B18-Core EXAFS
I22-Small angle scattering & Diffraction
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Elizabeth
Raine
,
Adam
Clark
,
Glen
Smales
,
Andrew
Smith
,
Diego
Gianolio
,
Tong
Li
,
Jianwei
Zheng
,
Benjamin
Griffith
,
Timothy I.
Hyde
,
Mark
Feaviour
,
Paul
Collier
,
John V.
Hanna
,
Gopinathan
Sankar
,
Shik Chi Edman
Tsang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[16316, 16583]
Abstract: The strong directing effects and difficulties in the removal of organic based surfactants makes the templated synthesis of nanoparticles in solid porous structures of defined molecular sizes such as SBA-15, without the use of surfactants, considerably attractive. However, the effects of their internal surface structures, adsorption affinities and lattice mis-match on the particle morphology grown therein have not been fully appreciated. Here, we report the internal surface of the silica preferentially hosts isolated tetrahedrally coordinated oxidic Zn species on the molecular walls of the SBA-15 channels from wet impregnated Zn2+ and Pt2+ species. This leads to less thermodynamic stable but kinetic controlled configuration of atomic zinc deposition on core platinum nanoparticles with unique confined lattice changes and surface properties to both host and guest structures at the interface upon reduction of the composite. This method for the formation templated nanoparticles may generate interests to form new tunable materials as dehydrogenation catalysts.
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Nov 2018
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I18-Microfocus Spectroscopy
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[9166]
Abstract: Previous work has shown that Mo isotopes measurably fractionate between metal and silicate liquids, even at temperatures appropriate for core formation. However, the effect of variations in the structural environment of Mo in the silicate liquid, especially as a function of valence state, on Mo isotope fractionation remained poorly explored. We have investigated the role of valence state in metal-silicate experiments in a gas-controlled furnace at 1400 °C and at oxygen fugacities between 10−12.7 and 10–9.9, i.e. between three and 0.2 log units below the iron-wüstite buffer. Two sets of experiments were performed, both with a silicate liquid in the CaO-Al2O3-SiO2 system. One set used molybdenum metal wire loops as the metal source, the other liquid gold alloyed with 2.5 wt% Mo contained in silica glass tubes. X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy analysis indicates that Mo6+/ΣMo in the silicate glasses varies between 0.24 and 0.77 at oxygen fugacities of 10–12.0 and 10–9.9 in the wire loop experiments and between 0.15 and 0.48 at 10–11.4 and 10–9.9 in the experiments with Au-Mo alloys. Double-spiked analysis of Mo isotope compositions furthermore shows that Mo isotope fractionation between metal and silicate is a linear function of Mo6+/ΣMo in the silicate glasses, with a difference of 0.51‰ in 98Mo/95Mo between purely Mo4+-bearing and purely Mo6+-bearing silicate liquid. The former is octahedrally and the latter tetrahedrally coordinated. Our study implies that previous experimental work contained a mixture of Mo4+ and Mo6+ species in the silicate liquid. Our refined parameterisation for Mo isotope fractionation between metal and silicate can be described as
Δ98/95Mometal–silicate=−1.43±0.14×106Mo6+/ΣMo+8±6×104T2
Molybdenum isotope ratios therefore have potential as a proxy to constrain the oxygen fugacity during core formation on planetary bodies if the parameterisation of Mo6+/ΣMo variation with oxygen fugacity is expanded, for instance to include iron-bearing systems. On Earth literature data indicate that the upper mantle is depleted in heavy Mo isotopes relative to the bulk Earth, as represented by chondrites. As previously highlighted, this difference is most likely not caused by core formation, which either enriches the mantle in heavy Mo isotopes or causes no significant fractionation, depending on temperature and, as we determined here, Mo6+ content. We reaffirm that core formation does not account for the Mo isotope composition of the modern upper mantle, which may instead reflect the effect of fractionation during subduction as part of global plate recycling.
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Nov 2018
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B18-Core EXAFS
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María
Retuerto
,
Federico
Calle-vallejo
,
Laura
Pascual
,
Pilar
Ferrer
,
Álvaro
García
,
Jorge
Torrero
,
Diego
Gianolio
,
José Luis G.
Fierro
,
Miguel A.
Peña
,
José Antonio
Alonso
,
Sergio
Rojas
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[18119]
Abstract: The activity of oxides towards the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is usually tuned by changing the transition metal components and/or the surface facets. An important yet less studied feature is the repercussion of the lattice oxygen content of the oxide in the active site's coordination and catalytic performance. This is illustrated here for the Ba-Ni-O system. We synthesized two oxides with Ni in different coordination and oxidation states, namely BaNiO2 with Ni2+ in square-planar positions, and BaNiO2.78(2) with Ni3+ and Ni4+ in octahedral positions. We show that the square-planar configuration of Ni endows BaNiO2 with high intrinsic OER activity, comparable to the best catalysts in the literature. DFT indicates that progressively lowering the lattice oxygen content from BaNiO3 to BaNiO2 increases the Ni sites' affinity for the reaction intermediates, thereby lowering the OER overpotential. Thus, oxygen content is an important parameter in oxide catalysts, as it modulates the coordination, orbital splitting, oxidation number, and catalytic activity of the active sites.
