Gas phase oxidation as a tool to introduce oxygen containing groups on metal-loaded carbon nanofibers
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2012
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Abstract
Oxygen containing groups were introduced, onto carbon nanofibers (CNFs) that were previously loaded with palladium, using HNO3 vapor. Using traditional liquid-phase oxidations this is not possible due to severe metal leaching. For the samples oxidized using HNO3 vapor temperature programmed desorption and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy revealed the presence of two major classes of oxygen containing groups, i.e. carboxylic acid groups which are thermally stable up to 300 °C and less acidic (e.g. phenol) and basic groups which were stable up to 700 °C. The amount of acidic oxygen containing groups introduced by this gas-phase treatment ranged from 0.1 to 0.3 mmol/g, as determined by titration. The latter amount is comparable to that introduced by traditional liquid-phase treatment in 65% HNO3 on bare CNFs. Transmission electron microscopy and H2-chemisorption measurements show a gradual increase of the average metal particle size from 2.1 nm for the starting Pd/CNF to 4.5 nm for Pd/CNF treated for 75 h in HNO3 vapor indicating that the extent of sintering with gas-phase treatment is limited. Elemental analysis showed that no leaching occurred upon gas-phase oxidation, whereas 90% of the metal was lost with a liquid-phase reflux HNO3 treatment.
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Gosselink, R W, van den Berg, R, Xia, B, Muhler, M, de Jong, K P & Bitter, J H 2012, 'Gas phase oxidation as a tool to introduce oxygen containing groups on metal-loaded carbon nanofibers', Carbon, vol. 50, no. 12, pp. 4424-4431. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2012.05.020