Sherwood List (eyesudan10)
The establishment of a heterojunction is a crucial strategy to design highly effective nonnoble metal nanocatalysts for the photocatalytic nitrogen reduction reaction (PNRR). Heteropoly blues (r-POMs) can act as electron-transfer mediators in PNRR, but its agglomeration limits the further promotion of PNRR productivity. In this work, we construct a protonation-modified surface of N-vacancy g-C3N4 (HV-C3N4), achieving the high dispersion of r-POMs via the surface modification strategy. Enlightened by the synergy effect of the nitrogenase, r-POMs were anchored onto HV-C3N4 nanosheets through an electrostatic self-assembly method for preparing r-POMs-based protonation-defective graphitic carbonitride (HV-C3N4/r-POMs). As an electron donor, r-PW12 can match with the energy level of HV-C3N4 to build a heterojunction. The electron redistribution of the heterojunction facilitates the optimization of the electronic structure for enhancing the performance of PNRR. HV-C3N4/r-PW12 exhibits the best PNRR efficiency of 171.4 μmol L-1 h-1, which is boosted by 94.39% (HV-C3N4) and 86.98% (r-PW12). The isotope 15NH4+ experiment proves that ammonia is derived from N2, not carbon nitride. This study opens up a crucial view to achieve the high dispersion of r-POMs nanoparticles and develop high-efficiency nonnoble metal photocatalysts for the PNRR.The interconversion of atomically precise nanoclusters represents an excellent platform to understand the structural correlations of nanomaterials at the atomic level. Herein, density functional theory calculations were performed to elucidate the mechanism of the redox-induced interconversion of [Au8(dppp)4]2+ and [Au8(dppp)4Cl2]2+ (dppp is short for 1,3-bis(diphenylphosphino)propane) nanoclusters. read more Reduction is the driving force for the conversion of [Au8(dppp)4Cl2]2+ to [Au8(dppp)4]2+, while the Au-Au and first Au-Cl bond dissociations occur asynchronously on the two different corner Au atoms to avoid the formation of an electron-deficient Au atom. By contrast, the reduced electron density of [Au8(dppp)4]2+ by oxidation with O2 weakens the outmost Au-Au bond therein and facilitates the coordination of the electron-rich chloride(s). The reduction- and oxidation-induced activations, respectively, of Au-Cl and Au-Au bonds and the elucidated principles on the structure-activity correlations might also be generalized to other size conversions upon redox treatment.Biological fluorescence imaging technologies have attracted a lot of attention and have been widely used in biomedical fields. Compared with other technologies, fluorescence imaging has a lower cost, higher sensitivity, and easier operation. However, due to the disadvantages of one-photon (OP) fluorescence imaging, such as low spatial and poor temporal resolution and poor tissue permeability depth, the application of OP fluorescence imaging has some limitations. Though two-photon (TP) fluorescence imaging can well overcome these shortcomings of OP, the single-mode imaging remains deficient. Therefore, dual-mode imaging combined with TP imaging and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can make up for the deficiency well, which make dual-mode imaging for the early diagnosis of diseases more accurate. Hence, a dual-mode nanoprobe TP-CQDs@MnO2 was designed for probing the fluorescence/MR dual-mode imaging strategy of intracellular H+ by using TP-CQDs (two photon-carbon quantum dots) and MnO2 nanosheets. The MnO2 nanosheets treated as fluorescence quenching agents of TP-CQDs exhibited a supersensitive response to H+, which made the fluorescence signals turn "off" to "on" for TP fluorescence imaging, in the meantime, large amounts of Mn2+ were generated for MRI. A dual-mode nanoprobe TP-CQDs@MnO2 can monitor intracellular wide pH (4.0-8.0), and the fluorescence intensity of TP-CQDs@MnO2 has recovered up to more than six times and the corresponding results of MRI were satisfactory. TP fluorescence imaging of cells and tissues showed higher dete