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Nov 2018
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B18-Core EXAFS
I18-Microfocus Spectroscopy
I20-EDE-Energy Dispersive EXAFS (EDE)
I20-Scanning-X-ray spectroscopy (XAS/XES)
Controls
Detectors
Optics
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Sofia
Diaz-moreno
,
Monica
Amboage
,
Mark
Basham
,
Roberto
Boada
,
Nicholas E.
Bricknell
,
Giannantonio
Cibin
,
Thomas
Cobb
,
Jacob
Filik
,
Adam
Freeman
,
Kalotina
Geraki
,
Diego
Gianolio
,
Shusaku
Hayama
,
Konstantin
Ignatyev
,
Luke
Keenan
,
Iuliia
Mikulska
,
J. Frederick W.
Mosselmans
,
James J.
Mudd
,
Stephen A.
Parry
Open Access
Abstract: This manuscript presents the current status and technical details of the Spectroscopy Village at Diamond Light Source. The Village is formed of four beamlines: I18, B18, I20-Scanning and I20-EDE. The village provides the UK community with local access to a hard X-ray microprobe, a quick-scanning multi-purpose XAS beamline, a high-intensity beamline for X-ray absorption spectroscopy of dilute samples and X-ray emission spectroscopy, and an energy-dispersive extended X-ray absorption fine-structure beamline. The optics of B18, I20-scanning and I20-EDE are detailed; moreover, recent developments on the four beamlines, including new detector hardware and changes in acquisition software, are described.
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Jul 2018
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B18-Core EXAFS
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[10411]
Abstract: We report on results of a comprehensive investigation on reaction mechanisms occurring during Li uptake and release of the composite NiFe2O4/CNT. Operando X-ray diffraction (XRD) and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) data collected simultaneously using one in situ cell allowed thorough elucidation of structural and electronic alterations happening during Li uptake. From the beginning of Li uptake, the Bragg intensity of the spinel reflections decreases which can be explained by reduction of Fe3+ ions and simultaneous movement of the Fe2+ cations from tetrahedral 8a to empty octahedral 16c sites. The reduction of Fe3+ is clearly evidenced by XAS. The occupation of tetrahedral sites by Li+ can be excluded based on results of density functional theory calculations. Increasing the Li content leads to formation of a new crystalline phase resembling a monoxide with a NaCl-like structure. The appearance of the new phase is accompanied by a steady decrease of the sizes of coherently scattering domains of the spinel and a growth of the domains of the monoxide phase. After uptake of about 2.5 Li per NiFe2O4, all Fe3+ cations are reduced to Fe2+ and the tetrahedral 8a sites are empty (XAS spectra). Careful Rietveld refinements of X-ray powder patterns demonstrate that the tetrahedral 8a site is successively depleted with increasing Li content. Interestingly, the occupancy of the octahedral 16d site is also slightly reduced. Increasing the Li content beyond 2.5 Li/NiFe2O4 leads to successive reduction of the cations to very small metal particles embedded in a Li2O matrix (as evidenced by 7Li MAS NMR investigations). During Li release metallic Ni and Fe are reoxidized to Ni2+ resp. Fe3+. The cycling stability of NiFe2O4/CNT is significantly improved compared to pure NiFe2O4 or a mechanical mixture of NiFe2O4 and CNTs.
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Jun 2018
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B18-Core EXAFS
E01-JEM ARM 200CF
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Chiara
Genovese
,
Manfred E.
Schuster
,
Emma K.
Gibson
,
Diego
Gianolio
,
Victor
Posligua
,
Ricardo
Grau-crespo
,
Giannantonio
Cibin
,
Peter
Wells
,
Debi
Garai
,
Vladyslav
Solokha
,
Sandra
Krick Calderon
,
Juan J.
Velasco-velez
,
Claudio
Ampelli
,
Siglinda
Perathoner
,
Georg
Held
,
Gabriele
Centi
,
Rosa
Arrigo
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[17031, 10306]
Open Access
Abstract: The carbon–carbon coupling via electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide represents the biggest challenge for using this route as platform for chemicals synthesis. Here we show that nanostructured iron (III) oxyhydroxide on nitrogen-doped carbon enables high Faraday efficiency (97.4%) and selectivity to acetic acid (61%) at very-low potential (−0.5 V vs silver/silver chloride). Using a combination of electron microscopy, operando X-ray spectroscopy techniques and density functional theory simulations, we correlate the activity to acetic acid at this potential to the formation of nitrogen-coordinated iron (II) sites as single atoms or polyatomic species at the interface between iron oxyhydroxide and the nitrogen-doped carbon. The evolution of hydrogen is correlated to the formation of metallic iron and observed as dominant reaction path over iron oxyhydroxide on oxygen-doped carbon in the overall range of negative potential investigated, whereas over iron oxyhydroxide on nitrogen-doped carbon it becomes important only at more negative potentials.
