Magnetic, highly porous ordered carbon of the CMK‐3 and CMK‐5 type and with pure carbon or carbon–nitrogen framework were nanoengineered by a sequence of bulk manipulation steps. The materials can be used as efficient magnetic adsorbents (see picture) or catalysts, but applications going far beyond these can be envisaged.
In context of investigations of doped sodium alanate as a hydrogen storage material, an investigation combining a TEM-EDX study and XAFS measurements has been carried out on doped sodium alanate, using titanium tetrabutylate (Ti(OBu n ) 4 ), colloidal titanium nanoparticles (Ti*) or TiCl 3 as doping agents. It was found that the dehydrogenated wet-chemically Ti(OBu n ) 4 doped NaAlH 4 consists of a crystalline Al and an amorphous NaH phase. The striking result of EDX analyses is that in each case the Ti-dopant is found to be present only in the Al phase. On the other hand, dehydrogenated NaAlH 4 doped with Ti* or TiCl 3 via ball milling is an amorphous material, with diffuse boundaries between Al and NaH phases and a highly uniform distribution of titanium in the Al-phase. Both the use of the ball milling doping method and of Ti* nanoparticles as dopants, are probable reasons for the outstanding kinetics of the Ti* doped material (B.
Nanoscale palladium and nickel colloids prepared in the presence of certain tetra-n-octylammonium carboxylates contain a high proportion of nonequilibrium trigonal cross section particles. Specifically, those carboxylates which bear a hydroxy function at the R-position, e.g., tetra-n-octylammonium glycolate, exert a strong influence on the shape of the metal colloids. It is shown by an in situ FTIR study of the preparation of colloidal nickel from bis(cyclooctadiene)nickel in the presence of tetra-n-octylammonium glycolate that the interaction of the R-hydroxy carboxylate with the surface of the colloidal metal particle is likely to be the morphology-determining factor in the shape-selective preparation of these metal particles.
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