PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Photocatalytic efficiency in photocatalysis found to be site sensitive

2021-03-16
(Press-News.org) Prof. HUANG Weixin and ZHANG Qun from University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), together with domestic collaborators, probed into the photocatalytic oxidation of methanol on various anatase TiO2 nanocrystals. The results were published on Angewandte Chemie International Edition.

Semiconductor-based photocatalysis has attracted extensive attention since its discovery, owing to its environmentally friendly production of chemical fuel utilizing solar energy.

A photocatalytic reaction consists of light absorption and charge generation within photocatalysts, charge separation and migration to photocatalyst surfaces, and charge-participated reactions on photocatalyst surfaces. The last step, rate-limiting of photocatalytic reactions, involves an interfacial charge transfer process from photocatalyst surfaces to surface adsorbates and subsequent surface reactions. However, due to its complexity, there are much less studies on it.

To discover the underlying mechanism and the correlation with the photocatalytic efficiency, the researchers studied the photochemistry of CH3OH oxidation on various TiO2 nanocrystals, and the probe photocatalytic reaction for fundamental studies of complex photocatalytic reactions on oxide photocatalysts, with in situ and time-resolved characterizations and density functional theory calculations.

The results revealed that the surface site and corresponding adsorbed methanol species are demonstrated to influence the valence band bending, and these factors can thus determine the TiO2-to-CH3OH interfacial charge transfer process and subsequently the photocatalytic efficiency.

The finding was consistent with the previous study of Prof. HUANG, justifying the feasibility of oxide model catalysts from single crystals to nanocrystals.

This study unveils the site sensitiveness of interfacial charge transfer, indicating surface structure engineering of photocatalysts to be an effective approach to maximize photocatalytic efficiencies.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Practical nanozymes discovered to fight antimicrobial resistance

2021-03-16
Nanozymes, a group of inorganic catalysis-efficient particles, have been proposed as promising antimicrobials against bacteria. They are efficient in killing bacteria, thanks to their production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Despite this advantage, nanozymes are generally toxic to both bacteria and mammalian cells, that is, they are also toxic to our own cells. This is mainly because of the intrinsic inability of ROS to distinguish bacteria from mammalian cells. In a study published in Nature Communications, the research team led by XIONG Yujie and YANG Lihua from University of Science and Technology (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) proposed a novel method to construct efficient-while-little-toxic nanozymes. The researchers showed that nanozymes ...

The fitter you are the better you burn fat - new research

2021-03-16
Females who are fit and healthy tend to burn more fat when they exercise than men, according to new research from a team of sports nutritionists. The research, comprising two new studies from academics led by the University of Bath's Centre for Nutrition, Exercise & Metabolism, analysed the factors that most influenced individuals' capacity to burn body fat when undertaking endurance sports. How the body burns fat is important to all of us for good metabolic health, insulin sensitivity and in reducing the risk of developing Type II diabetes. But, for endurance sport ...

From a window to a mirror: new material paves the way to faster computing

2021-03-16
Research led by the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge has identified a material that could help tackle speed and energy, the two biggest challenges for computers of the future. Research in the field of light-based computing - using light instead of electricity for computation to go beyond the limits of today's computers - is moving fast, but barriers remain in developing optical switching, the process by which light would be easily turned 'on' and 'off', reflecting or transmitting light on-demand. The study, published in Nature Communications, shows that a material known as Ta2NiSe5 could switch between a window and a mirror in a quadrillionth of a second when struck by a short laser pulse, paving the way for the development ...

How bacterial traffic jams lead to antibiotic-resistant, multilayer biofilms

How bacterial traffic jams lead to antibiotic-resistant, multilayer biofilms
2021-03-16
The bacterial equivalent of a traffic jam causes multilayered biofilms to form in the presence of antibiotics, shows a study published today in eLife. The study reveals how the collective behaviour of bacterial colonies may contribute to the emergence of antibiotic resistance. These insights could pave the way to new approaches for treating bacterial infections that help thwart the emergence of resistance. Bacteria can acquire resistance to antibiotics through genetic mutations. But they can also defend themselves via collective behaviours such as joining together ...

New perovskite LED emits a spin-polarized glow

2021-03-16
The inclusion of a special new perovskite layer has enabled scientists to create a "spin-polarized LED" without needing a magnetic field or extremely low temperatures, potentially clearing the path to a raft of novel technologies. Details of the research conducted at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and the University of Utah appear in the journal Science. Researchers at NREL and around the world have been investigating the use of perovskite semiconductors for solar cells that have proven to be highly efficient at converting sunlight to electricity. Since a solar cell is one of the most demanding applications of any semiconductor, scientists are discovering other uses exist as well. "We are exploring the fundamental properties of metal-halide ...