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Mar 2018
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B18-Core EXAFS
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[10306]
Abstract: The use of sol-immobilisation to prepare supported metal nanoparticles is an area of growing importance in heterogeneous catalysis; it affords greater control of nanoparticle properties compared to conventional catalytic routes e.g. impregnation. This work, and other recent studies, demonstrate how the properties of the resultant supported metal nanoparticles can be tailored by adjusting the conditions of colloidal synthesis i.e. temperature and solvent. We further demonstrate the applicability of these methods to the hydrogenation of nitrophenols using a series of tailored Pd/TiO2 catalysts, with low Pd loading 0.2 wt. %. Here, the temperature of colloidal synthesis is directly related to the mean particle diameter and the catalytic activity. Smaller Pd particles (2.2 nm, k = 0.632 min-1, TOF = 560 h-1) perform better than their larger counterparts (2.6 nm, k = 0.350 min-1, TOF = 370 h-1) for the hydrogenation of p-nitrophenol, with the catalyst containing smaller NPs found to have increased stability during recyclability studies, with high activity (> 90% conversion after 5 minutes) maintained across 5 catalytic cycles.
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Mar 2018
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B18-Core EXAFS
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[12775]
Open Access
Abstract: Pd nanoparticles supported on SiO2, Si3N4 and Al2O3 were studied to examine the effect of particle size and support type on the hydrogenation of 1,3-butadiene. Pd nanoparticles were produced using a reverse micelle method resulting in particles with a remarkably small particle size distribution (σ < < 1 nm). The support type and particle size were observed to affect both catalytic activity and product selectivity. All catalysts showed a decrease of their activity with time on stream, paired with an increase in selectivity to butenes (1-butene and cis/trans-2-butene) from a product stream initially dominated by n-butane. In situ XAFS demonstrated a correlation between the formation of palladium hydride and n-butane production in the early stages (~ 1 h) of reaction. The extent of palladium hydride formation, as well as its depletion with time on stream, was dependent on both particle size and support type. Metallic Pd was identified as the species selective towards the production of butenes.
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Jan 2018
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B18-Core EXAFS
I10-Beamline for Advanced Dichroism
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Richard
Kimber
,
Edward A.
Lewis
,
Fabio
Parmeggiani
,
Kurt
Smith
,
Heath
Bagshaw
,
Toby
Starborg
,
Nimisha
Joshi
,
Adriana
Figueroa
,
Gerrit
Van Der Laan
,
Giannantonio
Cibin
,
Diego
Gianolio
,
Sarah J.
Haigh
,
Richard A. D.
Pattrick
,
Nicholas J.
Turner
,
Jonathan R.
Lloyd
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[15476, 16136]
Open Access
Abstract: Copper nanoparticles (Cu-NPs) have a wide range of applications as heterogeneous catalysts. In this study, a novel green biosynthesis route for producing Cu-NPs using the metal-reducing bacterium, Shewanella oneidensis is demonstrated. Thin section transmission electron microscopy shows that the Cu-NPs are predominantly intracellular and present in a typical size range of 20–40 nm. Serial block-face scanning electron microscopy demonstrates the Cu-NPs are well-dispersed across the 3D structure of the cells. X-ray absorption near-edge
spectroscopy and extended X-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy analysis show the nanoparticles are Cu(0), however, atomic resolution images and electron energy loss spectroscopy suggest partial oxidation of the surface layer to Cu2O upon exposure to air. The catalytic activity of the Cu-NPs is demonstrated in an archetypal “click chemistry” reaction, generating good yields during azide-alkyne cycloadditions, most likely catalyzed by the Cu(I) surface layer of the nanoparticles. Furthermore, cytochrome deletion mutants suggest a novel metal reduction system is involved in enzymatic Cu(II) reduction and Cu-NP synthesis, which is not dependent on the Mtr pathway commonly used to reduce other high oxidation state metals in this bacterium. This work demonstrates a novel, simple, green biosynthesis method for producing efficient copper nanoparticle catalysts.
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Jan 2018
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B18-Core EXAFS
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[15151]
Open Access
Abstract: Efficient oxidation catalysts are important in many current industrial processes, including the selective oxidation of methanol to formaldehyde. Vanadium-containing catalysts have been shown to be effective selective oxidation catalysts for certain reactions, and research continues to examine their applicability to other reactions of interest. Several VOx/Fe2O3 shell–core catalysts with varying VOx coverage have been produced to investigate the stability of VOx monolayers and their selectivity for methanol oxidation. Catalyst formation proceeds via a clear progression of distinct surface species produced during catalyst calcination. At 300 °C the selective VOx overlayer has formed; by 500 °C a sandwich layer of FeVO4 arises between the VOx shell and the Fe2O3 core, inhibiting iron cation participation in the catalysis and enhancing catalyst selectivity. The resulting catalysts, comprising a shell–subshell–core system of VOx/FeVO4/Fe2O3, possess good catalytic activity and selectivity to formaldehyde.
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Nov 2017
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