Advanced Nanomaterials for Catalysis: Synthesis, Characterization, and Application
Author(s) -
Xianwen Zhang,
Xin Zhang,
Baojuan Xi,
Maofeng Zhang
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of nanomaterials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.463
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1687-4129
pISSN - 1687-4110
DOI - 10.1155/2015/541801
Subject(s) - characterization (materials science) , nanomaterial based catalyst , nanotechnology , catalysis , biochemical engineering , materials science , environmental pollution , nanomaterials , nanoparticle , chemistry , engineering , environmental science , organic chemistry , environmental protection
A great attention is being paid to catalysts which act to enhance the rate or yield of the reaction without being consumed by the reaction itself. Catalysis has become a key strategy in solving many of today’s challenges. Up to now, almost all industrial processes employ catalyst in multiple forms to increase economic viability, frombatteries to refineries. Meanwhile, increased concerns about environmental pollution have led to the development of novel catalysts, which can catalyze desirable chemical reactions. Catalysis is rather prevalent everywhere as a key enabling technology in energy conversion, fuel production, production of chemicals, and environmentalmitigation. On the other hand, nanotechnology has become an indispensable tool ofmaterial engineering for catalysis related applications. Nanoparticles with controlled morphology and structure have a higher surface area, which provide the best platform to catalyze desirable chemical transformations and lead to the increased catalytic activity. The current barrier for widespread industrial and environmental use is ascribed to the controlled synthesis of nanocrystals with high-energy surfaces and the understanding of synthesis-structure-performance relationships. Multidisciplinary advances from chemistry, physics, and materials science have played a major role in catalyst synthesis, structural and compositional modification, and mechanistic understanding with molecular and atomic-level precision by advanced characterization techniques and modeling. Last year, we invited investigators to contribute original research as well as review articles that address the field of advanced nanocatalysts. We encourage manuscripts that will concern new progress in controlled synthesis, thorough understanding of the reaction mechanism and cutting-edge characterization techniques. Today, we are very happy to publish this special issue of this journal. In this issue, original research and review articles are accepted. The research papers focused on nanocatalysts with novel structure produced by innovative synthetic technologies and detailed kinetic mechanism through experiments and promising application.
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