Long-term stability of heterogeneous catalysts is an omnipresent and pressing concern in industrial processes. Catalysts with high activity and selectivity can be searched for by high-throughput screening methods based maybe on educated guesses provided by ab initio thermodynamics or scaling relations. However, high-throughput screening is not feasible and is hardly able to identify long-term stable catalyst so that a rational and knowledge-driven approach is called for to identify potentially stable and active catalysts. Unfortunately, our current microscopic understanding on stability issues is quite poor. We propose that this gap in knowledge can be at least partly closed by investigating dedicated model catalyst materials with well-defined morphology that allow for a tight link to theory and the application of standard characterization methods. This topic is highly interdisciplinary, combining sophisticated inorganic synthesis with catalysis research, surface chemistry, and powerful theoretical modeling. In this Account, we focus on the stability issues of Deacon catalysts (RuO and CeO-based materials) for recovering Cl from HCl by aerobic oxidation and how to deepen our microscopic insight into the underlying processes. The main stability problems under harsh Deacon reaction conditions concomitant with a substantial loss in activity arise from deep chlorination of the catalyst, leaching of volatile chlorides and oxychlorides, and decrease in active surface area by particle sintering. In general, powder materials with undefined particle shape are not well suited for examining catalyst stability, because changes in the morphology are difficult to recognize, for instance, by electron microscopy. Rather, we focus here on model materials with well-defined starting morphologies, including electrospun nanofibers, shape-controlled nanoparticles, and well-defined ultrathin crystalline layers. CeO is able to stabilize shape-controlled particles, exposing a single facet orientation so that comparing activity and stability studies can reveal structure sensitive properties. We develop a quasi-steady-state kinetic approach that allows us to model the catalyst chlorination as a function of temperature and gas feed composition. For the case of pure CeO nanocubes, this simple approach predicts chlorination to be efficiently suppressed by addition of little amounts of water in the reaction feed or by keeping the catalyst at higher temperature. Both process parameters have great impact on the actual reactor design. Thermal stabilization of CeO by intermixing Zr has been known in automotive exhaust catalysis for decades, but this does not necessarily imply also chemical stabilization of CeO against bulk-chlorination since Zr can readily form volatile ZrCl and may quickly lose its stabilizing effect. Nevertheless, with model experiments the stabilizing effect of Zr in the Deacon process over mixed CeZrO nanorods is clearly evidenced. Even higher stability can be accomplished with ultrathin CeO coatings on preformed ZrO particles, demonstrating the great promise of atomic layer deposition (ALD) in catalysis synthesis.
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BDJ Open
December 2024
Faculty of Odonto-Stomatology, University of Medicine and Pharmacy at Ho Chi Minh City, Ho Chi Minh City, 749000, Vietnam.
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Department of General Surgery, Affiliated Zhongda Hospital of Southeast University, Nanjing, 210009, China.
Insulin-like growth factor II mRNA-binding proteins (IGF2BPs), a family of RNA-binding proteins, are pivotal in regulating RNA dynamics, encompassing processes such as localization, metabolism, stability, and translation through the formation of ribonucleoprotein complexes. First identified in 1999 for their affinity to insulin-like growth factor II mRNA, IGF2BPs have been implicated in promoting tumor malignancy behaviors, including proliferation, metastasis, and the maintenance of stemness, which are associated with unfavorable outcomes in various cancers. Additionally, non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs), particularly long non-coding RNAs, circular RNAs, and microRNAs, play critical roles in cancer progression through intricate protein-RNA interactions.
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January 2025
Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics, Laxai Life Sciences Pvt. Ltd, Hyderabad, India.
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December 2024
College of Materials Science and Engineering, Fuzhou University, Fuzhou 350116, PR China. Electronic address:
This work developed a novel oxidized hierarchical porous carbon (OHPC) with vesicule-like ultrathin graphitic walls via a method of air oxidation and used as an efficient adsorbent for Congo red (CR) and Malachite green (MG) removal. Results show that the OHPC2 oxidized at 400 °C possesses three-dimensional hierarchical pores with vesicule-like ultrathin graphitic walls. The prepared OHPC2 not only has a large specific surface area of 1020 m g with a high pore volume, but also has abundant oxygen-containing functional groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Res
December 2024
State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment, School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150090, PR China. Electronic address:
Diffusible signal factor (DSF)-c-di-GMP-mediated strategies have been proposed as an effective regulatory approach for signal molecules in aerobic granular sludge (AGS). The increase in temperature from low to normal levels had a significant impact on AGS stability. In this study, two reactors were established to investigate the effects of different temperature rise modes (abrupt or gradual) on AGS stability.
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