Photoreforming of biomass to value-added chemicals and fuels is a chemical approach to extract photosynthetically-trapped energy in complex biomolecules which otherwise disintegrate naturally in the environment. Designing precise photocatalytic materials that can selectively break the sturdy, nature-designed biomass with multiplex chemical composition/bonding and inaccessible sites is central to deploying this technology. Polymeric carbon nitride (CN) comprised of a 2D network of condensed heptazine/triazine (C6N7/C3N3) core has shown great promise for photoreforming of biomass derivatives due to intriguing physicochemical and optical properties. This review comprehensively summarizes the state-of-the-art applications of CN-based photocatalysts for the conversion of lignocellulosic biomass derivatives. Various chemical and structural modifications in CN structure such as doping, surface functionalization, hybridization entailing to higher selectivity and conversion have been discussed aiming at providing valuable guidance for future CN-based materials design.
Photocatalytic Mechanism Control and Study of Carrier Dynamics in CdS@C3N5 Co...Pawan Kumar
We present a potential solution to the problem of extraction of photogenerated holes from CdS nanocrystals and nanowires. The nanosheet form of C3N5 is a low-band-gap (Eg = 2.03 eV), azo-linked graphenic carbon nitride framework formed by the polymerization of melem hydrazine (MHP). C3N5 nanosheets were either wrapped around CdS nanorods (NRs) following the synthesis of pristine chalcogenide or intercalated among them by an in situ synthesis protocol to form two kinds of heterostructures, CdS-MHP and CdS-MHPINS, respectively. CdS-MHP improved the photocatalytic degradation rate of 4-nitrophenol by nearly an order of magnitude in comparison to bare CdS NRs. CdS-MHP also enhanced the sunlight-driven photocatalytic activity of bare CdS NWs for the decolorization of rhodamine B (RhB) by a remarkable 300% through the improved extraction and utilization of photogenerated holes due to surface passivation. More interestingly, CdS-MHP provided reaction pathway control over RhB degradation. In the absence of scavengers, CdS-MHP degraded RhB through the N-deethylation pathway. When either hole scavenger or electron scavenger was added to the RhB solution, the photocatalytic activity of CdS-MHP remained mostly unchanged, while the degradation mechanism shifted to the chromophore cleavage (cycloreversion) pathway. We investigated the optoelectronic properties of CdS-C3N5 heterojunctions using density functional theory (DFT) simulations, finite difference time domain (FDTD) simulations, time-resolved terahertz spectroscopy (TRTS), and photoconductivity measurements. TRTS indicated high carrier mobilities >450 cm2 V–1 s–1 and carrier relaxation times >60 ps for CdS-MHP, while CdS-MHPINS exhibited much lower mobilities <150 cm2 V–1 s–1 and short carrier relaxation times <20 ps. Hysteresis in the photoconductive J–V characteristics of CdS NWs disappeared in CdS-MHP, confirming surface passivation. Dispersion-corrected DFT simulations indicated a delocalized HOMO and a LUMO localized on C3N5 in CdS-MHP. C3N5, with its extended π-conjugation and low band gap, can function as a shuttle to extract carriers and excitons in nanostructured heterojunctions, and enhance performance in optoelectronic devices. Our results demonstrate how carrier dynamics in core–shell heterostructures can be manipulated to achieve control over the reaction mechanism in photocatalysis.
Polymeric carbon nitride-based photocatalysts for photoreforming of biomass d...Pawan Kumar
Photoreforming of biomass to value-added chemicals and fuels is a chemical approach to extract photosynthetically-trapped energy in complex biomolecules which otherwise disintegrate naturally in the environment. Designing precise photocatalytic materials that can selectively break the sturdy, nature-designed biomass with multiplex chemical composition/bonding and inaccessible sites is central to deploying this technology. Polymeric carbon nitride (CN) comprised of a 2D network of condensed heptazine/triazine (C6N7/C3N3) core has shown great promise for photoreforming of biomass derivatives due to intriguing physicochemical and optical properties. This review comprehensively summarizes the state-of-the-art applications of CN-based photocatalysts for the conversion of lignocellulosic biomass derivatives. Various chemical and structural modifications in CN structure such as doping, surface functionalization, hybridization entailing to higher selectivity and conversion have been discussed aiming at providing valuable guidance for future CN-based materials design.
Synthesis and Characterization of Zinc Phthalocyanine-Cellulose Nanocrystal (...Pawan Kumar
We report highly fluorescent cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) formed by conjugating a carboxylated zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) to two different types of CNCs. The conjugated nanocrystals (henceforth called ZnPc@CNCs) were bright green in color and exhibited absorption and emission maxima at ∼690 and ∼715 nm, respectively. The esterification protocol employed to covalently bind carboxylated ZnPc to surface hydroxyl group rich CNCs was expected to result in a monolayer of ZnPc on the surface of the CNCs. However, dynamic light scattering (DLS) studies indicated a large increase in the hydrodynamic radius of CNCs following conjugation to ZnPc, which suggests the binding of multiple ZnPc molecular layers on the CNC surface. This binding could be through co-facial π-stacking of ZnPc, where ZnPc metallophthalocyanine rings are horizontal to the CNC surface. The other possible binding mode would give rise to conjugated systems where ZnPc metallophthalocyanine rings are oriented vertically on the CNC surface. Density functional theory based calculations showed stable geometry following the conjugation protocol that involved covalently attached ester bond formation. The conjugates demonstrated superior performance for potential sensing applications through higher photoluminescence quenching capabilities compared to pristine ZnPc.
Sunlight-driven water-splitting using two dimensional carbon based semiconduc...Pawan Kumar
The overwhelming challenge of depleting fossil fuels and anthropogenic carbon emissions has driven research
into alternative clean sources of energy. To achieve the goal of a carbon neutral economy, the harvesting of
sunlight by using photocatalysts to split water into hydrogen and oxygen is an expedient approach to fulfill
the energy demand in a sustainable way along with reducing the emission of greenhouse gases. Even though
the past few decades have witnessed intensive research into inorganic semiconductor photocatalysts, their
quantum efficiencies for hydrogen production from visible photons remain too low for the large scale
deployment of this technology. Visible light absorption and efficient charge separation are two key necessary
conditions for achieving the scalable production of hydrogen from water. Two-dimensional carbon based
nanoscale materials such as graphene oxide, reduced graphene oxide, carbon nitride, modified 2D carbon
frameworks and their composites have emerged as potential photocatalysts due to their astonishing
properties such as superior charge transport, tunable energy levels and bandgaps, visible light absorption,
high surface area, easy processability, quantum confinement effects, and high photocatalytic quantum yields.
The feasibility of structural and chemical modification to optimize visible light absorption and charge
separation makes carbonaceous semiconductors promising candidates to convert solar energy into chemical
energy. In the present review, we have summarized the recent advances in 2D carbonaceous photocatalysts
with respect to physicochemical and photochemical tuning for solar light mediated hydrogen evolution
Water-splitting photoelectrodes consisting of heterojunctions of carbon nitri...Pawan Kumar
Quinary and senary non-stoichiometric double perovskites such as Ba2Ca0.66Nb1.34−xFexO6−δ (BCNF) have been utilized for gas sensing, solid oxide fuel cells and thermochemical CO2 reduction. Herein, we examined their potential as narrow bandgap semiconductors for use in solar energy harvesting. A cobalt co-doped BCNF, Ba2Ca0.66Nb0.68Fe0.33Co0.33O6−δ (BCNFCo), exhibited an optical absorption edge at ∼800 nm, p-type conduction and a distinct photoresponse up to 640 nm while demonstrating high thermochemical stability. A nanocomposite of BCNFCo and g-C3N4 (CN) was prepared via a facile solvent-assisted exfoliation/blending approach using dichlorobenzene and glycerol at a moderate temperature. The exfoliation of g-C3N4 followed by wrapping on perovskite established an effective heterojunction between the materials for charge separation. The conjugated 2D sheets of CN enabled better charge migration resulting in increased photoelectrochemical performance. A blend composed of 40 wt% perovskites and CN performed optimally, whilst achieving a photocurrent density as high as 1.5 mA cm−2 for sunlight-driven water-splitting with a Faradaic efficiency as high as ∼88%.
Water-splitting photoelectrodes consisting of heterojunctions of carbon nitri...Pawan Kumar
Quinary and senary non-stoichiometric double perovskites such as Ba2Ca0.66Nb1.34-xFexO6-δ (BCNF) have been utilized for gas sensing, solid oxide fuel cells and thermochemical CO2 reduction. Herein, we examined their potential as narrow bandgap semiconductors for use in solar energy harvesting. A cobalt co-doped BCNF, Ba2Ca0.66Nb0.68Fe0.33Co0.33O6-δ (BCNFCo), exhibited an optical absorption edge at ~ 800 nm, p-type conduction and a distinct photoresponse upto 640 nm while demonstrating high thermochemical stability. A nanocomposite of BCNFCo and g-C3N4 (CN) was prepared via a facile solvent assisted exfoliation/blending approach using dichlorobenzene and glycerol at a moderate temperature. The exfoliation of g-C3N4 followed by wrapping on perovskite established an effective heterojunction between the materials for charge separation. The conjugated 2D sheets of CN enabled better charge migration resulting in increased photoelectrochemical performance. A blend composed of 40 wt% perovskite and CN performed optimally, whilst achieving a photocurrent density as high as 1.5 mA cm-2 for sunlight-driven water-splitting with a Faradaic efficiency as high as ~ 88%.
Photocatalytic Mechanism Control and Study of Carrier Dynamics in CdS@C3N5 Co...Pawan Kumar
We present a potential solution to the problem of extraction of photogenerated holes from CdS nanocrystals and nanowires. The nanosheet form of C3N5 is a low-band-gap (Eg = 2.03 eV), azo-linked graphenic carbon nitride framework formed by the polymerization of melem hydrazine (MHP). C3N5 nanosheets were either wrapped around CdS nanorods (NRs) following the synthesis of pristine chalcogenide or intercalated among them by an in situ synthesis protocol to form two kinds of heterostructures, CdS-MHP and CdS-MHPINS, respectively. CdS-MHP improved the photocatalytic degradation rate of 4-nitrophenol by nearly an order of magnitude in comparison to bare CdS NRs. CdS-MHP also enhanced the sunlight-driven photocatalytic activity of bare CdS NWs for the decolorization of rhodamine B (RhB) by a remarkable 300% through the improved extraction and utilization of photogenerated holes due to surface passivation. More interestingly, CdS-MHP provided reaction pathway control over RhB degradation. In the absence of scavengers, CdS-MHP degraded RhB through the N-deethylation pathway. When either hole scavenger or electron scavenger was added to the RhB solution, the photocatalytic activity of CdS-MHP remained mostly unchanged, while the degradation mechanism shifted to the chromophore cleavage (cycloreversion) pathway. We investigated the optoelectronic properties of CdS-C3N5 heterojunctions using density functional theory (DFT) simulations, finite difference time domain (FDTD) simulations, time-resolved terahertz spectroscopy (TRTS), and photoconductivity measurements. TRTS indicated high carrier mobilities >450 cm2 V–1 s–1 and carrier relaxation times >60 ps for CdS-MHP, while CdS-MHPINS exhibited much lower mobilities <150 cm2 V–1 s–1 and short carrier relaxation times <20 ps. Hysteresis in the photoconductive J–V characteristics of CdS NWs disappeared in CdS-MHP, confirming surface passivation. Dispersion-corrected DFT simulations indicated a delocalized HOMO and a LUMO localized on C3N5 in CdS-MHP. C3N5, with its extended π-conjugation and low band gap, can function as a shuttle to extract carriers and excitons in nanostructured heterojunctions, and enhance performance in optoelectronic devices. Our results demonstrate how carrier dynamics in core–shell heterostructures can be manipulated to achieve control over the reaction mechanism in photocatalysis.
Effect of morphology on the photoelectrochemical performance of nanostructure...Pawan Kumar
This document discusses the effect of morphology on the photoelectrochemical performance of nanostructured Cu2O photocathodes. It summarizes that:
1) Different deposition methods including electroreduction, anodization, thermal oxidation, and chemical oxidation were used to deposit planar and 1D nanostructured Cu2O thin films on copper foil with varying morphologies.
2) Mesoscopic and planar Cu2O morphologies exhibited large differences in carrier density and charge transfer resistance, but these differences did not strongly influence their photoelectrochemical performance.
