Results 161 to 170 of about 724,446 (311)
Backbone Heterojunction Photocatalysts for Efficient Sacrificial Hydrogen Production
Herein, a ‘single‐component’ organic semiconductor photocatalyst is presented in which a molecular donor is bonded to a polymer acceptor. The resultant material demonstrates exceptional photocatalytic activity for hydrogen evolution in aqueous triethylamine with an outstanding external quantum efficiency of 38% at 420 nm.
Richard J. Lyons +11 more
wiley +1 more source
Comparative catalytic insights into green and commercial gold nanoparticles: synergistic catalytic reduction of organic pollutants. [PDF]
Sabur MA, Karim I, Ahmed AN.
europepmc +1 more source
MOFs and COFs in Electronics: Bridging the Gap between Intrinsic Properties and Measured Performance
Metal‐organic frameworks (MOFs) and covalent organic frameworks (COFs) hold promise for advanced electronics. However, discrepancies in reported electrical conductivities highlight the importance of measurement methodologies. This review explores intrinsic charge transport mechanisms and extrinsic factors influencing performance, and critically ...
Jonas F. Pöhls, R. Thomas Weitz
wiley +1 more source
Metal-metal <i>vs.</i> metal-ligand cooperation in iron-mediated activation and catalytic reduction of nitrous oxide and nitrobenzene. [PDF]
Jori N +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Spark plasma sintering enables rapid processing of porous organic polymer (POP) from fine powders to a freestanding and mechanically robust monolith. The sintering process retains the CO2 adsorption capacity and CO2/N2 selectivity, making the monolith more suitable as a solid sorbent for practical carbon capture applications.
Duan Li +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Self-assembled monolithic β-FeOOH/copper foam catalysts for enhanced catalytic reduction of nitrogen-containing contaminants in continuous-flow systems. [PDF]
Tai S, Wu Y, Wang R, Liu K, Zhao G.
europepmc +1 more source
Chemoselective Sequential Polymerization: An Approach Toward Mixed Plastic Waste Recycling
Inspired by biological protein metabolism, this study demonstrates the closed‐loop recycling of mixed synthetic polymers via ring‐closing depolymerization followed by a chemoselective sequential polymerizations process. The approach recovers pure polymers from mixed feedstocks, even in multilayer formats, highlighting a promising strategy to overcome a
Gadi Slor +5 more
wiley +1 more source

