Veerakumar, P, Maiyalagan T, Raj BGS, Guruprasad K, Jiang Z, Lin K-C.
2018.
Paper flower-derived porous carbons with high-capacitance by chemical and physical activation for sustainable applications. Arabian Journal of Chemistry.
AbstractPorous carbon nanosheets were prepared by the carbonization of paper flower via chemical and physical activation. The structural properties of the as-prepared carbons were characterized using the techniques, such as X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), Raman spectroscopy, N2 sorption isotherms and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), while the related morphological analyses were conducted using scanning/transmission electron microscopy (SEM/TEM). The obtained carbons exhibit a high specific surface area up to 1801 m2 g−1 with a robust porous graphitic carbon layer structure, which provides the merits for potential application in energy storage and dye removal. We carried out potentiostatic and galvanostatic measurements using a three-electrode cell in 1.0 M H2SO4 aqueous electrolyte and achieved a specific capacitance of 118, 109.5, 101.7, 93.6, and 91.2 F g−1 at 1, 2, 4, 8 and 12 A g−1, respectively. The stability at 12 A g−1 was tested to reach 10,000 cycles with capacity retention of around 97.4%. We have demonstrated that the paper flower-derived carbons at activation temperature 800 °C (PFC-800) can be used as a promising electrode material in supercapacitor. PFC-800 can also serve as an efficient sunset yellow dye removal, showing the maximum adsorption capacity for sunset yellow (Q0, 273.6 mg g−1). © 2018 King Saud University
Kasai, T, Che D-C, Tsai P-Y, Nakamura M, Muthiah B, Lin K-C.
2018.
Roaming and chaotic behaviors in collisional and photo-initiated molecular-beam reactions: a role of classical vs. quantum nonadiabatic dynamics. Rendiconti Lincei. 29:219-232., Number 2
AbstractA new reaction scheme is proposed to account for roaming and chaotic behaviors in collisional and photo-initiated molecular-beam reactions, where nonadiabatic dynamics plays a key role and the collapse of superposition of wave functions is considered to be important in the beginning of the present scheme. Since the feature of molecular orbitals of reagents is crucial in reaction, we showed how to map out the spatial distribution of the relevant HOMO molecular orbitals of CH3Cl in the impact of fast electrons. We identified by experiment that the multiple overlap of nearby molecular orbitals affects even the vibrational motion of adjacent molecule DCl of the transient [ClDCl] chemical species. We also showed dynamical steric effects in the HBr + OH four-atom reaction as a manifestation of the nonadiabatic dynamics in complex systems. The roaming mechanism in the photo-initiated reaction of methyl formate is clarified in detail by experiment as well as the QCT trajectory calculation, where the conical intersection region plays an essential role. We suggest that two types of roaming trajectories coexist, i.e., deterministic and chaotic roaming trajectories based on classical trajectory calculations. To clarify the nonadiabatic dynamics in the roaming mechanism for non-collinear three-dimensional (3D) collisions, a new model of the 3D Polanyi rule is proposed as the extension of the well-established 2D Polanyi rule. In the 3D Polanyi rule, it is expected that the curvature and torsion of Frenet–Serret formulas in three-dimensional space would provide us key concepts in understanding reaction dynamics. © 2018, Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei.
Lin, K-C, Tsai P-Y, Chao M-H, Nakamura M, Kasai T, Lombardi A, Palazzetti F, Aquilanti V.
2018.