3) Planar Cu2O deposited via electroreduction provided the highest photocurrent density of 5.0 mA cm−2 at 0 V vs RHE,
Photocatalytic Mechanism Control and Study of Carrier Dynamics in CdS@C3N5 Co...Pawan Kumar
We present a potential solution to the problem of extraction of photogenerated holes from CdS nanocrystals and nanowires. The nanosheet form of C3N5 is a low-band-gap (Eg = 2.03 eV), azo-linked graphenic carbon nitride framework formed by the polymerization of melem hydrazine (MHP). C3N5 nanosheets were either wrapped around CdS nanorods (NRs) following the synthesis of pristine chalcogenide or intercalated among them by an in situ synthesis protocol to form two kinds of heterostructures, CdS-MHP and CdS-MHPINS, respectively. CdS-MHP improved the photocatalytic degradation rate of 4-nitrophenol by nearly an order of magnitude in comparison to bare CdS NRs. CdS-MHP also enhanced the sunlight-driven photocatalytic activity of bare CdS NWs for the decolorization of rhodamine B (RhB) by a remarkable 300% through the improved extraction and utilization of photogenerated holes due to surface passivation. More interestingly, CdS-MHP provided reaction pathway control over RhB degradation. In the absence of scavengers, CdS-MHP degraded RhB through the N-deethylation pathway. When either hole scavenger or electron scavenger was added to the RhB solution, the photocatalytic activity of CdS-MHP remained mostly unchanged, while the degradation mechanism shifted to the chromophore cleavage (cycloreversion) pathway. We investigated the optoelectronic properties of CdS-C3N5 heterojunctions using density functional theory (DFT) simulations, finite difference time domain (FDTD) simulations, time-resolved terahertz spectroscopy (TRTS), and photoconductivity measurements. TRTS indicated high carrier mobilities >450 cm2 V–1 s–1 and carrier relaxation times >60 ps for CdS-MHP, while CdS-MHPINS exhibited much lower mobilities <150 cm2 V–1 s–1 and short carrier relaxation times <20 ps. Hysteresis in the photoconductive J–V characteristics of CdS NWs disappeared in CdS-MHP, confirming surface passivation. Dispersion-corrected DFT simulations indicated a delocalized HOMO and a LUMO localized on C3N5 in CdS-MHP. C3N5, with its extended π-conjugation and low band gap, can function as a shuttle to extract carriers and excitons in nanostructured heterojunctions, and enhance performance in optoelectronic devices. Our results demonstrate how carrier dynamics in core–shell heterostructures can be manipulated to achieve control over the reaction mechanism in photocatalysis.
Polymeric carbon nitride-based photocatalysts for photoreforming of biomass d...Pawan Kumar
Photoreforming of biomass to value-added chemicals and fuels is a chemical approach to extract photosynthetically-trapped energy in complex biomolecules which otherwise disintegrate naturally in the environment. Designing precise photocatalytic materials that can selectively break the sturdy, nature-designed biomass with multiplex chemical composition/bonding and inaccessible sites is central to deploying this technology. Polymeric carbon nitride (CN) comprised of a 2D network of condensed heptazine/triazine (C6N7/C3N3) core has shown great promise for photoreforming of biomass derivatives due to intriguing physicochemical and optical properties. This review comprehensively summarizes the state-of-the-art applications of CN-based photocatalysts for the conversion of lignocellulosic biomass derivatives. Various chemical and structural modifications in CN structure such as doping, surface functionalization, hybridization entailing to higher selectivity and conversion have been discussed aiming at providing valuable guidance for future CN-based materials design.
Synthesis and Characterization of Zinc Phthalocyanine-Cellulose Nanocrystal (...Pawan Kumar
We report highly fluorescent cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) formed by conjugating a carboxylated zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) to two different types of CNCs. The conjugated nanocrystals (henceforth called ZnPc@CNCs) were bright green in color and exhibited absorption and emission maxima at ∼690 and ∼715 nm, respectively. The esterification protocol employed to covalently bind carboxylated ZnPc to surface hydroxyl group rich CNCs was expected to result in a monolayer of ZnPc on the surface of the CNCs. However, dynamic light scattering (DLS) studies indicated a large increase in the hydrodynamic radius of CNCs following conjugation to ZnPc, which suggests the binding of multiple ZnPc molecular layers on the CNC surface. This binding could be through co-facial π-stacking of ZnPc, where ZnPc metallophthalocyanine rings are horizontal to the CNC surface. The other possible binding mode would give rise to conjugated systems where ZnPc metallophthalocyanine rings are oriented vertically on the CNC surface. Density functional theory based calculations showed stable geometry following the conjugation protocol that involved covalently attached ester bond formation. The conjugates demonstrated superior performance for potential sensing applications through higher photoluminescence quenching capabilities compared to pristine ZnPc.
Sunlight-driven water-splitting using two dimensional carbon based semiconduc...Pawan Kumar
The overwhelming challenge of depleting fossil fuels and anthropogenic carbon emissions has driven research
into alternative clean sources of energy. To achieve the goal of a carbon neutral economy, the harvesting of
sunlight by using photocatalysts to split water into hydrogen and oxygen is an expedient approach to fulfill
the energy demand in a sustainable way along with reducing the emission of greenhouse gases. Even though
the past few decades have witnessed intensive research into inorganic semiconductor photocatalysts, their
quantum efficiencies for hydrogen production from visible photons remain too low for the large scale
deployment of this technology. Visible light absorption and efficient charge separation are two key necessary
conditions for achieving the scalable production of hydrogen from water. Two-dimensional carbon based
nanoscale materials such as graphene oxide, reduced graphene oxide, carbon nitride, modified 2D carbon
frameworks and their composites have emerged as potential photocatalysts due to their astonishing
properties such as superior charge transport, tunable energy levels and bandgaps, visible light absorption,
high surface area, easy processability, quantum confinement effects, and high photocatalytic quantum yields.
The feasibility of structural and chemical modification to optimize visible light absorption and charge
separation makes carbonaceous semiconductors promising candidates to convert solar energy into chemical
energy. In the present review, we have summarized the recent advances in 2D carbonaceous photocatalysts
with respect to physicochemical and photochemical tuning for solar light mediated hydrogen evolution
Water-splitting photoelectrodes consisting of heterojunctions of carbon nitri...Pawan Kumar
Quinary and senary non-stoichiometric double perovskites such as Ba2Ca0.66Nb1.34−xFexO6−δ (BCNF) have been utilized for gas sensing, solid oxide fuel cells and thermochemical CO2 reduction. Herein, we examined their potential as narrow bandgap semiconductors for use in solar energy harvesting. A cobalt co-doped BCNF, Ba2Ca0.66Nb0.68Fe0.33Co0.33O6−δ (BCNFCo), exhibited an optical absorption edge at ∼800 nm, p-type conduction and a distinct photoresponse up to 640 nm while demonstrating high thermochemical stability. A nanocomposite of BCNFCo and g-C3N4 (CN) was prepared via a facile solvent-assisted exfoliation/blending approach using dichlorobenzene and glycerol at a moderate temperature. The exfoliation of g-C3N4 followed by wrapping on perovskite established an effective heterojunction between the materials for charge separation. The conjugated 2D sheets of CN enabled better charge migration resulting in increased photoelectrochemical performance. A blend composed of 40 wt% perovskites and CN performed optimally, whilst achieving a photocurrent density as high as 1.5 mA cm−2 for sunlight-driven water-splitting with a Faradaic efficiency as high as ∼88%.
Water-splitting photoelectrodes consisting of heterojunctions of carbon nitri...Pawan Kumar
Quinary and senary non-stoichiometric double perovskites such as Ba2Ca0.66Nb1.34-xFexO6-δ (BCNF) have been utilized for gas sensing, solid oxide fuel cells and thermochemical CO2 reduction. Herein, we examined their potential as narrow bandgap semiconductors for use in solar energy harvesting. A cobalt co-doped BCNF, Ba2Ca0.66Nb0.68Fe0.33Co0.33O6-δ (BCNFCo), exhibited an optical absorption edge at ~ 800 nm, p-type conduction and a distinct photoresponse upto 640 nm while demonstrating high thermochemical stability. A nanocomposite of BCNFCo and g-C3N4 (CN) was prepared via a facile solvent assisted exfoliation/blending approach using dichlorobenzene and glycerol at a moderate temperature. The exfoliation of g-C3N4 followed by wrapping on perovskite established an effective heterojunction between the materials for charge separation. The conjugated 2D sheets of CN enabled better charge migration resulting in increased photoelectrochemical performance. A blend composed of 40 wt% perovskite and CN performed optimally, whilst achieving a photocurrent density as high as 1.5 mA cm-2 for sunlight-driven water-splitting with a Faradaic efficiency as high as ~ 88%.
Photocatalytic Mechanism Control and Study of Carrier Dynamics in CdS@C3N5 Co...Pawan Kumar
We present a potential solution to the problem of extraction of photogenerated holes from CdS nanocrystals and nanowires. The nanosheet form of C3N5 is a low-band-gap (Eg = 2.03 eV), azo-linked graphenic carbon nitride framework formed by the polymerization of melem hydrazine (MHP). C3N5 nanosheets were either wrapped around CdS nanorods (NRs) following the synthesis of pristine chalcogenide or intercalated among them by an in situ synthesis protocol to form two kinds of heterostructures, CdS-MHP and CdS-MHPINS, respectively. CdS-MHP improved the photocatalytic degradation rate of 4-nitrophenol by nearly an order of magnitude in comparison to bare CdS NRs. CdS-MHP also enhanced the sunlight-driven photocatalytic activity of bare CdS NWs for the decolorization of rhodamine B (RhB) by a remarkable 300% through the improved extraction and utilization of photogenerated holes due to surface passivation. More interestingly, CdS-MHP provided reaction pathway control over RhB degradation. In the absence of scavengers, CdS-MHP degraded RhB through the N-deethylation pathway. When either hole scavenger or electron scavenger was added to the RhB solution, the photocatalytic activity of CdS-MHP remained mostly unchanged, while the degradation mechanism shifted to the chromophore cleavage (cycloreversion) pathway. We investigated the optoelectronic properties of CdS-C3N5 heterojunctions using density functional theory (DFT) simulations, finite difference time domain (FDTD) simulations, time-resolved terahertz spectroscopy (TRTS), and photoconductivity measurements. TRTS indicated high carrier mobilities >450 cm2 V–1 s–1 and carrier relaxation times >60 ps for CdS-MHP, while CdS-MHPINS exhibited much lower mobilities <150 cm2 V–1 s–1 and short carrier relaxation times <20 ps. Hysteresis in the photoconductive J–V characteristics of CdS NWs disappeared in CdS-MHP, confirming surface passivation. Dispersion-corrected DFT simulations indicated a delocalized HOMO and a LUMO localized on C3N5 in CdS-MHP. C3N5, with its extended π-conjugation and low band gap, can function as a shuttle to extract carriers and excitons in nanostructured heterojunctions, and enhance performance in optoelectronic devices. Our results demonstrate how carrier dynamics in core–shell heterostructures can be manipulated to achieve control over the reaction mechanism in photocatalysis.
Effect of morphology on the photoelectrochemical performance of nanostructure...Pawan Kumar
This document discusses the effect of morphology on the photoelectrochemical performance of nanostructured Cu2O photocathodes. It summarizes that:
1) Different deposition methods including electroreduction, anodization, thermal oxidation, and chemical oxidation were used to deposit planar and 1D nanostructured Cu2O thin films on copper foil with varying morphologies.
2) Mesoscopic and planar Cu2O morphologies exhibited large differences in carrier density and charge transfer resistance, but these differences did not strongly influence their photoelectrochemical performance.
3) Planar Cu2O deposited via electroreduction provided the highest photocurrent density of 5.0 mA cm−2 at 0 V vs RHE,
This document discusses X-ray diffraction (XRD) spectroscopy and provides examples of applying XRD principles to characterize different materials. It describes the basic principles of how XRD works using Bragg's law and Miller indices to identify crystal planes. Examples are given for characterizing silver nanoparticles, graphite, graphene oxide, and zinc oxide nanoparticles using XRD, including estimating particle sizes from XRD peak widths and identifying functional groups from infrared spectroscopy. References are also provided for further reading.
2021 influence of basic carbon additives on the electrochemical performance ...Ary Assuncao
This study investigates the effect of carbon surface basicity on the electrochemical performance and dynamic charge acceptance of lead-carbon batteries. Five activated carbons with different pH values ranging from 9.5 to 11.1 were prepared by ammonia and hydrogen gas treatments. Cyclic voltammetry showed that the hydrogen evolution reaction activity increased with higher carbon surface basicity. Testing of lead-carbon electrodes found a correlation between carbon pH and dynamic charge acceptance, with higher pH carbons showing improved charge currents and final dynamic charge acceptance. The carbon content also affected charge currents during simulated microcycles, demonstrating that surface chemistry and amount of carbon additive both influence the electrochemical properties and performance of lead-carbon batteries.
