scholarly journals Exploring Cu/Al cluster growth and reactivity: from embryonic building blocks to intermetalloid, open-shell superatoms

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Max Schütz ◽  
Christian Gemel ◽  
Maximilian Muhr ◽  
Christian Jandl ◽  
Samia Kahlal ◽  
...  

Cu/Al cluster growth reactions leading to open- and closed-shell superatoms are investigated. Therein, LIFDI-MS is presented as a powerful technique for the in situ detection of cluster identities and reactivity patterns.

Author(s):  
D.E. Brownlee ◽  
A.L. Albee

Comets are primitive, kilometer-sized bodies that formed in the outer regions of the solar system. Composed of ice and dust, comets are generally believed to be relic building blocks of the outer solar system that have been preserved at cryogenic temperatures since the formation of the Sun and planets. The analysis of cometary material is particularly important because the properties of cometary material provide direct information on the processes and environments that formed and influenced solid matter both in the early solar system and in the interstellar environments that preceded it.The first direct analyses of proven comet dust were made during the Soviet and European spacecraft encounters with Comet Halley in 1986. These missions carried time-of-flight mass spectrometers that measured mass spectra of individual micron and smaller particles. The Halley measurements were semi-quantitative but they showed that comet dust is a complex fine-grained mixture of silicates and organic material. A full understanding of comet dust will require detailed morphological, mineralogical, elemental and isotopic analysis at the finest possible scale. Electron microscopy and related microbeam techniques will play key roles in the analysis. The present and future of electron microscopy of comet samples involves laboratory study of micrometeorites collected in the stratosphere, in-situ SEM analysis of particles collected at a comet and laboratory study of samples collected from a comet and returned to the Earth for detailed study.


1979 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 495-501 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Wesdemiotis ◽  
H. Schwarz ◽  
C. C. Van de Sande ◽  
F. Van Gaever

Abstract The investigation of several 13carbon and deuterium labelled n-butyl and n-pentyl benzenes demonstrate that chemical ionization (reagent gas: methane) induces specific carbon-carbon bond cleavages of the alkyl group. The extent of competing reaction channels as for instance direct alkene elimination versus dealkylation/reprotonation is analyzed. Partial hydrogen exchange processes between reagent ions and substrate molecules are restricted to the phenyl ring. Intramolecular exchange reactions between the side chain and the aromatic ring which are typical for the open shell molecular ions of alkyl benzenes are not observed for analogous closed shell cations.


1952 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-48
Author(s):  
R. A. Clark ◽  
T. I. Gilroy ◽  
E. Reissner

Abstract This paper is concerned with the application of the theory of thin shells to several problems for toroidal shells with elliptical cross section. These problems are as follows: (a) Closed shell subjected to uniform normal wall pressure. (b) Open shell subjected to end bending moments. (c) Combination of the results for the first and second problems in such a way as to obtain results for the stresses and deformations in Bourdon tubes. In all three problems the distribution of stresses is axially symmetric but only in the first problem are the displacements axially symmetric. The magnitude of stresses and deformations for given loads depends in all three problems on the magnitude of the two parameters bc/ah and b/c where b and c are the semiaxes of the elliptical section, a is the distance of the center of the section from the axis of revolution, and h is the thickness of the wall of the shell. For sufficiently small values of bc/ah trigonometric series solutions are obtained. For sufficiently large values of bc/ah asymptotic solutions are obtained. Numerical results are given for various quantities of practical interest as a function of bc/ah for the values 2, 1, 1/2, 1/4 of the semiaxes ratio b/c. It is suggested that the analysis be extended to still smaller values of b/c and to cross sections other than elliptical.


