Publications by authors named "Justine Harmel"

MXenes are two-dimensional metal carbides or nitrides that are currently proposed in many applications thanks to their unique attributes including high conductivity and accessible surface. Recently, a synthetic route was proposed to prepare MXenes from the molten salt etching of precursors allowing for the preparation of MXene (denoted as MS-MXenes, for molten salt MXene) with tuned surface termination groups, resulting in improved electrochemical properties. However, further delamination of as-prepared multilayer MS-MXenes still remains a major challenge.

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In this study, Pt nanoparticles on zeolite/γ-AlO composites (50/50 wt) were located either the zeolite or the γ-AlO binder, hereby varying the average distance (intimacy) between zeolite acid sites and metal sites from "closest" to "nanoscale". The catalytic performance of these catalysts was compared to physical mixtures of zeolite and Pt/γ-AlO powders, which provide a "microscale" distance between sites. Several beneficial effects on catalytic activity and selectivity for -heptane hydroisomerization were observed when Pt nanoparticles are located on the γ-AlO binder in nanoscale proximity with zeolite acid sites, as opposed to Pt nanoparticles located inside zeolite crystals.

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Improving product selectivity by controlling the spatial organization of functional sites at the nanoscale is a critical challenge in bifunctional catalysis. We present a series of composite bifunctional catalysts consisting of one-dimensional zeolites (ZSM-22 and mordenite) and a γ-alumina binder, with platinum particles controllably deposited either on the alumina binder or inside the zeolite crystals. The hydroisomerization of n-heptane demonstrates that the catalysts with platinum particles on the binder, which separates platinum and acid sites at the nanoscale, leads to a higher yield of desired isomers than catalysts with platinum particles inside the zeolite crystals.

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The Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS) is a structure-sensitive exothermic reaction that enables catalytic transformation of syngas to high quality liquid fuels. Now, monolithic cobalt-based heterogeneous catalysts were elaborated through a wet chemistry approach that allows control over nanocrystal shape and crystallographic phase, while at the same time enables heat management. Copper and nickel foams have been employed as supports for the epitaxial growth of hcp-Co nanowires directly from a solution containing a coordination compound of cobalt and stabilizing ligands.

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Chemical methods offer the possibility to synthesize a large panel of nanostructures of various materials with promising properties. One of the main limitations to a mass market development of nanostructure based devices is the integration at a moderate cost of nano-objects into smart architectures. Here we develop a general approach by adapting the seed-mediated solution phase synthesis of nanocrystals in order to directly grow them on crystalline thin films.

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Hybrid nanocomposites based on magnetic nanoparticles dispersed in liquid crystalline elastomers are fascinating emerging materials. Their expected strong magneto-elastic coupling may open new applications as actuators, magnetic switches, and for reversible storage of magnetic information. We report here the synthesis of a novel hybrid ferromagnetic liquid crystalline elastomer.

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