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TiO2 as a gas sensor: The novel carbon structures and noble metals as new elements for enhancing sensitivity – A review

Ceramics International, 2021
The development of highly selective, stable, and sensitive materials for the various gas emissions is a challenging task concerning the numerous applications: environmental control, security systems, energy, and, more recently, biological monitoring. One
Evelyn Alves Nunes Simonetti   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Investigation of doping effects of different noble metals for ethanol gas sensors based on mesoporous In2O3

Nanotechnology, 2021
Elaborating the sensitization effects of different noble metals on In2O3 has great significance in providing an optimum method to improve ethanol sensing performance.
P. Cheng   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Noble gas adsorption to tuff

Journal of Environmental Radioactivity, 2022
A method was developed to measure trace noble gas element adsorption to the surfaces of geologic materials in the presence of a background gas that could potentially compete for surface adsorption sites. Adsorption of four noble gas elements (Ne, Ar, Kr, and Xe) at a concentration of 100 ppm in helium and nitrogen were measured on a sample of crushed ...
Kirk J. Cantrell   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Noble Gas Geochemistry

2001
Noble Gas Geochemistry discusses the fundamental concepts of using noble gases to solve problems in the earth and planetary sciences. The discipline offers a powerful and unique tool in resolving problems such as the origin of the solar system, evolution of the planets, earth formation, mantle evolution and dynamics, atmospheric degassing and evolution,
Minoru Ozima, Frank A. Podosek
openaire   +1 more source

Noble Gas Compounds

Nature, 1969
Noble-Gas Chemistry By John H. Holloway. Pp. viii + 213. (Methuen: London, November 1968.) 42s.
openaire   +1 more source

Noble-Gas Chemistry

2019
Noble-gas chemistry was started in 1962 with the discovery of xenon hexafluoroplatinate followed with a number of compounds binding xenon or krypton. We highlight the classical and more exotic noble-gas compounds and discuss the nature of their bonding starting with strongly bound systems and progressing to weak interactions.
Wojciech Grochala   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Selected noble-gas partition coefficients

Physics in Medicine and Biology, 1985
The Ostwald solubility of 41Ar, 127,133Xe, N13N and CH3 18F in water, saline, blood, plasma, lipids, benzene and bone were measured in vitro. In addition the bone-blood partition coefficients for these gases were determined. For 41Ar, the bone-blood partition function is found to be 1.1 +/- 0.3, whereas for xenon the bone-blood partition coefficient is
M S, Rosenthal, R J, Nickles
openaire   +2 more sources

Exotic species with explicit noble metal–noble gas–noble metal linkages

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 2018
In Pt2Ng2F4and in [Au2Ng2F4]2+, Ng = Kr, Xe, Rn, the noble gas atoms act as links bridging two noble metal atoms.
Norberto Moreno   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Excimer radiation from Na—Noble-gas and K—Noble-gas molecules

Optics Communications, 1976
Abstract Emission bands from Na-noble-gas (and K-noble-gas) molecules, due to transitions between the 4 s σ (and 5 s σ) bound excited states and dissociating ground states, are observed. The noble gases used are Ar, Kr and Xe. The red shift of the emission band from the forbidden atomic s-s transition is largest for NaXe, for which it is 3055 cm −1 .
A.C. Tam, G. Moe, B.R. Bulos, W. Happer
openaire   +1 more source

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