Combination therapy may provide significant protection against lethal influenza

Combination therapy may provide significant protection against lethal influenza
2021-03-16
Philadelphia, March 16, 2021 - A significant proportion of hospitalized patients with influenza develop complications of acute respiratory distress syndrome, driven by virus-induced cytopathic effects as well as exaggerated host immune response. Reporting in The American Journal of Pathology, published by Elsevier, investigators have found that treatment with an immune receptor blocker in combination with an antiviral agent markedly improves survival of mice infected with lethal influenza and reduces lung pathology in swine-influenza-infected piglets. Their research also provides insights into the optimal timing of treatment to prevent acute lung injury. Previously, the investigators found ...

New imaging technology could help predict heart attacks

New imaging technology could help predict heart attacks
2021-03-16
WASHINGTON -- Researchers have developed a new intravascular imaging technique that could one day be used to detect coronary plaques that are likely to lead to a heart attack. Heart attacks are often triggered when an unstable plaque ruptures and then blocks a major artery that carries blood and oxygen to the heart. "If unstable coronary plaques could be detected before they rupture, pharmacological or other treatments could be initiated early to prevent heart attacks and save lives," said research team leader Seemantini Nadkarni from the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at Massachusetts General Hospital. "Our new imaging technique represents a major step toward achieving this." In The Optical Society (OSA) journal Biomedical ...

Researchers find a better way to measure consciousness

2021-03-16
MADISON, Wis. -- Millions of people are administered general anesthesia each year in the United States alone, but it's not always easy to tell whether they are actually unconscious. A small proportion of those patients regain some awareness during medical procedures, but a new study of the brain activity that represents consciousness could prevent that potential trauma. It may also help both people in comas and scientists struggling to define which parts of the brain can claim to be key to the conscious mind. "What has been shown for 100 years in an unconscious state like sleep are these slow ...

Exposure to common chemical during pregnancy may reduce protection against breast cancer

Exposure to common chemical during pregnancy may reduce protection against breast cancer
2021-03-16
Low doses of propylparaben - a chemical preservative found in food, drugs and cosmetics - can alter pregnancy-related changes in the breast in ways that may lessen the protection against breast cancer that pregnancy hormones normally convey, according to University of Massachusetts Amherst research. The findings, published March 16 in the journal Endocrinology, suggest that propylparaben is an endocrine-disrupting chemical that interferes with the actions of hormones, says environmental health scientist Laura Vandenberg, the study's senior author. Endocrine ...

Demonstration of the universal quantum error correcting code with superconducting qubits

Demonstration of the universal quantum error correcting code with superconducting qubits
2021-03-16
Universal fault-tolerant quantum computing relies on the implementation of quantum error correction. An essential milestone is the achievement of error-corrected logical qubits that genuinely benefit from error correction, outperforming simple physical qubits. Although tremendous efforts have been devoted to demonstrate quantum error correcting codes with different quantum hardware, previous realizations are limited to be against certain types of errors or to prepare special logical states. It remains one of the greatest and also notoriously difficult challenges to realize a universal quantum error correcting code for more than a decade. In a new research article published in the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Vitamin E succinate controls tumor growth and enhances immunotherapy effects

University of Tennessee physicist named Cottrell Scholar

Simple, quick test can predict fall risk in older adults six months in advance

Mass General Brigham researchers awarded ARPA-H funding to enhance health outcomes in rural America

Semaglutide shows promise in reducing cravings for alcohol, heavy drinking

Epidural steroid injections for chronic back pain: An AAN systematic review

More sunshine as a baby linked to less disease activity for children with MS

Study finds more barriers to genetic testing for Black children than white children

Removal of parental consent requirement reduces gestational duration at abortion for minors

Dating is not broken, but the trajectories of relationships have changed

Global study identifies markers for the five clinical stages of Parkinson’s disease

Bacterial cellulose promotes plant tissue regeneration

Biohybrid hand gestures with human muscles

Diabetes can drive the evolution of antibiotic resistance

ChatGPT has the potential to improve psychotherapeutic processes

Prioritise vaccine boosters for vulnerable immunocompromised patients and prevent emergence of new COVID variants, say scientists

California's most economically and culturally important species among those most vulnerable to projected climate change

Scientists develop novel self-healing electronic skin for health monitoring

Models show intensifying wildfires in a warming world due to changes in vegetation and humidity; only a minor role for lightning

Unraveling the complex role of climate in dengue dynamics

INSEAD celebrates five years of impact in North America during its second Americas Conference 2025

MAGE-4 promotes tumor progression by halting antitumor responses

Economically, culturally important marine species vulnerable to changing climate, new study shows

Tennessee professor receives SAEA Emerging Scholar Award

Sea turtles’ secret GPS: researchers uncover how sea turtles learn locations using Earth's magnetic field

Mayo Clinic researchers and surgeons test virtual reality to calm presurgery jitters

Mothers with incarcerated children shoulder emotional and financial burdens

Adults can learn absolute pitch: new research challenges long-held musical belief

Loneliness and social isolation linked to increased risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, study finds

Exotic observations with neutrons at the ILL

[Press-News.org] Photocatalytic efficiency in photocatalysis found to be site sensitive