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1.
Materials (Basel) ; 16(19)2023 Oct 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37834681

ABSTRACT

Electroless noble metal deposition on the conducting substrate is widely used to obtain the desired film or coating on the substrate of interest. Wire-gauge-based Pt/Pd/Pt-Pd (individually, sequentially, and simultaneously deposited) catalysts have been developed using formaldehyde and sodium formate as reducing agents. Various surface pretreatment methods like SnCl2 + PdCl2 seeding, oxalic acid etching, and HCl activation (etching) have been employed to obtain the desired noble metal coating. Minimum time duration was observed for simultaneously deposited catalysts using formaldehyde as a reducing agent. Prepared catalysts were characterized for noble metal deposition, coating kinetics, surface morphology, and binding energy. The catalyst was found to be active for H2 and O2 recombination reactions for hydrogen mitigation applications in nuclear reactors.

2.
Appl Spectrosc ; 70(8): 1300-8, 2016 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27296308

ABSTRACT

Femtosecond laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS), a powerful and versatile multi-elemental analysis technique, is employed for quantification of noble metal catalysts (Pt-Pd) loaded on cordierite matrix. The laser-induced plasma was generated on the sample surface using 1 mJ energy from a 50 fs, 1 kHz, Ti-Sa laser system. The spectral emission of the cordierite matrix and noble metals are systematically studied to identify 270.23 nm and 340.42 nm lines for quantitative estimation of Pt and Pd, respectively. Quantification of the LIBS signal is further aided by measurement of excitation temperature and electron density of the laser-ablated plasma. Time-resolved LIBS is used under optimized conditions to evaluate the analytical predictive ability of the technique. Calibration curves for Pt and Pd exhibit good linearity. The limit of detection for Pt and Pd is estimated to be 55 µg/g and 17 µg/g, respectively, of the cordierite matrix.

3.
Chemistry ; 17(44): 12310-25, 2011 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21922566

ABSTRACT

Nanoparticles of Ti(0.95)V(0.05)O(2) were found to be impregnated in the hexagonal channels of the MCM-41 host, with a distribution of some particles on the surface, thus leading to an effective variation in the particle size as a function of loading host MCM-41 matrix. These catalysts were subjected to the photocatalytic degradation of alkenes under the ambient conditions in which the photocatalytic activity varied as a function of the loading percentage of Ti(0.95)V(0.05)O(2) in the host MCM-41.This is explained in light of the structure-activity correlation, and the better catalytic activity can be attributed to an electronic interaction between the host and guest molecules, as established from X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. To understand the mechanistic aspect of the photooxidation of ethylene on the vanadium-doped titania dispersed in the MCM-41 matrix, extensive in situ FTIR experiments were undertaken. The intermediate species produced on bare Ti(0.95)V(0.05)O(2) are different from that produced on the Ti(0.95)V(0.05)O(2)/MCM-41 surface. Moreover, different intermediates were produced during ethylene oxidation under UV and visible irradiation, thus leading to different rates. The ethylene decomposition over bare Ti(0.95)V(0.05)O(2) occurs by means of formation of ethoxy groups, transformed to acetaldehyde or enolates, subsequently to acetates, and then to CO(2) under both UV and visible irradiation. However, in the case of Ti(0.95)V(0.05)O(2)/MCM-41 catalyst with UV irradiation, the adsorbed acetaldehyde thus formed undergoes aldol condensation over the Lewis acid sites to lead to the formation of crotonaldehyde, which is subsequently oxidized to acetate and consequently to CO(2). It was observed that during visible irradiation labile ethyl acetate is produced either by the Tischenko reaction or by the reaction between the labile acetic acid and the unreacted ethoxy groups. The ethyl acetate produces acetic acid monomer, which is oxidized to CO(2). Furthermore, in this work the effects of particle size on the intermediate species were also studied.

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