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1.
Dalton Trans ; 39(36): 8437-49, 2010 Sep 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20717598

RESUMEN

The comprehensive understanding of the composition, behaviour and reactivity of a catalyst used inside industrial plants is an extremely hard task that is rarely achieved. It requires the use of different spectroscopic techniques, applied under in situ or in operando conditions, and combined with the investigation of the catalyst activity. Often the operating experimental conditions are different from technique to technique and the different results must be compared with care. In the present contribution, we combined in situ XANES/EXAFS, IR spectroscopy of adsorbed CO, CO chemisorption and catalytic tests performed using a pulse reactor in depletive mode. This multitechnical approach resulted in the understanding of the role that dopants (LiCl, KCl, CsCl, MgCl(2) LaCl(3)) have in the nature, relative fraction, reducibility and dispersion of Cu-phases on CuCl(2)/gamma-Al(2)O(3) catalysts for oxychlorination reaction, a key step of the PVC chemistry. In the undoped catalyst two Cu phases coexist: Cu-aluminate and supported CuCl(2), being the latter the only active one [J. Catal., 2000, 189, 91]. EXAFS and XANES highlighted that all dopants contribute more or less efficiently in increasing the fraction of the active copper species, that reaches a value of almost 100% in the case of MgCl(2) or LaCl(3). EXAFS directly, and IR indirectly, proved that the addition of KCl or CsCl (and less efficiently of LiCl) results in the formation of mixed CuK(x)Cl(2+x) or CuCs(x)Cl(2+x) phases, so altering the chemical nature of the active phase. XANES spectroscopy indicates that addition of MgCl(2) or LaCl(3) does not affect the reducibility by ethylene (under static conditions) of the active CuCl(2) phase and that the reducibilility of the new copper-dopant mixed chloride are in the order CuCl(2) > CuLi(x)Cl(2+x) > CuK(x)Cl(2+x) > CuCs(x)Cl(2+x). However, when reduction is done inside a pulse reactor, a more informative picture comes out. The last technique is able to differentiate all samples, and their ability to be reduced by ethylene resulted in the order: La- > Mg- > Li-doped > undoped > K- > Cs-doped catalyst. To understand this apparent discrepancy the dispersion of the active phase, measured by CO chemisorption, was needed: it has been found that addition of LiCl increases enormously the dispersion of the active phase, LaCl(3) significantly and MgCl(2) barely, while addition of both KCl and CsCl results in a decrease of the surface area of the active phase. The mechanism of the enhancing effect of La and Mg on catalytic activity is still not clear, but it could be associated to the modification that they induce to the support surface: the Cu is so highly dispersed that almost all is in direct contact with support surface. It is finally worth noticing that the previous EXAFS and XANES study allowed us to refer the chemisorption data to the active phase only, while the IR study allowed us to fix the Cu(+)/CO surface stoichiometry. Summarizing the use of a multidisciplinary approach has been the conditio sine qua non (mandatory condition) to understand the complex role that the different additives have on the active phase of the CuCl(2)/gamma-Al(2)O(3) catalysts for ethylene oxychlorination.


Asunto(s)
Óxido de Aluminio/química , Cobre/química , Etilenos/química , Catálisis , Cesio/química , Cloruros/química , Cloruro de Litio/química , Cloruro de Magnesio/química , Oxidación-Reducción , Cloruro de Potasio/química , Espectroscopía de Absorción de Rayos X
2.
Carbohydr Res ; 231: 117-35, 1992 Jul 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1394308

RESUMEN

The physicochemical solution properties of the galactoglucan excreted by Rhizobium meliloti strain YE-2(S1) have been investigated by capillary viscometry, potentiometric titration, isothermal mixing microcalorimetry, and circular dichroism. Potentiometric and chiro-optical data, as a function of the degree of ionisation, indicate the absence of a co-operative conformational transition. Solution properties, as a function of ionic strength and temperature, suggest that the galactoglucan adopts a disordered conformation characterised by moderate flexibility. Polyelectrolyte theory is used to fit the enthalpy of dilution data with a suitable linear charge-density parameter. Conformational calculations and chain modelling, using molecular mechanics, give an unperturbed characteristic ratio, (C infinity) of 20, which was smaller than that estimated from intrinsic-viscosity and molecular-weight data for an expanded-coil chain model.


Asunto(s)
Polisacáridos Bacterianos/química , Sinorhizobium meliloti/química , Calorimetría , Conformación de Carbohidratos , Secuencia de Carbohidratos , Dicroismo Circular , Indicadores y Reactivos , Cinética , Modelos Moleculares , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Rotación Óptica , Polisacáridos Bacterianos/aislamiento & purificación , Potenciometría , Soluciones
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