Single-atom catalysts for biomass-derived drop-in chemicalsPawan Kumar
Conversion of biomass to fuel and drop-in chemicals is envisaged to solve the problem of depleting fossil fuel reserves while leveling-off the staggering CO2 concentration. By-passing the natural carbon cycle via the transformation of abundant lignocellulosic biomass into chemicals does not add any extra CO2 to the environment and the net CO2 concentration remains the same. The paradigm shifts from fossil fuel-based chemicals to biomass-derived products will rely on efficient and cost-effective catalysts that can compete with cheap and readily available fossil fuels. Existing transition and noble metal-based nanoparticle catalysts either in the supported or unsupported form are crippling due to poor activity/selectivity, deactivation of catalytically active sites, and the complex composition, recalcitrant nature, and high moisture content of biomass. Single-atom catalysts (SACs) possessing single-atom centers decorated on support have shown great promise in biomass conversion due to their unique geometric configuration, electronic properties, and ensemble effect. In contrast to traditional catalytic systems, SACs encompass the advantages of both heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysts with improved performance and easy recyclability. Because of the availability of each metal center for the reaction and unique geometrical configuration, SACs have displayed exceptional catalytic activity and selectivity (~95% in most cases). In addition, the SACs show increased thermal and chemical stability due to the stabilization of the metal center on the support. The present chapter highlights the various aspects of SACs for efficient and selective biomass conversion into drop-in chemicals.
Energy level tuning of cd se colloidal quantum dots in ternary 0d 2d-2d cdse ...Journal Papers
This document summarizes the energy level tuning of CdSe colloidal quantum dots (QDs) in a ternary 0D-2D-2D CdSe QD/B-rGO/O-gC3N4 photocatalyst system for enhanced hydrogen generation. Specifically, it discusses how the use of different thiol capping ligands on CdSe QDs results in shifts in the QD energy levels and band gaps. These ligand-specific CdSe QDs then exhibit trends in photocatalytic performance consistent with their respective measured energy and gap levels. Furthermore, it describes how an optimized CdSe QD is incorporated into a ternary composite with B-rGO and O-g
Heterostructured nanocomposite tin phthalocyanine@mesoporous ceria (SnPc@CeO2...Pawan Kumar
Heterostructured tin phthalocyanine supported to mesoporous ceria was synthesized and used a
photocatalyst for CO2 reduction under visible light. The photoreduction CO2 activities of the
heterostructures were investigated in the presence of triethylamine as sacrificial agent. The developed
photocatalyst exhibited high catalytic activity for photoreduction of CO2 and after 24 hours of visible
light irradiation 2342 mmol g1 cat of methanol (fMeOH ¼ 0.0223 or 2.23%) and 840 mmol g1 cat of CO
(fCO ¼ 0.0026 or 0.26%) were obtained as the major reaction products. The methanol formation rate
(RMeOH) and CO formation rate (RCO) was found to be 97.5 mmol h1 g1 cat and 35.0 mmol h1 g1 cat
respectively. While under the identical experimental conditions mesoporous ceria (meso-CeO2) gave
only 316 mmol g1 cat of methanol (fMeOH ¼ 0.003 or 0.30%) and 126 mmol g1 cat CO (fCO ¼ 0.0004
or 0.04%) with product formation rate RMeOH ¼ 13.2 mmol h1 g1 cat and RCO ¼ 5.3 mmol h1 g1 cat.
Furthermore, the recovered catalyst showed consistent catalytic activity for at least five runs without any
significant loss in product yields
The document discusses the origin of radiation-induced degradation in polymer solar cells. It finds that charge accumulation at the interface is the primary reason for degradation, affected by the donor-acceptor mixing ratio in the bulk heterojunction. In situ measurements of polymer solar cell performance and recombination lifetimes under X-ray radiation show that devices with high acceptor concentrations experience a significant decrease in open-circuit voltage and fill factor due to radiation, while devices with low acceptor concentrations are more resistant to these changes. The findings provide a quantitative understanding and physical model of the degradation mechanism.
Boosting Photocatalytic Activity Using Carbon Nitride Based 2D/2D van der Waa...Pawan Kumar
The surging demand for energy and staggering pollutants in the environment have geared the scientific community to explore sustainable pathways that are economically feasible and environmentally compelling. In this context, harnessing solar energy using semiconductor materials to generate charge pairs to drive photoredox reactions has been envisioned as a futuristic approach. Numerous inorganic crystals with promising nanoregime properties investigated in the past decade have yet to demonstrate practical application due to limited photon absorption and sluggish charge separation kinetics. Two-dimensional semiconductors with tunable optical and electronic properties and quasi-resistance-free lateral charge transfer mechanisms have shown great promise in photocatalysis. Polymeric graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) is among the most promising candidates due to fine-tuned band edges and the feasibility of optimizing the optical properties via materials genomics. Constructing a two-dimensional (2D)/2D van der Waals (vdW) heterojunction by allies of 2D carbon nitride sheets and other 2D semiconductors has demonstrated enhanced charge separation with improved visible photon absorption, and the performance is not restricted by the lattice matching of constituting materials. With the advent of new 2D semiconductors over the recent past, the 2D/2D heterojunction assemblies are gaining momentum to design high performance photocatalysts for numerous applications. This review aims to highlight recent advancements and key understanding in carbon nitride based 2D/2D heterojunctions and their applications in photocatalysis, including small molecules activation, conversion, and degradations. We conclude with a forward-looking perspective discussing the key challenges and opportunity areas for future research.
Heterojunctions of halogen-doped carbon nitride nanosheets and BiOI for sunli...Pawan Kumar
This document summarizes the synthesis and characterization of halogen-doped carbon nitride nanosheets and BiOI heterojunctions for use in photoelectrochemical water splitting. Specifically:
1) Fluorine-doped, chlorine-intercalated carbon nitride (CNF-Cl) nanosheets were synthesized using thermal annealing to improve light absorption and charge separation.
2) CNF-Cl nanosheets were combined with bismuth oxyiodide (BiOI) nanoplates via a hydrothermal method to form heterojunctions.
3) Characterization using TEM, XRD, Raman and EDS mapping confirmed the formation of CNF-Cl
Proton‐functionalized graphitic carbon nitride for efficient metal‐free disin...Journal Papers
This document summarizes a study on using proton-functionalized graphitic carbon nitride (P-CN) as a metal-free photocatalyst for disinfecting Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria under low-power light irradiation. P-CN demonstrated 100% disinfection of E. coli within 4 hours under 23W light bulb irradiation. Testing with scavengers showed that hydroxyl radicals (·OH) played a major role in the disinfection process, while superoxide (·O2-) played a minimal role. P-CN exhibited higher disinfection efficiency compared to unmodified graphitic carbon nitride, due to the introduction of protons enhancing conductivity and charge transfer in P-CN. This
Vapor Deposition of Semiconducting Phosphorus Allotropes into TiO2 Nanotube A...Pawan Kumar
Recent evidence of exponential environmental degradation will demand a drastic shift in research and development toward exploiting alternative energy resources such as solar energy. Here, we report the successful low-cost and easily accessible synthesis of hybrid semiconductor@TiO2 nanotube photocatalysts. In order to realize its maximum potential in harvesting photons in the visible-light range, TiO2 nanotubes have been loaded with earth-abundant, low-band-gap fibrous red and black phosphorus (P). Scanning electron microscopy– and scanning transmission electron microscopy–energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron microscopy, and UV–vis measurements have been performed, substantiating the deposition of fibrous red and black P on top and inside the cavities of 100-μm-long electrochemically fabricated nanotubes. The nanotubular …
Photo-assisted oxidation of thiols to disulfides using cobalt ‘‘Nanorust’’ un...Pawan Kumar
Heterogeneous ‘‘Nanorust’’ containing cobalt oxide has been developed for the visible light assisted
oxidation of thiols to disulfides using molecular oxygen as an oxidant under alkaline free conditions and
therefore more environmentally friendly. Pyrolysis of heterogenized tetrasulfonated cobalt(II) phthalocyanine
(CoPcS) supported on mesoporous ceria (CeO2) transforms it into a novel heterogeneous ‘‘Nanorust’’
containing CoOx-C,N@CeO2 which exhibited higher catalytic activity than the homogeneous CoPcS as well
as the ceria immobilized CoPcS catalyst. Importantly, these catalysts could easily be recovered and recycled
for several runs, which makes the process greener and cost-effective.
Visible light assisted reduction of nitrobenzenes using Fe(bpy)3+2/rGOnanocom...Pawan Kumar
Visible-light-induced photocatalytic reduction of aromatic nitrobenzenes to the corresponding anilinesat room temperature using reduced graphene oxide (rGO) immobilized iron(II) bipyridine complex asphotocatalyst is described. The rGO-immobilized iron catalyst exhibited superior catalytic activity thanhomogeneous iron(II) bipyridine complex and much higher than metal free rGO photocatalysts. Theheterogeneous photocatalyst was found to be robust and could easily be recovered and reused for severalruns without any significant loss in photocatalytic activity.
Synthesis of flower-like magnetite nanoassembly: Application in the efficient...Pawan Kumar
A facile approach for the synthesis of magnetite microspheres with flower-like morphology is reported
that proceeds via the reduction of iron(III) oxide under a hydrogen atmosphere. The ensuing magnetic
catalyst is well characterized by XRD, FE-SEM, TEM, N2 adsorption-desorption isotherm, and
Mössbauer spectroscopy and explored for a simple yet efficient transfer hydrogenation reduction of a
variety of nitroarenes to respective anilines in good to excellent yields (up to 98%) employing hydrazine
hydrate. The catalyst could be easily separated at the end of a reaction using an external magnet and
can be recycled up to 10 times without any loss in catalytic activity.
Vapor Deposition of Semiconducting Phosphorus Allotropes into TiO2 Nanotube A...Pawan Kumar
Recent evidence of exponential environmental degradation will demand a drastic shift in research and development toward
exploiting alternative energy resources such as solar energy. Here, we
report the successful low-cost and easily accessible synthesis of hybrid
semiconductor@TiO2 nanotube photocatalysts. In order to realize its
maximum potential in harvesting photons in the visible-light range, TiO2
nanotubes have been loaded with earth-abundant, low-band-gap fibrous
red and black phosphorus (P). Scanning electron microscopy− and
scanning transmission electron microscopy−energy-dispersive X-ray
spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron microscopy, and UV−vis measurements have been performed,
substantiating the deposition of fibrous red and black P on top and
inside the cavities of 100-μm-long electrochemically fabricated nanotubes. The nanotubular morphology of titania and a vapor-transport technique are utilized to form heterojunctions of P and
TiO2. Compared to pristine anatase 3.2 eV TiO2 nanotubes, the creation of heterojunctions in the hybrid material resulted in
1.5−2.1 eV photoelectrocatalysts. An enhanced photoelectrochemical water-splitting performance under visible light compared
with the individual components resulted for the P@TiO2 hybrids. This feature is due to synergistically improved charge
separation in the heterojunction and more effective visible-light absorption. The electronic band structure and charge-carrier
dynamics are investigated in detail using ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy and Kelvin probe force microscopy to elucidate
the charge-separation mechanism. A Fermi-level alignment in P@TiO2 heterojunctions leads to a more reductive flat-band
potential and a deeper valence band compared to pristine P and thus facilitates a better water-splitting performance. Our results
demonstrate effective conversion efficiencies for the nanostructured hybrids, which may enable future applications in
optoelectronic applications such as photodetectors, photovoltaics, photoelectrochemical catalysts, and sensors.
Remarkable self-organization and unusual conductivity behavior in cellulose n...Pawan Kumar
Aqueous suspensions of cellulose nanocrystals were blended with Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) [PEDOT:PSS], and cast into thin films. The morphology, structure and electrical properties of the resulting nanocomposite thin films were thoroughly characterized. We found that the CNC–PEDOT:PSS blends self-organize into a layered vertical stack with a pitch of 100–200 nm while retaining a continuous percolation network for PEDOT. Atomic force microscopy, dynamic light scattering and multi-angle light scattering measurements confirmed the wrapping of polymer chains around the rod-like CNCs. The blended films exhibited improved molecular ordering of the PEDOT chains with concomitant improvement in the carrier mobility. The remarkable self-organization and enhanced structural order enabled the CNC–PEDOT:PSS blends to exhibit a high conductivity typical of PEDOT:PSS even when the content of the insulating CNCs in the nanocomposite was as high as 50 wt%.
Development of novel catalytic systems for photoreduction of CO2 to fuel and ...Pawan Kumar
This document summarizes the proposed research project on developing novel catalytic systems for the photoreduction of CO2 to fuels and chemicals. The project will focus on using transition metal complexes as photocatalysts immobilized on supporting materials like graphene oxide. Previous work has shown that ruthenium and cobalt complexes immobilized on graphene oxide are effective visible-light active catalysts for reducing CO2 to methanol. The proposed work will synthesize new graphene oxide-supported transition metal complexes and characterize their photocatalytic activity for CO2 reduction.
1. The document describes a new nanohybrid material composed of polyoxomolybdate, polypyrrole, and graphene oxide for use as a high-power symmetric supercapacitor electrode.
