules. However, the process is not suitable for practical use because it proceeds at a low temperature. Here, we present results on CO2 adsorption on CaNaY zeolites, demonstrating that one Ca2+ site can attach three CO2 molecules. The ν3(13CO2) mode arising from the natural 13C abundance allows for easy infrared monitoring of the processes: it appears at 2298, 2294, and 2291 cm-1 for the complexes with one, two, and three CO2 ligands, respectively. The 12CO2 molecules in the polyligand complexes interact vibrationally, leading to the split of the ν3(12CO2) modes. At ambient temperature, Ca2+(CO2)2 complexes predominate at >1 mbar CO2 and triligand species begin to form at 65 mbar. The obtained results show that CaY zeolites can be very effective CO2 capture materials.

4.
Chem Rev ; 121(3): 1286-1424, 2021 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33315388

ABSTRACT

The variety of functionalities and porous structures inherent to metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) together with the facile tunability of their properties makes these materials suitable for a wide range of existing and emerging applications. Many of these applications are based on processes involving interaction of MOFs with guest molecules. To optimize a certain process or successfully design a new one, a thorough knowledge is required about the physicochemical characteristics of materials and the mechanisms of their interaction with guest molecules. To obtain such important information, various complementary analytical techniques are applied, among which vibrational spectroscopy (IR and Raman) plays an important role and is indispensable in many cases. In this review, we critically examine the reported applications of IR and Raman spectroscopies as powerful tools for initial characterization of MOF materials and for studying processes of their interaction with various gases. Both the advantages and the limitations of the technique are considered, and the cases where IR or Raman spectroscopy is preferable are highlighted. Peculiarities of MOFs interaction with specific gases and some inconsistent band assignments are also emphasized. Summarizing the broad analytical possibilities of the IR and Raman spectroscopies, we conclude that it can be applied in combinations with other techniques to explicitly establish the structure, properties, and reactivity of MOFs.

5.
J Vis Exp ; (156)2020 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32065156

ABSTRACT

In situ infrared spectroscopy is an inexpensive, highly sensitive, and selective valuable tool to investigate the interaction of polycrystalline solids with adsorbates. Vibrational spectra provide information on the chemical nature of adsorbed species and their structure. Thus, they are very useful for obtaining molecular level understanding of surface species. The IR spectrum of the sample itself gives some direct information about the material. General conclusions can be drawn concerning hydroxyl groups, some stable surface species and impurities. However, the spectrum of the sample is "blind" with respect to the presence of coordinatively unsaturated ions and gives rather poor information about the acidity of surface hydroxyls, species decisive for the adsorption and catalytic properties of the materials. Furthermore, no discrimination between bulk and surface species can be made. These problems are solved by the use of probe molecules, substances that interact specifically with the surface; the alteration of some spectral features of these molecules as a result of adsorption provides valuable information about the nature, properties, location, concentration, etc., of the surface sites. The experimental protocol for in-situ IR studies of gas/sample interaction includes preparation of a sample pellet, activation of the material, initial spectral characterization through the analysis of the background spectra, characterization by probe molecules, and study of the interaction with a particular set of gas mixtures. In this paper we investigate a zirconium terephthalate metal organic framework, Zr6O4(OH)4(BDC)6 (BDC = benzene-1,4-dicarboxylate), namely UiO-66 (UiO refers to University of Oslo). The acid sites of the UiO-66 sample are determined by using CO and CD3CN as molecular probes. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that CO2 is adsorbed on basic sites exposed on dehydroxylated UiO-66. Introduction of water to the system produces hydroxyl groups acting as additional CO2 adsorption sites. As a result, CO2 adsorption capacity of the sample is strongly enhanced.


Subject(s)
Carbon Dioxide/analysis , Gases/analysis , Metal-Organic Frameworks/chemistry , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared/methods , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Water/chemistry , Zirconium/chemistry , Adsorption , Carbon Dioxide/chemistry , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Metal-Organic Frameworks/metabolism , Spectrophotometry, Infrared
6.
Chemistry ; 24(23): 6115-6126, 2018 Apr 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29385289

ABSTRACT

A fully interpenetrated 8,3-connected zirconium MOF with the the-i topology type, STA-26 (St Andrews porous material-26), has been prepared using the 4,4',4"-(2,4,6-trimethylbenzene-1,3,5-triyl)tribenzoate (TMTB) tritopic linker with formic acid as a modulating agent. In the as-prepared form STA-26 possesses Im3‾ m symmetry compared with the Pm3‾ m symmetry of the non-interpenetrated analogue, NU-1200, prepared using benzoic acid as a modulator. Upon removal of residual solvent there is a shift between the interpenetrating lattices and a resultant symmetry change to Cmcm which is fully reversible. This is observed by X-ray diffraction and 13 C MAS NMR is also found to be remarkably sensitive to the structural transition. Furthermore, heating STA-26(Zr) in vacuum dehydroxylates the Zr6 nodes leaving coordinatively unsaturated Zr4+ sites, as shown by IR spectroscopy using CO and CD3 CN as probe molecules. Nitrogen adsorption at 77 K together with grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations confirms a microporous, fully interpenetrated, structure with pore volume 0.53 cm3 g-1 while CO2 adsorption at 196 K reaches 300 cm3 STP g-1 at 1 bar. While the pore volume is smaller than that of its non-interpenetrated mesoporous analogue, interpenetration makes the structure more stable to moisture adsorption and introduces shape selectivity in adsorption.

