Publications by authors named "Ronald J T Houk"

We demonstrate a versatile, bottom-up method of forming metal and semiconducting nanoparticles by exposing precursor metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) to an electron beam. Using a transmission electron microscope to initiate and observe growth, we show that the composition, size, and morphology of the nanoparticles are determined by the chemistry and structure of the MOF, as well as the electron beam properties. Zinc oxide, metallic indium and copper particles were produced with narrow and tunable size distributions comparable to those obtained from state-of-the-art methods.

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Synthetic methods used to produce metal nanoparticles typically lead to a distribution of particle sizes. In addition, creation of the smallest clusters, with sizes of a few to tens of atoms, remains very challenging. Nanoporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a promising solution to these problems, since their long-range crystalline order creates completely uniform pore sizes with the potential for both steric and chemical stabilization.

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A colorimetric chemodosimeter (SQ1) for the detection of trace palladium salts in cross-coupling reactions mediated by palladium is described. Decolorization of SQ1 is affected by nucleophilic attack of ethanethiol in basic DMSO solutions. Thiol addition is determined to have an equilibrium constant (K(eq)) of 2.

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In this work we demonstrate the concept of stress-induced chemical detection using metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) by integrating a thin film of the MOF HKUST-1 with a microcantilever surface. The results show that the energy of molecular adsorption, which causes slight distortions in the MOF crystal structure, can be converted to mechanical energy to create a highly responsive, reversible, and selective sensor. This sensor responds to water, methanol, and ethanol vapors, but yields no response to either N2 or O2.

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One of the most common, and yet least well understood, enzymatic transformations is proton abstraction from activated carbon acids such as carbonyls. Understanding the mechanism for these proton abstractions is basic to a good understanding of enzyme function. Significant controversy has arisen over the means by which a given enzyme might facilitate these deprotonations.

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[reaction: see text] The dependence of acidity on Li+ coordination geometry to alpha-carbon acids is investigated by generating potential energy surfaces of Li+ complexation with acetaldehyde and its respective enolate. The global minimum for the enolate complex shows significant Li+-pi-system coordination to both oxygen and the alpha-carbon. The gas-phase acidity analysis reveals significantly more alpha-carbon coordination, which presumably enhances the lability of the cleaving proton in the transition state of deprotonation.

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