2. The nanohybrid was synthesized via a one-pot reaction where polyoxomolybdate acted as an oxidizing agent to polymerize pyrrole monomers onto graphene oxide nanosheets.
3. Structural and morphological analysis showed the nanohybrid had an excellent architecture with good interfacial contact between components, enabling fast redox reactions for high capacitive performance.
A closed loop ammonium salt system for recovery of high-purity lead tetroxide...Ary Assuncao
This document describes a closed-loop hydrometallurgical process for recovering high-purity lead tetroxide from spent lead-acid battery paste. The process involves leaching the paste with a mixed solution of ammonium acetate, acetic acid, and hydrogen peroxide. The leachate is then reacted with ammonium carbonate to precipitate lead carbonate. Impurities are removed during leaching and precipitation. The regenerated leachate is recycled for the next leaching. Lead carbonate is calcined to produce lead tetroxide with low impurity levels meeting industry standards. This process allows for reagent recirculation and production of a high value lead recovery product.
Nanostructured composite materials for CO2 activationPawan Kumar
This document discusses nanostructured composite materials for CO2 activation, specifically for the photocatalytic reduction of CO2 to valuable products. It provides background on the increasing energy crisis and climate change caused by fossil fuel use. It then summarizes the basic principles and challenges of using semiconductor photocatalysts for CO2 reduction, including appropriate band gap positions and preventing electron-hole recombination. The document discusses various approaches to overcoming these challenges, such as forming heterojunction composites and using co-catalysts to facilitate charge separation and transfer.
The document describes a study that uses design of experiments (DoE) to optimize slurry-cast cathodes for solid-state batteries. Various combinations of polymer binder type and content and conductive carbon additive type and content were tested as cathode composites. Electrochemical and mechanical performance data from the experiments were analyzed using statistical software to identify optimal combinations. The predictions identified polyisobutene as the best binder and vapor-grown carbon fibers as the best additive to maximize specific capacity. Hydrogenated nitrile butadiene rubber and vapor-grown carbon fibers provided the best combination to maximize capacity retention. Additional tests were conducted to understand changes during cycling.
Sunlight-driven water-splitting using two-dimensional carbon based semiconduc...Pawan Kumar
The overwhelming challenge of depleting fossil fuels and anthropogenic carbon emissions has driven research into alternative clean sources of energy. To achieve the goal of a carbon neutral economy, the harvesting of sunlight by using photocatalysts to split water into hydrogen and oxygen is an expedient approach to fulfill the energy demand in a sustainable way along with reducing the emission of greenhouse gases. Even though the past few decades have witnessed intensive research into inorganic semiconductor photocatalysts, their quantum efficiencies for hydrogen production from visible photons remain too low for the large scale deployment of this technology. Visible light absorption and efficient charge separation are two key necessary conditions for achieving the scalable production of hydrogen from water. Two-dimensional carbon based nanoscale materials such as graphene oxide, reduced …
Sunlight-driven water-splitting using twodimensional carbon based semiconductorsPawan Kumar
The overwhelming challenge of depleting fossil fuels and anthropogenic carbon emissions has driven research
into alternative clean sources of energy. To achieve the goal of a carbon neutral economy, the harvesting of
sunlight by using photocatalysts to split water into hydrogen and oxygen is an expedient approach to fulfill
the energy demand in a sustainable way along with reducing the emission of greenhouse gases. Even though
the past few decades have witnessed intensive research into inorganic semiconductor photocatalysts, their
quantum efficiencies for hydrogen production from visible photons remain too low for the large scale
deployment of this technology. Visible light absorption and efficient charge separation are two key necessary
conditions for achieving the scalable production of hydrogen from water. Two-dimensional carbon based
nanoscale materials such as graphene oxide, reduced graphene oxide, carbon nitride, modified 2D carbon
frameworks and their composites have emerged as potential photocatalysts due to their astonishing
properties such as superior charge transport, tunable energy levels and bandgaps, visible light absorption,
high surface area, easy processability, quantum confinement effects, and high photocatalytic quantum yields.
The feasibility of structural and chemical modification to optimize visible light absorption and charge
separation makes carbonaceous semiconductors promising candidates to convert solar energy into chemical
energy. In the present review, we have summarized the recent advances in 2D carbonaceous photocatalysts
with respect to physicochemical and photochemical tuning for solar light mediated hydrogen evolution.
This document discusses X-ray diffraction (XRD) spectroscopy and provides examples of applying XRD principles to characterize different materials. It describes the basic principles of how XRD works using Bragg's law and Miller indices to identify crystal planes. Examples are given for characterizing silver nanoparticles, graphite, graphene oxide, and zinc oxide nanoparticles using XRD, including estimating particle sizes from XRD peak widths and identifying functional groups from infrared spectroscopy. References are also provided for further reading.
2021 influence of basic carbon additives on the electrochemical performance ...Ary Assuncao
This study investigates the effect of carbon surface basicity on the electrochemical performance and dynamic charge acceptance of lead-carbon batteries. Five activated carbons with different pH values ranging from 9.5 to 11.1 were prepared by ammonia and hydrogen gas treatments. Cyclic voltammetry showed that the hydrogen evolution reaction activity increased with higher carbon surface basicity. Testing of lead-carbon electrodes found a correlation between carbon pH and dynamic charge acceptance, with higher pH carbons showing improved charge currents and final dynamic charge acceptance. The carbon content also affected charge currents during simulated microcycles, demonstrating that surface chemistry and amount of carbon additive both influence the electrochemical properties and performance of lead-carbon batteries.
Single-atom catalysts for biomass-derived drop-in chemicalsPawan Kumar
Conversion of biomass to fuel and drop-in chemicals is envisaged to solve the problem of depleting fossil fuel reserves while leveling-off the staggering CO2 concentration. By-passing the natural carbon cycle via the transformation of abundant lignocellulosic biomass into chemicals does not add any extra CO2 to the environment and the net CO2 concentration remains the same. The paradigm shifts from fossil fuel-based chemicals to biomass-derived products will rely on efficient and cost-effective catalysts that can compete with cheap and readily available fossil fuels. Existing transition and noble metal-based nanoparticle catalysts either in the supported or unsupported form are crippling due to poor activity/selectivity, deactivation of catalytically active sites, and the complex composition, recalcitrant nature, and high moisture content of biomass. Single-atom catalysts (SACs) possessing single-atom centers decorated on support have shown great promise in biomass conversion due to their unique geometric configuration, electronic properties, and ensemble effect. In contrast to traditional catalytic systems, SACs encompass the advantages of both heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysts with improved performance and easy recyclability. Because of the availability of each metal center for the reaction and unique geometrical configuration, SACs have displayed exceptional catalytic activity and selectivity (~95% in most cases). In addition, the SACs show increased thermal and chemical stability due to the stabilization of the metal center on the support. The present chapter highlights the various aspects of SACs for efficient and selective biomass conversion into drop-in chemicals.
Energy level tuning of cd se colloidal quantum dots in ternary 0d 2d-2d cdse ...Journal Papers
This document summarizes the energy level tuning of CdSe colloidal quantum dots (QDs) in a ternary 0D-2D-2D CdSe QD/B-rGO/O-gC3N4 photocatalyst system for enhanced hydrogen generation. Specifically, it discusses how the use of different thiol capping ligands on CdSe QDs results in shifts in the QD energy levels and band gaps. These ligand-specific CdSe QDs then exhibit trends in photocatalytic performance consistent with their respective measured energy and gap levels. Furthermore, it describes how an optimized CdSe QD is incorporated into a ternary composite with B-rGO and O-g
Heterostructured nanocomposite tin phthalocyanine@mesoporous ceria (SnPc@CeO2...Pawan Kumar
Heterostructured tin phthalocyanine supported to mesoporous ceria was synthesized and used a
photocatalyst for CO2 reduction under visible light. The photoreduction CO2 activities of the
heterostructures were investigated in the presence of triethylamine as sacrificial agent. The developed
photocatalyst exhibited high catalytic activity for photoreduction of CO2 and after 24 hours of visible
light irradiation 2342 mmol g1 cat of methanol (fMeOH ¼ 0.0223 or 2.23%) and 840 mmol g1 cat of CO
(fCO ¼ 0.0026 or 0.26%) were obtained as the major reaction products. The methanol formation rate
(RMeOH) and CO formation rate (RCO) was found to be 97.5 mmol h1 g1 cat and 35.0 mmol h1 g1 cat
respectively. While under the identical experimental conditions mesoporous ceria (meso-CeO2) gave
only 316 mmol g1 cat of methanol (fMeOH ¼ 0.003 or 0.30%) and 126 mmol g1 cat CO (fCO ¼ 0.0004
or 0.04%) with product formation rate RMeOH ¼ 13.2 mmol h1 g1 cat and RCO ¼ 5.3 mmol h1 g1 cat.
Furthermore, the recovered catalyst showed consistent catalytic activity for at least five runs without any
significant loss in product yields
The document discusses the origin of radiation-induced degradation in polymer solar cells. It finds that charge accumulation at the interface is the primary reason for degradation, affected by the donor-acceptor mixing ratio in the bulk heterojunction. In situ measurements of polymer solar cell performance and recombination lifetimes under X-ray radiation show that devices with high acceptor concentrations experience a significant decrease in open-circuit voltage and fill factor due to radiation, while devices with low acceptor concentrations are more resistant to these changes. The findings provide a quantitative understanding and physical model of the degradation mechanism.
Boosting Photocatalytic Activity Using Carbon Nitride Based 2D/2D van der Waa...Pawan Kumar
The surging demand for energy and staggering pollutants in the environment have geared the scientific community to explore sustainable pathways that are economically feasible and environmentally compelling. In this context, harnessing solar energy using semiconductor materials to generate charge pairs to drive photoredox reactions has been envisioned as a futuristic approach. Numerous inorganic crystals with promising nanoregime properties investigated in the past decade have yet to demonstrate practical application due to limited photon absorption and sluggish charge separation kinetics. Two-dimensional semiconductors with tunable optical and electronic properties and quasi-resistance-free lateral charge transfer mechanisms have shown great promise in photocatalysis. Polymeric graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) is among the most promising candidates due to fine-tuned band edges and the feasibility of optimizing the optical properties via materials genomics. Constructing a two-dimensional (2D)/2D van der Waals (vdW) heterojunction by allies of 2D carbon nitride sheets and other 2D semiconductors has demonstrated enhanced charge separation with improved visible photon absorption, and the performance is not restricted by the lattice matching of constituting materials. With the advent of new 2D semiconductors over the recent past, the 2D/2D heterojunction assemblies are gaining momentum to design high performance photocatalysts for numerous applications. This review aims to highlight recent advancements and key understanding in carbon nitride based 2D/2D heterojunctions and their applications in photocatalysis, including small molecules activation, conversion, and degradations. We conclude with a forward-looking perspective discussing the key challenges and opportunity areas for future research.
Heterojunctions of halogen-doped carbon nitride nanosheets and BiOI for sunli...Pawan Kumar
This document summarizes the synthesis and characterization of halogen-doped carbon nitride nanosheets and BiOI heterojunctions for use in photoelectrochemical water splitting. Specifically:
1) Fluorine-doped, chlorine-intercalated carbon nitride (CNF-Cl) nanosheets were synthesized using thermal annealing to improve light absorption and charge separation.
2) CNF-Cl nanosheets were combined with bismuth oxyiodide (BiOI) nanoplates via a hydrothermal method to form heterojunctions.
3) Characterization using TEM, XRD, Raman and EDS mapping confirmed the formation of CNF-Cl
Proton‐functionalized graphitic carbon nitride for efficient metal‐free disin...Journal Papers
This document summarizes a study on using proton-functionalized graphitic carbon nitride (P-CN) as a metal-free photocatalyst for disinfecting Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria under low-power light irradiation. P-CN demonstrated 100% disinfection of E. coli within 4 hours under 23W light bulb irradiation. Testing with scavengers showed that hydroxyl radicals (·OH) played a major role in the disinfection process, while superoxide (·O2-) played a minimal role. P-CN exhibited higher disinfection efficiency compared to unmodified graphitic carbon nitride, due to the introduction of protons enhancing conductivity and charge transfer in P-CN. This
Vapor Deposition of Semiconducting Phosphorus Allotropes into TiO2 Nanotube A...Pawan Kumar
Recent evidence of exponential environmental degradation will demand a drastic shift in research and development toward exploiting alternative energy resources such as solar energy. Here, we report the successful low-cost and easily accessible synthesis of hybrid semiconductor@TiO2 nanotube photocatalysts. In order to realize its maximum potential in harvesting photons in the visible-light range, TiO2 nanotubes have been loaded with earth-abundant, low-band-gap fibrous red and black phosphorus (P). Scanning electron microscopy– and scanning transmission electron microscopy–energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron microscopy, and UV–vis measurements have been performed, substantiating the deposition of fibrous red and black P on top and inside the cavities of 100-μm-long electrochemically fabricated nanotubes. The nanotubular …
Photo-assisted oxidation of thiols to disulfides using cobalt ‘‘Nanorust’’ un...Pawan Kumar
Heterogeneous ‘‘Nanorust’’ containing cobalt oxide has been developed for the visible light assisted
oxidation of thiols to disulfides using molecular oxygen as an oxidant under alkaline free conditions and
therefore more environmentally friendly. Pyrolysis of heterogenized tetrasulfonated cobalt(II) phthalocyanine
(CoPcS) supported on mesoporous ceria (CeO2) transforms it into a novel heterogeneous ‘‘Nanorust’’
containing CoOx-C,N@CeO2 which exhibited higher catalytic activity than the homogeneous CoPcS as well
as the ceria immobilized CoPcS catalyst. Importantly, these catalysts could easily be recovered and recycled
for several runs, which makes the process greener and cost-effective.