Roaming signature in photodissociation of carbonyl compounds. International Reviews in Physical Chemistry. 37:217-258., Number 2
AbstractAn alternative to the transition state (TS) pathway, the roaming route, which bypasses the minimum energy path but produces the same molecular products, was recently found in photodissociation dynamics. This account describes signatures of roaming in photodissociation of the carbonyl compounds, specifically methyl formate and aliphatic aldehydes. Methyl formate was promoted to the excited state, followed by internal conversion via a conical intersection. Then, the energetic precursor dissociated to fragments which proceeded along either TS or roaming path. In contrast to the lack of a roaming saddle point found in methyl formate, the structure of the roaming saddle point for each of a series of aliphatic aldehydes comprises two moieties that are weakly bound at a distance. As its size increases, the energy difference between the TS barrier and the roaming saddle point increases and the roaming pathway becomes increasingly dominant. Experimentally, the rotational-level dependence of the roaming route was measured with ion imaging, while the vibrational-state dependence was observed with time-resolved Fourier-transform infrared emission spectroscopy. The roaming signature was verified theoretically by quasi-classical trajectory (QCT) calculations. As an alternative to the QCT method, a multi-center impulsive model was developed to simulate the roaming scalar and vector properties. © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Veerakumar, P, Salamalai K, Thanasekaran P, Lin K-C.
2018.
Simple Preparation of Porous Carbon-Supported Ruthenium: Propitious Catalytic Activity in the Reduction of Ferrocyanate(III) and a Cationic Dye. ACS Omega. 3:12609-12621., Number 10
AbstractThe present study involves the synthesis, characterization, and catalytic application of ruthenium nanoparticles (Ru NPs) supported on plastic-derived carbons (PDCs) synthesized from plastic wastes (soft drink bottles) as an alternative carbon source. PDCs have been further activated with CO2 and characterized by various analytical techniques. The catalytic activity of Ru@PDC for the reduction of potassium hexacyanoferrate(III), (K3[Fe(CN)6]), and new fuchsin (NF) dye by NaBH4 was performed under mild conditions. The PDCs had spherical morphology with an average size of 0.5 μm, and the Ru NP (5 ± 0.2 nm) loading (4.01 wt %) into the PDC provided high catalytic performance for catalytic reduction of ferrocyanate(III) and NF dye. This catalyst can be recycled more than six times with only a minor loss of its catalytic activity. In addition, the stability and reusability of the Ru@PDC catalyst are also discussed. Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Society.
Lin, Y-C, Yeh C-H, Lin H-C, Siao M-D, Liu Z, Nakajima H, Okazaki T, Chou M-Y, Suenaga K, Chiu P-W.
2018.
Stable 1T Tungsten Disulfide Monolayer and Its Junctions: Growth and Atomic Structures. ACS Nano. 12:12080-12088., Number 12
Abstractn/a
Veerakumar, P, Rajkumar C, Chen S-M, Thirumalraj B, Lin K-C.
2018.
Ultrathin 2D graphitic carbon nitride nanosheets decorated with silver nanoparticles for electrochemical sensing of quercetin. Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry. 826:207-216.
AbstractIn this work, we describe a facile fabrication of silver nanoparticles decorated on porous ultrathin two dimensional (2D) graphitic carbon nitride nanosheets (AgNPs@g-CN) via chemical approach, which was characterized by various analytical techniques including cyclic voltammetry (CV), differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) and chronoamperometry. As expected, the AgNPs@g-CN modified glassy carbon electrode (AgNPs@g-CN/GCE) exhibited remarkable electrocatalytic activity towards the detection of quercetin (QCR) with a wide linear range from 1.0 × 10−8 to 1.2 × 10−4 mol L−1 and a lower detection limit of 6.0 × 10−9 mol L−1. Besides, the amperometric results revealed that the peak current for QCR could not affect upon the sequential additions of electroactive interfering species such as metal ions (300 μM), biomolecules (100 μM), and other flavonoids (50 μM) indicating the selectivity of the proposed sensor. Moreover, the AgNPs@g-CN modified electrode displayed higher stability and reproducibility towards the detection of QCR. The AgNPs@g-CN/GCE could also be used to detect QCR in green apple (GA) samples with satisfactory recoveries for practical applications. The concepts behind the novel architecture to modify electrodes can be potentially harnessed in other electrochemical sensors and photocatalysis applications. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.