Publications by authors named "Martin St'astny"

Nanoceria is a promising nanomaterial for the catalytic hydrolysis of a wide variety of substances. In this study, it was experimentally demonstrated for the first time that CeO nanostructures show extraordinary reactivity toward sulfonamide drugs (sulfadimethoxine, sulfamerazine, and sulfapyridine) in aqueous solution without any illumination, activation, or pH adjustment. Hydrolytic cleavage of various bonds, including S-N, C-N, and C-S, was proposed as the main reaction mechanism and was indicated by the formation of various reaction products, namely, sulfanilic acid, sulfanilamide, and aniline, which were identified by HPLC-DAD, LC-MS/MS, and NMR spectroscopy.

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The surface of nanocrystalline cerium oxide (CeO) was treated with various chemical agents by a simple postmodification method at 25 °C and atmospheric pressure. Hydrogen peroxide, ammonium persulfate, deionized water, ascorbic acid, and ortho-phosphoric acid were used in order to study and evaluate their effect on surface materials, such as surface area, crystallite size, number of surface hydroxyl groups, particle morphology, and Ce/Ce ratio. Paraoxon-methyl (PO) decomposition and inorganic phosphate adsorption were used to evaluate the effect of surface treatment on catalytic and adsorption properties.

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Two types of CeO nanoparticles (CeNPs) prepared by low-temperature (<100 °C) precipitation methods in water were successfully immobilized in a matrix of electrospun PA6 nanofibers. The colloidal solutions of CeNPs in AcOH were directly mixed with the polymer solution before the needle electrospinning process, thereby achieving their good dispersion in the nanofibers. CeNPs embedded in the structure and on the surface of nanofibers exposing their reactive surfaces showed robust dephosphorylation catalytic activity, as demonstrated by monitoring the hydrolytic cleavage of three phosphodiester molecules (-NP-TMP, -NPPC, BNPP) in water by the HPLC method.

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Nanoscale cerium-bismuth oxides/oxynitrates were prepared by a scalable low-temperature method at ambient pressure using water as the sole solvent. Solid solutions were formed up to a 1:1 Ce/Bi molar ratio, while at higher doping levels, bismuth oxynitrate photocatalysts with a pronounced layered structure were formed. Bismuth caused significant changes in the structure and surface properties of nanoceria, such as the formation of defects, oxygen-containing surface groups, and Lewis and Brønsted acid sites.

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