Visible light assisted reduction of nitrobenzenes using Fe(bpy)3+2/rGOnanocom...Pawan Kumar
Visible-light-induced photocatalytic reduction of aromatic nitrobenzenes to the corresponding anilinesat room temperature using reduced graphene oxide (rGO) immobilized iron(II) bipyridine complex asphotocatalyst is described. The rGO-immobilized iron catalyst exhibited superior catalytic activity thanhomogeneous iron(II) bipyridine complex and much higher than metal free rGO photocatalysts. Theheterogeneous photocatalyst was found to be robust and could easily be recovered and reused for severalruns without any significant loss in photocatalytic activity.
Synthesis of flower-like magnetite nanoassembly: Application in the efficient...Pawan Kumar
A facile approach for the synthesis of magnetite microspheres with flower-like morphology is reported
that proceeds via the reduction of iron(III) oxide under a hydrogen atmosphere. The ensuing magnetic
catalyst is well characterized by XRD, FE-SEM, TEM, N2 adsorption-desorption isotherm, and
Mössbauer spectroscopy and explored for a simple yet efficient transfer hydrogenation reduction of a
variety of nitroarenes to respective anilines in good to excellent yields (up to 98%) employing hydrazine
hydrate. The catalyst could be easily separated at the end of a reaction using an external magnet and
can be recycled up to 10 times without any loss in catalytic activity.
Vapor Deposition of Semiconducting Phosphorus Allotropes into TiO2 Nanotube A...Pawan Kumar
Recent evidence of exponential environmental degradation will demand a drastic shift in research and development toward
exploiting alternative energy resources such as solar energy. Here, we
report the successful low-cost and easily accessible synthesis of hybrid
semiconductor@TiO2 nanotube photocatalysts. In order to realize its
maximum potential in harvesting photons in the visible-light range, TiO2
nanotubes have been loaded with earth-abundant, low-band-gap fibrous
red and black phosphorus (P). Scanning electron microscopy− and
scanning transmission electron microscopy−energy-dispersive X-ray
spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron microscopy, and UV−vis measurements have been performed,
substantiating the deposition of fibrous red and black P on top and
inside the cavities of 100-μm-long electrochemically fabricated nanotubes. The nanotubular morphology of titania and a vapor-transport technique are utilized to form heterojunctions of P and
TiO2. Compared to pristine anatase 3.2 eV TiO2 nanotubes, the creation of heterojunctions in the hybrid material resulted in
1.5−2.1 eV photoelectrocatalysts. An enhanced photoelectrochemical water-splitting performance under visible light compared
with the individual components resulted for the P@TiO2 hybrids. This feature is due to synergistically improved charge
separation in the heterojunction and more effective visible-light absorption. The electronic band structure and charge-carrier
dynamics are investigated in detail using ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy and Kelvin probe force microscopy to elucidate
the charge-separation mechanism. A Fermi-level alignment in P@TiO2 heterojunctions leads to a more reductive flat-band
potential and a deeper valence band compared to pristine P and thus facilitates a better water-splitting performance. Our results
demonstrate effective conversion efficiencies for the nanostructured hybrids, which may enable future applications in
optoelectronic applications such as photodetectors, photovoltaics, photoelectrochemical catalysts, and sensors.
Remarkable self-organization and unusual conductivity behavior in cellulose n...Pawan Kumar
Aqueous suspensions of cellulose nanocrystals were blended with Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) [PEDOT:PSS], and cast into thin films. The morphology, structure and electrical properties of the resulting nanocomposite thin films were thoroughly characterized. We found that the CNC–PEDOT:PSS blends self-organize into a layered vertical stack with a pitch of 100–200 nm while retaining a continuous percolation network for PEDOT. Atomic force microscopy, dynamic light scattering and multi-angle light scattering measurements confirmed the wrapping of polymer chains around the rod-like CNCs. The blended films exhibited improved molecular ordering of the PEDOT chains with concomitant improvement in the carrier mobility. The remarkable self-organization and enhanced structural order enabled the CNC–PEDOT:PSS blends to exhibit a high conductivity typical of PEDOT:PSS even when the content of the insulating CNCs in the nanocomposite was as high as 50 wt%.
Development of novel catalytic systems for photoreduction of CO2 to fuel and ...Pawan Kumar
This document summarizes the proposed research project on developing novel catalytic systems for the photoreduction of CO2 to fuels and chemicals. The project will focus on using transition metal complexes as photocatalysts immobilized on supporting materials like graphene oxide. Previous work has shown that ruthenium and cobalt complexes immobilized on graphene oxide are effective visible-light active catalysts for reducing CO2 to methanol. The proposed work will synthesize new graphene oxide-supported transition metal complexes and characterize their photocatalytic activity for CO2 reduction.
1. The document describes a new nanohybrid material composed of polyoxomolybdate, polypyrrole, and graphene oxide for use as a high-power symmetric supercapacitor electrode.
2. The nanohybrid was synthesized via a one-pot reaction where polyoxomolybdate acted as an oxidizing agent to polymerize pyrrole monomers onto graphene oxide nanosheets.
3. Structural and morphological analysis showed the nanohybrid had an excellent architecture with good interfacial contact between components, enabling fast redox reactions for high capacitive performance.
A closed loop ammonium salt system for recovery of high-purity lead tetroxide...Ary Assuncao
This document describes a closed-loop hydrometallurgical process for recovering high-purity lead tetroxide from spent lead-acid battery paste. The process involves leaching the paste with a mixed solution of ammonium acetate, acetic acid, and hydrogen peroxide. The leachate is then reacted with ammonium carbonate to precipitate lead carbonate. Impurities are removed during leaching and precipitation. The regenerated leachate is recycled for the next leaching. Lead carbonate is calcined to produce lead tetroxide with low impurity levels meeting industry standards. This process allows for reagent recirculation and production of a high value lead recovery product.
Nanostructured composite materials for CO2 activationPawan Kumar
This document discusses nanostructured composite materials for CO2 activation, specifically for the photocatalytic reduction of CO2 to valuable products. It provides background on the increasing energy crisis and climate change caused by fossil fuel use. It then summarizes the basic principles and challenges of using semiconductor photocatalysts for CO2 reduction, including appropriate band gap positions and preventing electron-hole recombination. The document discusses various approaches to overcoming these challenges, such as forming heterojunction composites and using co-catalysts to facilitate charge separation and transfer.
The document describes a study that uses design of experiments (DoE) to optimize slurry-cast cathodes for solid-state batteries. Various combinations of polymer binder type and content and conductive carbon additive type and content were tested as cathode composites. Electrochemical and mechanical performance data from the experiments were analyzed using statistical software to identify optimal combinations. The predictions identified polyisobutene as the best binder and vapor-grown carbon fibers as the best additive to maximize specific capacity. Hydrogenated nitrile butadiene rubber and vapor-grown carbon fibers provided the best combination to maximize capacity retention. Additional tests were conducted to understand changes during cycling.
Sunlight-driven water-splitting using two-dimensional carbon based semiconduc...Pawan Kumar
The overwhelming challenge of depleting fossil fuels and anthropogenic carbon emissions has driven research into alternative clean sources of energy. To achieve the goal of a carbon neutral economy, the harvesting of sunlight by using photocatalysts to split water into hydrogen and oxygen is an expedient approach to fulfill the energy demand in a sustainable way along with reducing the emission of greenhouse gases. Even though the past few decades have witnessed intensive research into inorganic semiconductor photocatalysts, their quantum efficiencies for hydrogen production from visible photons remain too low for the large scale deployment of this technology. Visible light absorption and efficient charge separation are two key necessary conditions for achieving the scalable production of hydrogen from water. Two-dimensional carbon based nanoscale materials such as graphene oxide, reduced …
Sunlight-driven water-splitting using twodimensional carbon based semiconductorsPawan Kumar
The overwhelming challenge of depleting fossil fuels and anthropogenic carbon emissions has driven research
into alternative clean sources of energy. To achieve the goal of a carbon neutral economy, the harvesting of
sunlight by using photocatalysts to split water into hydrogen and oxygen is an expedient approach to fulfill
the energy demand in a sustainable way along with reducing the emission of greenhouse gases. Even though
the past few decades have witnessed intensive research into inorganic semiconductor photocatalysts, their
quantum efficiencies for hydrogen production from visible photons remain too low for the large scale
deployment of this technology. Visible light absorption and efficient charge separation are two key necessary
conditions for achieving the scalable production of hydrogen from water. Two-dimensional carbon based
nanoscale materials such as graphene oxide, reduced graphene oxide, carbon nitride, modified 2D carbon
frameworks and their composites have emerged as potential photocatalysts due to their astonishing
properties such as superior charge transport, tunable energy levels and bandgaps, visible light absorption,
high surface area, easy processability, quantum confinement effects, and high photocatalytic quantum yields.
The feasibility of structural and chemical modification to optimize visible light absorption and charge
separation makes carbonaceous semiconductors promising candidates to convert solar energy into chemical
energy. In the present review, we have summarized the recent advances in 2D carbonaceous photocatalysts
with respect to physicochemical and photochemical tuning for solar light mediated hydrogen evolution.
Heterojunctions of halogen-doped carbon nitride nanosheets and BiOI for sunli...Pawan Kumar
A fluorine-doped, chlorine-intercalated carbon nitride (CNF-Cl) photocatalyst has been synthesized for simultaneous improvements in light harvesting capability along with suppression of charge recombination in bulk gC 3 N 4. The formation of heterojunctions of these CNF-Cl nanosheets with low bandgap, earth abundant bismuth oxyiodide (BiOI) was achieved, and the synthesized heterojunctions were tested as active photoanodes in photoelectrochemical water splitting experiments. BiOI/CNF-Cl heterojunctions exhibited extended light harvesting with a band-edge of 680 nm and generated photocurrent densities approaching 1.3 mA cm− 2 under AM1. 5 G one sun illumination. Scanning Kelvin probe force microscopy under optical bias showed a surface potential of 207 mV for the 50% BiOI/CNF-Cl nanocomposite, while pristine CNF-Cl and BiOI had surface photopotential values of 83 mV and 98 mV …
Coproduction of hydrogen and lactic acid from glucose photocatalysis on band-...Pawan Kumar
Photocatalytic transformation of biomass into value-added chemicals coupled with co-production of hydrogen provides an explicit route to trap sunlight into the chemical bonds. Here, we demonstrate a rational design of Zn1-xCdxS solid solution homojunction photocatalyst with a pseudo-periodic cubic zinc blende (ZB) and hexagonal wurtzite (WZ) structure for efficient glucose conversion to simultaneously produce hydrogen and lactic acid. The optimized Zn0.6Cd0.4S catalyst consists of a twinning superlattice, has a tuned bandgap, and displays excellent efficiency with respect to hydrogen generation (690 ± 27.6 μmol·h−1·gcat.−1), glucose conversion (~90%), and lactic acid selectivity (~87%) without any co-catalyst under visible light irradiation. The periodic WZ/ZB phase in twinning superlattice facilitates better charge separation, while superoxide radical (⋅O2-) and photogenerated holes drive the glucose transformation and water oxidation reactions, respectively. This work demonstrates that rational photocatalyst design could realize an efficient and concomitant production of hydrogen and value-added chemicals from glucose photocatalysis.