7.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 18(32): 22108-21, 2016 Aug 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27444400

ABSTRACT

The paper addresses possible ambiguities in the determination of the state of platinum species by the stretching frequency of a CO probe, which is a common technique for characterization of platinum-containing catalytic systems. We present a comprehensive comparison of the available experimental data with our theoretical modeling (density functional) results of pertinent systems - platinum surfaces, nanoparticles and clusters as well as reduced or oxidized platinum moieties on a ceria support. Our results for CO adsorbed on-top on metallic Pt(0), with C-O vibrational frequencies in the region 2018-2077 cm(-1), suggest that a decrease of the coordination number of the platinum atom, to which CO is bound, by one lowers the CO frequency by about 7 cm(-1). This trend corroborates the Kappers-van der Maas correlation derived from the analysis of the experimental stretching frequency of CO adsorbed on platinum-containing samples on different supports. We also analyzed the effect of the charge of platinum species on the CO frequency. Based on the calculated vibrational frequencies of CO in various model systems, we concluded that the actual state of the platinum species may be mistaken based only on the measured value of the C-O vibrational frequency due to overlapping regions of frequencies corresponding to different types of species. In order to identify the actual state of platinum species one has to combine this powerful technique with other approaches.

8.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 51(26): 5668-71, 2015 Apr 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25714684

ABSTRACT

We show that the first stages of interaction between NO and reduced ceria comprise the formation of azides, N3(-), with simultaneous oxidation of Ce(3+) to Ce(4+). This finding imposes revision on some current views of catalytic NO conversion and may contribute to design of new deNOx materials and processes.


Subject(s)
Azides/chemical synthesis , Nitric Oxide/chemistry , Azides/chemistry , Catalysis , Cerium/chemistry , Free Radicals/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Quantum Theory
9.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 396(6): 2349-61, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20165837

ABSTRACT

This paper describes the application of TiO(2) nano-particles (anatase form) for the solid-phase extraction of iron from coastal seawater samples. We investigated the adsorption processes by infra-red spectroscopy. We compared in batch and on-(mini)column extraction approaches (0.1 and 0.05 g TiO(2) per sample, respectively), combined to external calibration and detection by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry at medium mass resolution. Globally, this titania phase was slightly more efficient with seawater than with ultra-pure water, although between pH 2 and pH 7, the Fe retention efficiency progressed more in ultra-pure water than in seawater (6.9 versus 4.8 times improvement). Different reaction schemes are proposed between Fe(III) species and the two main categories of titania sites at pH 2 (adsorption of [FeL(x)]((3-x)+) via possibly the mediation of chlorides) and at pH 7 (adsorption of [Fe(OH)(2)](+) and precipitation of [Fe(OH)(3)](0)). Under optimised conditions, the inlet system was pre-cleaned by pumping 6% HCl for approximately 2 h, and the column was conditioned by aspirating ultra-pure water (1.7 g min(-1)) and 0.05% ammonia (0.6 g min(-1)) for 1 min. Then 3 g seawater sample was loaded at the same flow rate while being mixed on-line with 0.05% ammonia at 0.6 g min(-1) to adjust the pH to 7. The iron retained on the oxide powder was then eluted with 3 g 6% HCl (<0.002% residual salinity in the separated samples). The overall procedural blank was 220 +/- 46 (2 s, n = 16) ng Fe kg(-1) (the titania was renewed in the column every 20 samples, with 2-min rinsing in between samples with 6% HCl at 1.5 g min(-1)). The recovery estimated from the Canadian certified reference material CASS-2 was 69.5 +/- 7.6% (2 s, n = 4). Typically, the relative combined uncertainty (k = 2) estimated for the measurement of approximately 1 microg Fe kg(-1) (0.45 microm filtered and acidified to pH 1.5) of seawater was approximately 12%. We applied our method to a similar sample, from the coastal region of the North Sea. The agreement well within stated uncertainties of our result with the value obtained independently by isotope dilution mass spectrometry further validated our method.


Subject(s)
Iron/analysis , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Seawater/analysis , Solid Phase Extraction/methods , Titanium/chemistry , Adsorption , Solid Phase Extraction/instrumentation
10.
J Phys Chem B ; 110(15): 7695-701, 2006 Apr 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16610863

ABSTRACT

Adsorption of CO on gold supported in zeolite NaY at 85 K led to the formation of (i) various carbonyls and isocarbonyls typical of the zeolite and (ii) carbonyls formed at cationic gold sites (observed in the 2186-2171 cm(-1) region). Analysis of the behavior of the bands allows their assignment to carbonyls of Au(3+) ions. At temperatures higher than 220 K, CO adsorption led to the formation of a new type of Au(3+)-CO species (2207 cm(-1)). Once formed, these complexes could be transformed into the dicarbonyls Au(3+)(CO)(2) when the sample was cooled to 85 K in the presence of CO. The results are explained by migration of Au(3+) ions to more accessible positions within the zeolite at increasing temperatures. When a CO molecule is already adsorbed, it stabilizes the Au(3+) ion in the new position, and a second CO molecule can be coordinated, thus forming a geminal species. These results are the first evidence of Au(3+)(CO)(2) complexes.

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