Search results for "Surfaces"
showing 10 items of 2837 documents
Correlation between surface forces and surface reactivity in the setting of plaster by atomic force microscopy
2000
Abstract The setting of mineral binders (cement, plaster, etc.) arises as a direct consequence of surface reactivity by a process of dissociation and rehydration. This transformation induces a complete change of surface forces, of which the nature remains still unknown. The general process of the setting has been studied by means of plaster (CaSO 4 ·0.5H 2 O) crystals, chosen for an experimental convenience. The surface alteration (growth, dissolution, atomic resolution) of the plaster crystal with respect to the introduction of the calcium sulfate solution has been followed by using atomic force microscopy (AFM. Alternatively, this apparatus has been adapted by gluing a plaster microcrysta…
Formation of the C−S−H Layer during Early Hydration of Tricalcium Silicate Grains with Different Sizes
2005
Portland cement is a mixture of solid phases which all react with water. Tricalcium silicate (Ca3SiO5) is its main component and is often used in model systems to study cement hydration. It is generally recognized that setting and hardening of cement are due to the formation, by a dissolution-precipitation process, of a calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H) on anhydrous grains during Ca3SiO5 hydration. The purpose of this paper is to study the effect of Ca3SiO5 particle size on the nucleation-growth process of C-S-H. An experimental study of the rate of hydration by using different grain sizes under controlled conditions has been performed. The experimental data have been compared with results o…
Intrinsic Acidity of Surface Sites in Calcium Silicate Hydrates and Its Implication to Their Electrokinetic Properties
2014
Calcium Silicate Hydrates (C–S–H) are the major hydration products of portland cement paste. The accurate description of acid–base reactions at the surface of C–S–H particles is essential for both understanding the ion sorption equilibrium in cement and prediction of mechanical properties of the hardened cement paste. Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations at the density functional level of theory were applied to calculate intrinsic acidity constants (pKa’s) of the relevant ≡SiOH and ≡CaOH2 groups on the C–S–H surfaces using a thermodynamic integration technique. Ion sorption equilibrium in C–S–H was modeled applying ab initio calculated pKa’s in titrating Grand Canonical Monte Carlo simu…
XPS study of supported gold catalysts:the role of Au0 and Au+? species as active sites.
2006
Gold nanoparticles supported on different oxides (SiO2, CeO2 and TiO2) were prepared by the SMAD (solvated metal atom dispersion) and deposition–precipitation (DP) techniques. The physical and chemical characterization of the catalysts was performed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) and the catalytic activity was tested during the reaction of low temperature CO oxidation. The structural and surface analyses evidenced the presence of small gold crystallites (cluster size ∼2–5 nm) in all the SMAD-prepared samples and oxidized gold species in the case of the DP catalysts. A different surface distribution of ionic gold species was found on the different suppo…
Relationship between structure and CO oxidation activity of ceria supported gold catalysts
2005
Gold catalysts supported on cerium oxide were prepared by solvated metal atom dispersion (SMAD), by deposition-precipitation (DP), and by coprecipitation (CP) methods and were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), temperature programmed reduction (TPR), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The catalytic activity was tested in the CO oxidation reaction. The structural and surface analyses evidenced the presence of a modified ceria phase in the case of the DP sample and the presence of pure ceria and gold metal crystallites in the case of the SMAD and CP samples. The DP sample, after a mild treatment in air at 393 K, exhibited only ionic gold, and it was very active below 273 K. By…
Platinum-doped CeO2 thin film catalysts prepared by magnetron sputtering.
2010
The interaction of Pt with CeO(2) layers was investigated by using photoelectron spectroscopy. The 30 nm thick Pt doped CeO(2) layers were deposited simultaneously by rf-magnetron sputtering on a Si(001) substrate, multiwall carbon nanotubes (CNTs) supported by a carbon diffusion layer of a polymer membrane fuel cell and on CNTs grown on the silicon wafer by the CVD technique. The synchrotron radiation X-ray photoelectron spectra showed the formation of cerium oxide with completely ionized Pt(2+,4+) species, and with the Pt(2+)/Pt(4+) ratio strongly dependent on the substrate. The TEM and XRD study showed the Pt(2+)/Pt(4+) ratio is dependent on the film structure.
Growth of nano-porous Pt-doped cerium oxide thin films on glassy carbon substrate
2013
Abstract Glassy carbon (GC) substrates were treated by the oxygen plasma over several periods of time. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) study showed the dramatic influence of oxygen plasma on the morphology of glassy carbon. The treatment leads to the formation of nanostructured surface, which consists of well separated rod-like nanostructures oriented perpendicularly to the substrate surface. The surface roughness was found to increase with increasing treatment time. By using magnetron co-sputtering of platinum and cerium oxide we can prepare oxide layers continuously doped with Pt atoms during the growth. This tec…
MOCVD growth of porous cerium oxide thin films on silicon substrate
2015
Abstract Porous cerium oxide thin films were grown by pulsed direct liquid injection metal organic chemical vapor deposition (DLI-MOCVD) on silicon substrate, using cerium tetrakis (1-methoxy-2-methyl-2-propanolate) dissolved in cyclohexane as precursor as well as oxygen as oxidant agent. The chemical and morphological characteristics of the films were investigated by XPS, SEM and TEM. The influence of the growth conditions on the morphological features of the thin films and the cerium chemical states are reported and discussed. The decrease of the oxygen and/or alkoxide flow rate induces the decrease of both the film thickness and the porosity of the layer. Moreover, the growth of silicate…
Enhanced quantum sieving of hydrogen isotopes via molecular rearrangement of the adsorbed phase in chabazite
2020
Coadsorption experiments reveal an unexpected increase of the D2/H2 selectivity with loading in pure silica chabazite at 47 K. This effect is correlated with the appearance of a step in the adsorption isotherms of H2 and D2. Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations show that this phenomenon is related to a molecular rearrangement of the adsorbed phase induced by its strong confinement. In the case of a H2 and D2 mixture, this rearrangement favors the adsorption of D2 having a smaller size due to quantum effects.
Comparative computational analysis of different active site conformations and substrates in a chalcone isomerase catalyzed reaction.
2006
Chalcone isomerase catalyzes the transformation of chalcones to flavanones. We present a computational study of the rate-limiting chemical step, an intramolecular Michael addition of a 2'-oxyanion to the alpha,beta-double bound. By using quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical hybrid methods we traced the free-energy profiles associated with the reaction of two different substrates (chalcone and 6'-deoxychalcone) in two different conformations of the active site that are described in the different crystallographic structures available. We have obtained significant differences (about 4 kcal/mol) in the free-energy barriers calculated for the two active sites. According to our results, the ac…