Multifunctional carbon nitride nanoarchitectures for catalysisPawan Kumar
Catalysis is at the heart of modern-day chemical and pharmaceutical industries, and there is an urgent demand to develop metal-free, high surface area, and efficient catalysts in a scalable, reproducible and economic manner. Amongst the ever-expanding two-dimensional materials family, carbon nitride (CN) has emerged as the most researched material for catalytic applications due to its unique molecular structure with tunable visible range band gap, surface defects, basic sites, and nitrogen functionalities. These properties also endow it with anchoring capability with a large number of catalytically active sites and provide opportunities for doping, hybridization, sensitization, etc. To make considerable progress in the use of CN as a highly effective catalyst for various applications, it is critical to have an in-depth understanding of its synthesis, structure and surface sites. The present review provides an overview of the recent advances in synthetic approaches of CN, its physicochemical properties, and band gap engineering, with a focus on its exclusive usage in a variety of catalytic reactions, including hydrogen evolution reactions, overall water splitting, water oxidation, CO2 reduction, nitrogen reduction reactions, pollutant degradation, and organocatalysis. While the structural design and band gap engineering of catalysts are elaborated, the surface chemistry is dealt with in detail to demonstrate efficient catalytic performances. Burning challenges in catalytic design and future outlook are elucidated.
This document provides an overview of a themed issue on nanotechnology for emerging applications. It summarizes 7 review articles that cover topics such as the separation and deposition of nanoparticles, enhancing drug solubility through nanonization, controlling nanocrystal synthesis and growth, green approaches to nanomaterials synthesis, determining the structures of complex mesoporous materials, and computational modeling of gas and liquid separations using metal-organic frameworks. The editor concludes that nanotechnology continues to enable cutting-edge research and development across chemical engineering fields.
Recent progress in Tungsten disulphide based Photocatalyst for Hydrogen Produ...MaiyalaganT
Semiconductor-based photocatalysis has dramatically increased interest in the field of photocatalysis, because of
its ability to directly utilize solar energy into fuels and for the degradation of various pollutants. However, the
photocatalytic performance of semiconductor-based photocatalys still lower due to the quick recombination
photogenerated electron–hole pairs and low visible light utilization. Therefore, numerous efforts have been made
to solve these complications. Particularly, cocatalysts supported semiconductor have been extensively applied in
designing and developing highly effective composite photocatalysts for hydrogen photocatalytic application.WS2
has attracted enormous attention in photocatalysis due to its unusual properties like enhancing visible lightharvesting,
charge transfer dynamics and surface reactions of a photocatalytic system. In this review, we
begin by describing synthesis route, different morphologies and brief sketch properties of WS2. A brief discussion
of the WS2 supported metal oxide, metal sulphide, carbon based materials, silver based materials and bismuth
based materials photocatalysts is then provided. While various plausible photocatalytic mechanisms of
photogenerated-electrons and holes in WS2 composite should be proposed. The applications of WS2 as cocatalyst
in the Photocatalytic hydrogen production, organic contaminant degradation and Cr(VI) removal. This review
may offer motivation for designing and fabricating novel and efficient WS2 based composite photocatalysts for
highly efficient photocatalytic applications.
This document summarizes biological processes for converting carbon dioxide and hydrogen into liquid fuels and chemicals. It discusses several microorganisms and pathways being developed for this purpose, known as "electrofuels". These include Ralstonia eutropha and Clostridium ljungdahlii, which can fix carbon dioxide via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle or Wood-Ljungdahl pathway respectively. The document also reviews computational analyses of carbon fixation pathways and their relative energetic costs for producing biomass and fuels.
Our approach mostly depends on creating porosity in functional organic and inorganic materials by soft and hard templating approaches and their extensive characterization.
This document summarizes a project studying the use of red mud and pure metal oxides as potential catalysts for hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) of food waste. The goal is to find a cheaper alternative to the commercial Ceria Zirconia catalyst. HTL converts biomass into liquid biofuel using water at high pressure and temperature. Previous studies show Ceria Zirconia improves biooil yield but is costly to reuse. Red mud, a low-cost byproduct, contains metal oxides that could achieve the desired base chemistry. The project will compare the impact of red mud and pure metal oxide catalysts to Ceria Zirconia on biooil production from food waste.
This document is Daniel Jacob Goodman's master's thesis on the methanation of carbon dioxide. It provides background on carbon dioxide emissions and the potential for methanation to address global warming by consuming CO2 to produce natural gas. The thesis aims to introduce current methanation research, considerations for entering the field, and how to conduct experiments. It covers the thermodynamics of the CO2 methanation reaction, types of catalysts being explored, and how to characterize catalyst performance. Equilibrium calculations show CO2 methanation is favored at lower temperatures and higher pressures. The thesis provides guidance on the factors that influence methanation and recommendations for further research.
This document reports on a study investigating the influence of sodium carboxymethylcellulose (NaCMC) on the aggregation behavior of aqueous solutions of 1-hexadecyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride (C16MeImCl), a cationic surface active ionic liquid (SAIL). Electrical conductivity and surface tension measurements were used to study C16MeImCl aggregation in the presence of NaCMC. Two characteristic concentrations were identified before free C16MeImCl micelles form: the critical aggregation concentration and the polymer saturation concentration. The effects of temperature, NaCMC concentration, and NaCMC charge density on C16MeImCl self-aggregation were analyzed. Thermodynamic parameters of C16MeImCl mic
JBEI Research Highlights Slides - July 2022SaraHarmon4
Anaerobic fungi produce a wealth of enzymes that can act on cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. These enzymes show promise for accelerating the breakdown of lignocellulose for industrial applications like chemical and fuel production. Molecular dynamics simulations provide insights into how these enzymes may interact with lignocellulose and enable its breakdown. This could allow enzymes from anaerobic fungi to be applied industrially.
The document describes a study that used direct coal liquefaction residue (DCLR) as a microwave absorbent to improve the upgrading of lignite via microwave-assisted pyrolysis. DCLR was added in amounts ranging from 0-20% during the microwave pyrolysis of lignite. Analysis showed that DCLR accelerated the heating rate and facilitated changes to the lignite's chemical and physical properties. These changes improved the slurryability and increased the maximum solid concentration of lignite water slurry from 41.73% to 65.42% with the addition of 12% DCLR. The approach provides an effective way to utilize DCLR waste while upgrading lignite to make it more suitable for transportation and utilization.
Production of Renewable Fuels by the Photocatalytic Reduction of CO2 using Ma...Pawan Kumar
The photo-reductive performance of natural ilmenite was boosted and the production of renewable fuels from the reduction of CO2 was enhanced by doping the natural mineral with magnesium. The doping was achieved by high energy ball milling in the presence of MgO and Mg(NO3)2. The photo-reduction of CO2 in aqueous solution led to the evolution of H2, CH4, C2H4, and C2H6, and the insertion of Mg in the structure of ilmenite enabled increases of up to 1245% in the fuel production yield, reaching total production of 210.9 µmol h-1 gcat-1. Displacements of the conduction band to more negative potentials were evidenced for the samples doped with magnesium. Indirect effects such as increases in the valence band maximum, and the introduction of intermediate energy levels were also evidenced through the measurement of the crystallite size and the determination of the band structure of the materials. Mott-Schottky analyses of the samples showed the n-type nature of the semiconductor materials and enabled the estimation of the density of charge carriers, which strongly influenced the photocatalytic performance. The strong potential of the application of natural ilmenite in gas phase artificial photosynthesis was proved by the evaluation of CO2 reduction in gas conditions, which allowed the enhancement in the selectivity and significantly increased the production of CH4 as compared to aqueous solution, reaching an important yield of CH4 of 16.1 µmol h-1 gcat-1.
This document contains the resume of Shen-Kuei Chiu, who is seeking a senior chemist position using his 9 years of experience in organic polymer synthesis, hydrosilicate polymer synthesis, and nanomaterial characterization. He has skills in synthesizing various nanomaterials using different techniques and extensively characterizing materials using various instruments. He has research experience synthesizing luminescent silicon nanoparticles and other nanoparticles for biomedical applications.
HYDROGEN GENERATION FROM WASTE WATER BY USING SOLAR ENERGY | J4RV3I11004Journal For Research
Objective of this paper is to produce hydrogen which is an ideal fuel for the next generation because it is abundantly available in nature, energy efficient and clean. Wide varieties of technologies are available to produce hydrogen but only few of them are considered environmental friendly. Solar water splitting via photo catalytic reaction is one of them which have attracted tremendous attention. In this paper we are working on hydrogen production via solar splitting. Photo catalytic water splitting is one of the promising technologies to produce pure and clean hydrogen. Since it is reasonable having low process cost and has a small reactor, it can be made for house hold application and hence has a huge market potential. Generation of hydrogen under visible irradiation is the main area of work. Based on the literature reported here, visible irradiation can be achieved by doping of TiO2 with metal or non-metal. We have used Fe doping to increase the efficiency. The result indicates that Fe doped sieves produce more hydrogen than the normal TiO2 coated sieve and the efficiency can be increased if we increase the number of doped sieves and surface area.
Similar to Polymeric carbon nitride-based photocatalysts for photoreforming of biomass derivatives (20)
Isolated Iridium Sites on Potassium-Doped Carbon-nitride wrapped Tellurium Na...Pawan Kumar
Many industrial processes such transesterification of fatty acid for biodiesel production, soap manufacturing and biosynthesis of ethanol generate glycerol as a major by-product that can be used to produce commodity chemicals. Photocatalytic transformation of glycerol is an enticing approach that can exclude the need of harsh oxidants and extraneous thermal energy. However, the product yield and selectivity remain poor due to low absorption and unsymmetrical site distribution on the catalyst surface. Herein, tellurium (Te) nanorods/nanosheets (TeNRs/NSs) wrapped potassium-doped carbon nitride (KCN) van der Waal (vdW) heterojunction (TeKCN) is designed to enhance charge separation and visible-NIR absorption. The iridium (Ir) single atom sites decoration on the TeKCN core-shell structure (TeKCNIr) promotes selective oxidation of glycerol to glyceraldehyde with a conversion of 45.6% and selectivity of 61.6% under AM1.5G irradiation. The catalytic selectivity can reach up to 88% under 450 nm monochromatic light. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) demonstrates the presence of undercoordinated IrN2O2 sites which improved catalytic selectivity for glycol oxidation. Band energies and computational calculations reveal faile charge transfer in the TeKCNIr heterostructure. EPR and scavenger tests discern that superoxide (O2•−) and hydroxyl (•OH) radicals are prime components driving glycerol oxidation.
Isolated Iridium Sites on Potassium-Doped Carbon-nitride wrapped Tellurium Na...Pawan Kumar
Many industrial processes such transesterification of fatty acid for biodiesel production, soap manufacturing and biosynthesis of ethanol generate glycerol as a major by-product that can be used to produce commodity chemicals. Photocatalytic transformation of glycerol is an enticing approach that can exclude the need of harsh oxidants and extraneous thermal energy. However, the product yield and selectivity remain poor due to low absorption and unsymmetrical site distribution on the catalyst surface. Herein, tellurium (Te) nanorods/nanosheets (TeNRs/NSs) wrapped potassium-doped carbon nitride (KCN) van der Waal (vdW) heterojunction (TeKCN) is designed to enhance charge separation and visible-NIR absorption. The iridium (Ir) single atom sites decoration on the TeKCN core-shell structure (TeKCNIr) promotes selective oxidation of glycerol to glyceraldehyde with a conversion of 45.6% and selectivity of 61.6% under AM1.5G irradiation. The catalytic selectivity can reach up to 88% under 450 nm monochromatic light. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) demonstrates the presence of undercoordinated IrN2O2 sites which improved catalytic selectivity for glycol oxidation. Band energies and computational calculations reveal faile charge transfer in the TeKCNIr heterostructure. EPR and scavenger tests discern that superoxide (O2•−) and hydroxyl (•OH) radicals are prime components driving glycerol oxidation.
Isolated Iridium Sites on Potassium-Doped Carbon-nitride wrapped Tellurium Na...Pawan Kumar
Many industrial processes such transesterification of fatty acid for biodiesel production, soap manufacturing and biosynthesis of ethanol generate glycerol as a major by-product that can be used to produce commodity chemicals. Photocatalytic transformation of glycerol is an enticing approach that can exclude the need of harsh oxidants and extraneous thermal energy. However, the product yield and selectivity remain poor due to low absorption and unsymmetrical site distribution on the catalyst surface. Herein, tellurium (Te) nanorods/nanosheets (TeNRs/NSs) wrapped potassium-doped carbon nitride (KCN) van der Waal (vdW) heterojunction (TeKCN) is designed to enhance charge separation and visible-NIR absorption. The iridium (Ir) single atom sites decoration on the TeKCN core-shell structure (TeKCNIr) promotes selective oxidation of glycerol to glyceraldehyde with a conversion of 45.6% and selectivity of 61.6% under AM1.5G irradiation. The catalytic selectivity can reach up to 88% under 450 nm monochromatic light. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) demonstrates the presence of undercoordinated IrN2O2 sites which improved catalytic selectivity for glycol oxidation. Band energies and computational calculations reveal faile charge transfer in the TeKCNIr heterostructure. EPR and scavenger tests discern that superoxide (O2•−) and hydroxyl (•OH) radicals are prime components driving glycerol oxidation.