2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (01n02) ◽  
pp. 115-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Srinivas Banala ◽  
Klaus Wurst ◽  
Bernhard Kräutler

We report here the preparation (in "one-pot") of a tetra-β″-sulfoleno-meso-aryl-porphyrin in about 80% yield by using an optimized modification of Lindsey's variant of the Adler–Longo approach. The Zn ( II )-, Cu ( II )- and Ni ( II )-complexes of the symmetrical porphyrin were prepared and characterized spectroscopically. Crystal structures of the fluorescent Zn ( II )- and of the non-fluorescent Ni ( II )-tetra-β″-sulfoleno-meso-aryl-porphyrinates showed the highly substituted porphyrin ligands to be nearly perfectly planar. The Zn ( II )-complex of this porphyrin has been used as a thermal precursor of a reactive diene, and — formally — of lateral and diagonal bis-dienes, of a tris-diene and of a tetra-diene, which all underwent [4 + 2]-cycloaddition reactions in situ with a range of dienophiles. Thus, the tetra-β″-sulfoleno-meso-aryl-porphyrin and its metal complexes represent reactive building blocks, "programmed" for the syntheses of symmetrical and highly functionalized porphyrins.


2011 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 231-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
François Baril-Robert ◽  
Xiaobo Li ◽  
Michael J. Katz ◽  
Andrew R. Geisheimer ◽  
Daniel B. Leznoff ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolaas P. van Leest ◽  
Wowa Stroek ◽  
Maxime A. Siegler ◽  
Jarl Ivar van der Vlugt ◽  
Bas de Bruin

ABSTRACT: The influence of a redox-active ligand on spin changing events induced by coordination of exogenous donors is investigated within the cobalt complex <b>[Co<sup>II</sup>(DPP<sup>•2‒</sup>)]</b>, bearing a redox-active <b>DPP<sup>2‒</sup></b> ligand (DPP = dipyrrin-bis-(<i>o,p</i>-di-tert-butylphenolato) with a pentafluorophenyl moiety on the meso-position. This square planar complex was subjected to coordination of THF, pyridine, tBuNH<sub>2</sub> and AdNH<sub>2</sub> (Ad = 1‑adamantyl), and the resulting complexes were analyzed with a variety of experimental (XRD, NMR, UV-Vis, HRMS, SQUID, Evans’ method) and computational (DFT, NEVPT2-CASSCF) techniques to elucidate the respective structures, spin states and orbital compositions of the corresponding octahedral bis-donor adducts, relative to <b>[Co<sup>II</sup>(DPP<sup>•2‒</sup>)]</b>. This starting species is best described as an open-shell singlet complex containing a <b>DPP<sup>•2‒</sup></b> ligand radical that is antiferromagnetically coupled to a low-spin (S = ½) cobalt(II) center. The redox-active <b>DPP<sup>n‒</sup></b> ligand plays a crucial role in stabilizing this complex, and in its facile conversion to the triplet THF-adduct <b>[Co<sup>II</sup>(DPP<sup>•2‒</sup>)(THF)<sub>2</sub>]</b> and closed-shell singlet pyridine and amine adducts <b>[Co<sup>III</sup>(DPP<sup>3‒</sup>)(L)<sub>2</sub>]</b> (L = py, tBuNH<sub>2</sub> or AdNH<sub>2</sub>). Coordination of the weak donor THF to <b>[Co<sup>II</sup>(DPP<sup>•2-</sup>)]</b> changes the orbital overlap between the <b>DPP<sup>•2‒</sup></b> ligand radical π-orbitals and the cobalt(II) metalloradical d-orbitals, which results in a spin-flip to the triplet ground state without changing the oxidation states of the metal or <b>DPP<sup>•2‒</sup></b> ligand. In contrast, coordination of the stronger donors pyridine, tBuNH<sub>2</sub> or AdNH<sub>2</sub> induces metal-to-ligand single-electron transfer, resulting in formation of low-spin (S = 0) cobalt(III)-complexes <b>[Co<sup>III</sup>(DPP<sup>3‒</sup>)(L)<sub>2</sub>]</b> containing a fully reduced <b>DPP<sup>3‒</sup></b> ligand, thus explaining their closed-shell singlet electronic ground states.


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