Solar-Driven Cellulose Photorefining into Arabinose over Oxygen-Doped Carbon ...Pawan Kumar
Biomass photorefining is a promising strategy to address the energy crisis and transition toward carbon carbon-neutral society. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of direct cellulose photorefining into arabinose by a rationally designed oxygen-doped polymeric carbon nitride, which generates favorable oxidative species (e.g., O2–, •OH) for selective oxidative reactions at neutral conditions. In addition, we also illustrate the mechanism of the photocatalytic cellulose to arabinose conversion by density functional theory calculations. The oxygen insertion derived from oxidative radicals at the C1 position of glucose within cellulose leads to oxidative cleavage of β-1,4 glycosidic linkages, resulting in the subsequent gluconic acid formation. The following decarboxylation process of gluconic acid via C1–C2 α-scissions, triggered by surface oxygen-doped active sites, generates arabinose and formic acid, respectively. This work not only offers a mechanistic understanding of cellulose photorefining to arabinose but also sets up an example for illuminating the path toward direct cellulose photorefining into value-added bioproducts under mild conditions.
Solar-Driven Cellulose Photorefining into Arabinose over Oxygen-Doped Carbon ...Pawan Kumar
Biomass photorefining is a promising strategy to address the energy crisis and transition toward carbon carbon-neutral society. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of direct cellulose photorefining into arabinose by a rationally designed oxygen-doped polymeric carbon nitride, which generates favorable oxidative species (e.g., O2–, •OH) for selective oxidative reactions at neutral conditions. In addition, we also illustrate the mechanism of the photocatalytic cellulose to arabinose conversion by density functional theory calculations. The oxygen insertion derived from oxidative radicals at the C1 position of glucose within cellulose leads to oxidative cleavage of β-1,4 glycosidic linkages, resulting in the subsequent gluconic acid formation. The following decarboxylation process of gluconic acid via C1–C2 α-scissions, triggered by surface oxygen-doped active sites, generates arabinose and formic acid, respectively. This work not only offers a mechanistic understanding of cellulose photorefining to arabinose but also sets up an example for illuminating the path toward direct cellulose photorefining into value-added bioproducts under mild conditions.
Solar-Driven Cellulose Photorefining into Arabinose over Oxygen-Doped Carbon ...Pawan Kumar
Biomass photorefining is a promising strategy to address the energy crisis and transition toward carbon carbon-neutral society. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of direct cellulose photorefining into arabinose by a rationally designed oxygen-doped polymeric carbon nitride, which generates favorable oxidative species (e.g., O2–, •OH) for selective oxidative reactions at neutral conditions. In addition, we also illustrate the mechanism of the photocatalytic cellulose to arabinose conversion by density functional theory calculations. The oxygen insertion derived from oxidative radicals at the C1 position of glucose within cellulose leads to oxidative cleavage of β-1,4 glycosidic linkages, resulting in the subsequent gluconic acid formation. The following decarboxylation process of gluconic acid via C1–C2 α-scissions, triggered by surface oxygen-doped active sites, generates arabinose and formic acid, respectively. This work not only offers a mechanistic understanding of cellulose photorefining to arabinose but also sets up an example for illuminating the path toward direct cellulose photorefining into value-added bioproducts under mild conditions.
Partial Thermal Condensation Mediated Synthesis of High-Density Nickel Single...Pawan Kumar
Direct selective transformation of greenhouse methane (CH4) to liquid oxygenates (methanol) can substitute energy-intensive two-step (reforming/Fischer–Tropsch) synthesis while creating environmental benefits. The development of inexpensive, selective, and robust catalysts that enable room temperature conversion will decide the future of this technology. Single-atom catalysts (SACs) with isolated active centers embedded in support have displayed significant promises in catalysis to drive challenging reactions. Herein, high-density Ni single atoms are developed and stabilized on carbon nitride (NiCN) via thermal condensation of preorganized Ni-coordinated melem units. The physicochemical characterization of NiCN with various analytical techniques including HAADF-STEM and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) validate the successful formation of Ni single atoms coordinated to the heptazine-constituted CN network. The presence of uniform catalytic sites improved visible absorption and carrier separation in densely populated NiCN SAC resulting in 100% selective photoconversion of (CH4) to methanol using H2O2 as an oxidant. The superior catalytic activity can be attributed to the generation of high oxidation (NiIII═O) sites and selective C─H bond cleavage to generate •CH3 radicals on Ni centers, which can combine with •OH radicals to generate CH3OH.
Partial Thermal Condensation Mediated Synthesis of High-Density Nickel Single...Pawan Kumar
Direct selective transformation of greenhouse methane (CH4) to liquid oxygenates (methanol) can substitute energy-intensive two-step (reforming/Fischer–Tropsch) synthesis while creating environmental benefits. The development of inexpensive, selective, and robust catalysts that enable room temperature conversion will decide the future of this technology. Single-atom catalysts (SACs) with isolated active centers embedded in support have displayed significant promises in catalysis to drive challenging reactions. Herein, high-density Ni single atoms are developed and stabilized on carbon nitride (NiCN) via thermal condensation of preorganized Ni-coordinated melem units. The physicochemical characterization of NiCN with various analytical techniques including HAADF-STEM and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) validate the successful formation of Ni single atoms coordinated to the heptazine-constituted CN network. The presence of uniform catalytic sites improved visible absorption and carrier separation in densely populated NiCN SAC resulting in 100% selective photoconversion of (CH4) to methanol using H2O2 as an oxidant. The superior catalytic activity can be attributed to the generation of high oxidation (NiIII═O) sites and selective C─H bond cleavage to generate •CH3 radicals on Ni centers, which can combine with •OH radicals to generate CH3OH.
Selective Cellobiose Photoreforming for Simultaneous Gluconic Acid and Syngas...Pawan Kumar
Here, we demonstrate the selective cellobiose (building block of cellulose) photoreforming for gluconic acid and syngas co-production in acidic conditions by rationally designing a bifunctional polymeric carbon nitride (CN) with potassium/sulfur co-dopant. This heteroatomic doped CN photocatalyst possesses enhanced visible light absorption, higher charge separation efficiency than pristine CN. Under acidic conditions, cellobiose is not only more efficiently hydrolyzed into glucose but also promotes the syngas and gluconic acid production. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal the favorable generation of •O2− during the photocatalytic reaction, which is essential for gluconic acid production. Consequently, the fine-designed photocatalyst presents excellent cellobiose conversion (>80%) and gluconic acid selectivity (>70%) together with the co-production of syngas (~56 μmol g-1 h-1) under light illumination. The current work demonstrates the feasibility of biomass photoreforming with value-added chemicals and syngas co-production under mild condition.
Selective Cellobiose Photoreforming for Simultaneous Gluconic Acid and Syngas...Pawan Kumar
Here, we demonstrate the selective cellobiose (building block of cellulose) photoreforming for gluconic acid and syngas co-production in acidic conditions by rationally designing a bifunctional polymeric carbon nitride (CN) with potassium/sulfur co-dopant. This heteroatomic doped CN photocatalyst possesses enhanced visible light absorption, higher charge separation efficiency than pristine CN. Under acidic conditions, cellobiose is not only more efficiently hydrolyzed into glucose but also promotes the syngas and gluconic acid production. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal the favorable generation of •O2− during the photocatalytic reaction, which is essential for gluconic acid production. Consequently, the fine-designed photocatalyst presents excellent cellobiose conversion (>80%) and gluconic acid selectivity (>70%) together with the co-production of syngas (~56 μmol g-1 h-1) under light illumination. The current work demonstrates the feasibility of biomass photoreforming with value-added chemicals and syngas co-production under mild condition.
Selective Cellobiose Photoreforming for Simultaneous Gluconic Acid and Syngas...Pawan Kumar
Here, we demonstrate the selective cellobiose (building block of cellulose) photoreforming for gluconic acid and syngas co-production in acidic conditions by rationally designing a bifunctional polymeric carbon nitride (CN) with potassium/sulfur co-dopant. This heteroatomic doped CN photocatalyst possesses enhanced visible light absorption, higher charge separation efficiency than pristine CN. Under acidic conditions, cellobiose is not only more efficiently hydrolyzed into glucose but also promotes the syngas and gluconic acid production. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal the favorable generation of •O2− during the photocatalytic reaction, which is essential for gluconic acid production. Consequently, the fine-designed photocatalyst presents excellent cellobiose conversion (>80%) and gluconic acid selectivity (>70%) together with the co-production of syngas (~56 μmol g-1 h-1) under light illumination. The current work demonstrates the feasibility of biomass photoreforming with value-added chemicals and syngas co-production under mild condition.
Partial Thermal Condensation Mediated Synthesis of High-Density Nickel Single...Pawan Kumar
Direct selective transformation of greenhouse methane (CH4) to liquid oxygenates (methanol) can substitute energy-intensive two-step (reforming/Fischer–Tropsch) synthesis while creating environmental benefits. The development of inexpensive, selective, and robust catalysts that enable room temperature conversion will decide the future of this technology. Single-atom catalysts (SACs) with isolated active centers embedded in support have displayed significant promises in catalysis to drive challenging reactions. Herein, high-density Ni single atoms are developed and stabilized on carbon nitride (NiCN) via thermal condensation of preorganized Ni-coordinated melem units. The physicochemical characterization of NiCN with various analytical techniques including HAADF-STEM and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) validate the successful formation of Ni single atoms coordinated to the heptazine-constituted CN network. The presence of uniform catalytic sites improved visible absorption and carrier separation in densely populated NiCN SAC resulting in 100% selective photoconversion of (CH4) to methanol using H2O2 as an oxidant. The superior catalytic activity can be attributed to the generation of high oxidation (NiIII═O) sites and selective C─H bond cleavage to generate •CH3 radicals on Ni centers, which can combine with •OH radicals to generate CH3OH.
Recent advancements in tuning the electronic structures of transitional metal...Pawan Kumar
The smooth transition from finite non-renewables to renewable energy conversion technologies will require efficient electrocatalysts which can harness intermittent energies to store in the form of chemical bonds. The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) impedes the widespread usage of water electrolyzers to convert H2O into H2 and persists as a bottleneck, including other energy conversion devices with sluggish four H+/e− kinetics. In this context, designing highly active and stable catalysts capable of driving a lower overpotential in the OER to produce continuous hydrogen (H2) is a primary demanded. This chapter discussed the mechanism of the OER in conventional adsorbate oxygen and lattice oxygen participation in transition metal oxides (TMOs). Further, the influences of surface engineering, doping, and defects in the TMOs and understanding the electronic structure to screen electrodes towards the structure–activity relationship are highlighted. Specifically, the adsorption strength of O 2p is understood in detail as its binding ability over the surface of TMOs can be correlated directly to the OER activity. The iterative development of TMOs in terms of understanding electronic structural attributes is essential for the commercial deployment of energy conversion technologies. The comprehensive outlook of this chapter investigates thoroughly how TMOs can be used as significant materials for the OER in the near future.
Hole transport materials (HTMs) have a significant impact on the effectiveness of organic electronic devices; therefore, we present a molecular architecture of pyrazino[2,3-g]quinoxaline (PQ10)-based room-temperature organic liquid crystalline semiconductor (OLCS) as an alternative HTM. The PQ10 compound exhibits three different rectangular columnar (Colr) phases offering an impressive hole mobility of 8.8 × 10−3 cm2V−1s−1 which is found to be dexterous than most of existing polymeric hole transport materials. The charge transport mechanism is governed by the hole polarons hopping through H-aggregates of the PQ10 molecules and the hole mobility remains nearly constant throughout the mesophase range, but it decreases with increasing applied electric field. The current-voltage characteristics of the PQ10 have also been investigated in all three Colr phases and explained via the Poole-Frenkel conduction mechanism. The dielectric spectroscopy has been eventually carried out to understand the nature of dielectric permittivity and conductivity as a function of temperature and a correlation is established between the molecular architecture of the Colr phases and aforementioned physical properties. Solar cell simulation has been additionally performed to demonstrate that the PQ10 material can be a better choice as HTM for organic electronics and photovoltaic applications.
Nanoengineered Au-Carbon Nitride Interfaces Enhance PhotoCatalytic Pure Water...Pawan Kumar
Photocatalytic pure water splitting using solar energy is one of the promising routes to produce sustainable green hydrogen (H2). Tuning the interfacial active site density at catalytic heterojunctions and better light management are imperative to steer the structure-activity correlations to enhance the photo-efficiency of nanocomposite photocatalysts. Herein, we report the decoration of nitrogen defects-rich carbon nitride CN(T) with metallic Au nanostructures of different morphologies and sizes to investigate their influence on the photocatalytic hydrogen evolution reactions (HER). The CN(T)-7-NP nano-heterostructure comprises Au nanoparticles (NPs) of ~7 nm and thiourea-derived defective CN exhibits an excellent H2 production rate of 76.8 µmol g–1 h–1 from pure water under simulated AM 1.5 solar irradiation. In contrast to large-size Au nanorods, the high activity of CN(T)-7-NP was attributed to their strong localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) mediated visible absorption and interfacial charge separation. The surface ligands used to control Au nanostructures morphology were found to play a major role in the stabilization of NPs and improve interfacial charge transport between Au NPs and CN(T). First-principles calculations revealed that defects in CN and Au-CN interfacial sites in these nanocomposites facilitate the separation of e-/h+ pairs after light excitation and provide lower energy barrier pathways for H2 production by photocatalytic water splitting.
Nanoengineered Au-Carbon Nitride Interfaces Enhance Photo-Catalytic Pure Wate...Pawan Kumar
Photocatalytic pure water splitting using solar energy is one of the promising routes to produce sustainable green hydrogen (H2). Tuning the interfacial active site density at catalytic heterojunctions and better light management are imperative to steer the structure-activity correlations to enhance the photo-efficiency of nanocomposite photocatalysts. Herein, we report the decoration of nitrogen defects-rich carbon nitride CN(T) with metallic Au nanostructures of different morphologies and sizes to investigate their influence on the photocatalytic hydrogen evolution reactions (HER). The CN(T)-7-NP nano-heterostructure comprises Au nanoparticles (NPs) of ~7 nm and thiourea-derived defective CN exhibits an excellent H2 production rate of 76.8 µmol g–1 h–1 from pure water under simulated AM 1.5 solar irradiation. In contrast to large-size Au nanorods, the high activity of CN(T)-7-NP was attributed to their strong localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) mediated visible absorption and interfacial charge separation. The surface ligands used to control Au nanostructures morphology were found to play a major role in the stabilization of NPs and improve interfacial charge transport between Au NPs and CN(T). First-principles calculations revealed that defects in CN and Au-CN interfacial sites in these nanocomposites facilitate the separation of e-/h+ pairs after light excitation and provide lower energy barrier pathways for H2 production by photocatalytic water splitting.
Cooperative Copper Single Atom Catalyst in Two-dimensional Carbon Nitride for...Pawan Kumar
This document summarizes a study that investigated copper single atom catalysts supported on two-dimensional carbon nitride materials for enhancing the electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide to methane. Specifically, copper ions were incorporated into the nanoporous structures of poly(heptazine imide) and poly(triazine imide) using a room temperature ion exchange process. This allowed for high loading densities of isolated copper sites. The proximity of copper atoms within the nanopores was found to enable cooperative catalysis that boosted the selectivity and efficiency of the multi-electron conversion of CO2 to CH4. Density functional theory calculations helped explain how the copper-copper distance and coordination environment modulated the binding of reaction intermediates. Optimized copper loading in the
Bioinspired multimetal electrocatalyst for selective methane oxidationPawan Kumar
Selective partial electrooxidation of methane (CH4) to liquid oxygenates has been a long-sought goal. However, the high activation energy of C–H bonds and competing oxygen evolution reaction limit product selectivity and reaction rates. Inspired by iron (IV)-oxo containing metalloenzymes’ functionality to activate the C–H bond, here we report on the design of a copper-iron-nickel catalyst for selective oxidation of CH4 to formate via a peroxide-assisted pathway. Each catalyst serves a specific role which is confirmed via electrochemical, in situ, and theoretical studies. A combination of electrochemical and in situ spectroelectrochemical studies revealed that H2O2 oxidation on nickel led to the formation of active oxygen species which trigger the formation of iron (IV) at low voltages. Density functional theory analysis helped reveal the role of iron (IV)-oxo species in reducing the activation energy barrier for CH4 deprotonation and the critical role of copper to suppress overoxidation. Our multimetal catalyst exhibits a formate faradaic efficiency of 42% at an applied potential of 0.9 V versus a reversible hydrogen electrode.
Radial Nano-Heterojunctions Consisting of CdS Nanorods Wrapped by 2D CN:PDI P...Pawan Kumar
Solar energy harvesting using semiconductor photocatalysis offers an enticing solution to two of the biggest societal challenges, energy scarcity and environmental pollution. After decades of effort, no photocatalyst exists which can simultaneously meet the demand for excellent absorption, high quantum efficiency and photochemical resilience/durability. While CdS is an excellent photocatalyst for hydrogen evolution, pollutant degradation and organic synthesis, photocorrosion of CdS leads to the deactivation of the catalyst. Surface passivation of CdS with 2D graphitic carbon nitrides (CN) such as g-C3N4 and C3N5 has been shown to mitigate the photocorrosion problem but the poor oxidizing power of photogenerated holes in CN limits the utility of this approach for photooxidation reactions. We report the synthesis of exfoliated 2D nanosheets of a modified carbon nitride constituted of tris-s-triazine (C6N7) linked pyromellitic dianhydride polydiimide (CN:PDI) with a deep oxidative highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) position, which ensures sufficient oxidizing power for photogenerated holes in CN. The heterojunction formed by the wrapping of mono-/few layered CN:PDI on CdS nanorods (CdS/CN:PDI) was determined to be an excellent photocatalyst for oxidation reactions including photoelectrochemical water splitting, dye decolorization and the photocatalytic conversion of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde. Extensive structural characterization using HR-TEM, Raman, XPS, etc., confirmed wrapping of few-layered CN:PDI on CdS nanorods. The increased photoactivity in CdS/CN:PDI catalyst was ascribed to facile electron transfer from CdS to CN:PDI in comparison to CdS/g-C3N4, leading to an increased electron density on the surface of the photocatalyst to drive chemical reactions.
Radial Nano-Heterojunctions Consisting of CdS Nanorods Wrapped by 2D CN:PDI P...Pawan Kumar
Solar energy harvesting using semiconductor photocatalysis offers an enticing solution to two of the biggest societal challenges, energy scarcity and environmental pollution. After decades of effort, no photocatalyst exists which can simultaneously meet the demand for excellent absorption, high quantum efficiency and photochemical resilience/durability. While CdS is an excellent photocatalyst for hydrogen evolution, pollutant degradation and organic synthesis, photocorrosion of CdS leads to the deactivation of the catalyst. Surface passivation of CdS with 2D graphitic carbon nitrides (CN) such as g-C3N4 and C3N5 has been shown to mitigate the photocorrosion problem but the poor oxidizing power of photogenerated holes in CN limits the utility of this approach for photooxidation reactions. We report the synthesis of exfoliated 2D nanosheets of a modified carbon nitride constituted of tris-s-triazine (C6N7) linked pyromellitic dianhydride polydiimide (CN:PDI) with a deep oxidative highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) position, which ensures sufficient oxidizing power for photogenerated holes in CN. The heterojunction formed by the wrapping of mono-/few layered CN:PDI on CdS nanorods (CdS/CN:PDI) was determined to be an excellent photocatalyst for oxidation reactions including photoelectrochemical water splitting, dye decolorization and the photocatalytic conversion of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde. Extensive structural characterization using HR-TEM, Raman, XPS, etc., confirmed wrapping of few-layered CN:PDI on CdS nanorods. The increased photoactivity in CdS/CN:PDI catalyst was ascribed to facile electron transfer from CdS to CN:PDI in comparison to CdS/g-C3N4, leading to an increased electron density on the surface of the photocatalyst to drive chemical reactions.
Sexuality - Issues, Attitude and Behaviour - Applied Social Psychology - Psyc...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
When I was asked to give a companion lecture in support of ‘The Philosophy of Science’ (https://shorturl.at/4pUXz) I decided not to walk through the detail of the many methodologies in order of use. Instead, I chose to employ a long standing, and ongoing, scientific development as an exemplar. And so, I chose the ever evolving story of Thermodynamics as a scientific investigation at its best.
Conducted over a period of >200 years, Thermodynamics R&D, and application, benefitted from the highest levels of professionalism, collaboration, and technical thoroughness. New layers of application, methodology, and practice were made possible by the progressive advance of technology. In turn, this has seen measurement and modelling accuracy continually improved at a micro and macro level.
Perhaps most importantly, Thermodynamics rapidly became a primary tool in the advance of applied science/engineering/technology, spanning micro-tech, to aerospace and cosmology. I can think of no better a story to illustrate the breadth of scientific methodologies and applications at their best.
EWOCS-I: The catalog of X-ray sources in Westerlund 1 from the Extended Weste...Sérgio Sacani
Context. With a mass exceeding several 104 M⊙ and a rich and dense population of massive stars, supermassive young star clusters
represent the most massive star-forming environment that is dominated by the feedback from massive stars and gravitational interactions
among stars.
Aims. In this paper we present the Extended Westerlund 1 and 2 Open Clusters Survey (EWOCS) project, which aims to investigate
the influence of the starburst environment on the formation of stars and planets, and on the evolution of both low and high mass stars.
The primary targets of this project are Westerlund 1 and 2, the closest supermassive star clusters to the Sun.
Methods. The project is based primarily on recent observations conducted with the Chandra and JWST observatories. Specifically,
the Chandra survey of Westerlund 1 consists of 36 new ACIS-I observations, nearly co-pointed, for a total exposure time of 1 Msec.
Additionally, we included 8 archival Chandra/ACIS-S observations. This paper presents the resulting catalog of X-ray sources within
and around Westerlund 1. Sources were detected by combining various existing methods, and photon extraction and source validation
were carried out using the ACIS-Extract software.
Results. The EWOCS X-ray catalog comprises 5963 validated sources out of the 9420 initially provided to ACIS-Extract, reaching a
photon flux threshold of approximately 2 × 10−8 photons cm−2
s
−1
. The X-ray sources exhibit a highly concentrated spatial distribution,
with 1075 sources located within the central 1 arcmin. We have successfully detected X-ray emissions from 126 out of the 166 known
massive stars of the cluster, and we have collected over 71 000 photons from the magnetar CXO J164710.20-455217.
ESA/ACT Science Coffee: Diego Blas - Gravitational wave detection with orbita...Advanced-Concepts-Team
Presentation in the Science Coffee of the Advanced Concepts Team of the European Space Agency on the 07.06.2024.
Speaker: Diego Blas (IFAE/ICREA)
Title: Gravitational wave detection with orbital motion of Moon and artificial
Abstract:
In this talk I will describe some recent ideas to find gravitational waves from supermassive black holes or of primordial origin by studying their secular effect on the orbital motion of the Moon or satellites that are laser ranged.
Mending Clothing to Support Sustainable Fashion_CIMaR 2024.pdfSelcen Ozturkcan
Ozturkcan, S., Berndt, A., & Angelakis, A. (2024). Mending clothing to support sustainable fashion. Presented at the 31st Annual Conference by the Consortium for International Marketing Research (CIMaR), 10-13 Jun 2024, University of Gävle, Sweden.
The binding of cosmological structures by massless topological defectsSérgio Sacani
Assuming spherical symmetry and weak field, it is shown that if one solves the Poisson equation or the Einstein field
equations sourced by a topological defect, i.e. a singularity of a very specific form, the result is a localized gravitational
field capable of driving flat rotation (i.e. Keplerian circular orbits at a constant speed for all radii) of test masses on a thin
spherical shell without any underlying mass. Moreover, a large-scale structure which exploits this solution by assembling
concentrically a number of such topological defects can establish a flat stellar or galactic rotation curve, and can also deflect
light in the same manner as an equipotential (isothermal) sphere. Thus, the need for dark matter or modified gravity theory is
mitigated, at least in part.
Current Ms word generated power point presentation covers major details about the micronuclei test. It's significance and assays to conduct it. It is used to detect the micronuclei formation inside the cells of nearly every multicellular organism. It's formation takes place during chromosomal sepration at metaphase.
Authoring a personal GPT for your research and practice: How we created the Q...Leonel Morgado
Thematic analysis in qualitative research is a time-consuming and systematic task, typically done using teams. Team members must ground their activities on common understandings of the major concepts underlying the thematic analysis, and define criteria for its development. However, conceptual misunderstandings, equivocations, and lack of adherence to criteria are challenges to the quality and speed of this process. Given the distributed and uncertain nature of this process, we wondered if the tasks in thematic analysis could be supported by readily available artificial intelligence chatbots. Our early efforts point to potential benefits: not just saving time in the coding process but better adherence to criteria and grounding, by increasing triangulation between humans and artificial intelligence. This tutorial will provide a description and demonstration of the process we followed, as two academic researchers, to develop a custom ChatGPT to assist with qualitative coding in the thematic data analysis process of immersive learning accounts in a survey of the academic literature: QUAL-E Immersive Learning Thematic Analysis Helper. In the hands-on time, participants will try out QUAL-E and develop their ideas for their own qualitative coding ChatGPT. Participants that have the paid ChatGPT Plus subscription can create a draft of their assistants. The organizers will provide course materials and slide deck that participants will be able to utilize to continue development of their custom GPT. The paid subscription to ChatGPT Plus is not required to participate in this workshop, just for trying out personal GPTs during it.