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Creators/Authors contains: "Guzman, Marcelo I."

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  1. Semiconductor photocatalysis with commercial TiO2 (Degussa P25) has shown significant potential in water treatment of organic pollutants. However, the photoinduced reactions of adsorbed catechol, a phenolic air pollutant from biomass burning and combustion emissions, at the air–solid interface of TiO2 remain unexplored. Herein we examine the photocatalytic decay of catechol in the presence of water vapor, which acts as an electron acceptor. Experiments under variable cut-off wavelengths of irradiation (λcut-off ≥ 320, 400, and 515 nm) distinguish the mechanistic contribution of a ligand-to-metal charge-transfer (LMCT) complex of surface chemisorbed catechol on TiO2. The LMCT complex injects electrons into the conduction band of TiO2 from the highest occupied molecular orbital of catechol by visible light (≥2.11 eV) excitation. The deconvolution of diffuse reflectance UV–visible spectral bands from LMCT complexes of TiO2 with catechol, o-semiquinone radical, and quinone and the quantification of the evolving gaseous products follow a consecutive kinetic model. CO2(g) and CO(g) final oxidation products are monitored by gas chromatography and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. The apparent quantum efficiency at variable λcut-off are determined for reactant loss (Φ−TiO2/catechol = 0.79 ± 0.19) and product growth ΦCO2 = 0.76 ± 0.08). Spectroscopic and electrochemical measurements reveal the energy band diagram for the LMCT of TiO2/catechol. Two photocatalytic mechanisms are analyzed based on chemical transformations and environmental relevance. 
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  2. Catechol is a widespread atmospheric dihydroxybenzene present in vehicle emissions, biomass burning, and combustion pollution plumes. Although the daytime reactivity of catechol is controlled by ozone (O3) and hydroxyl radicals (HO), the action of nitrate radicals (NO3) on the surface of aqueous atmospheric particles should become significant at night. This work simulates nighttime interfacial chemistry between hydrated catechol and adsorbed NO3 to form 4-nitrocatechol during experiments lasting ≤1 μs. Surface-sensitive online electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (OESI-MS) examines the reaction on the water surface under variable ratios of [NO2] and [O3]. The produced 4-nitrocatechol is quantified by a standard addition in real-time experiments under [NO2]:[O3] ratios of 1:1, 2:1, 3:1, and 4:1. Three mechanisms contribute to produce 4-nitrocatechol: (1) electron and proton transfers from catechol to NO3, forming a semiquinone radical, (2) electrophilic NO3 attack to the ring to yield a cyclohexadienyl radical intermediate, and (3) electrophilic attack to the ring by nitronium ion (NO2+) formed at the interface of water by colliding N2O5(g) at low pH. Ozonolysis competes strongly with nitration when using [NO2]:[O3] ratios 1:1 or smaller. Instead, nighttime chemistry under higher molar ratios proceeds mainly by nitration with a maximum yield of 0.90 for [NO2]:[O3] = 4:1. 
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  3. Formate (HCOO–) is the most dominant intermediate identified during carbon dioxide electrochemical reduction (CO2ER). While previous studies showed that copper (Cu)-based materials that include Cu(0), Cu2O, and CuO are ideal catalysts for CO2ER, challenges to scalability stem from low selectivity and undesirable products in the −1.0–1.0 V range. There are few studies on the binding mechanism of intermediates and products for these systems as well as on changes to surface sites upon applying potential. Here, we use an in situ approach to study the redox surface chemistry of formate on Cu thin films deposited on Si wafers using a VeeMAX III spectroelectrochemical (SEC) cell compatible with attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR). Spectra for surface species were collected in real time as a function of applied potential during cyclic voltammetry (CV) experiments. Results showed the reproducibility of CV curves on freshly prepared Cu/Si wafers with relatively high signal-to-noise ATR-FTIR absorbance features of surface species during these electrochemical experiments. The oxidation reaction of HCOO– to bicarbonate (HCO3–) was observed using ATR-FTIR at a voltage of 0.27 V. Samples were then subjected to reduction in the CV, and the aqueous phase products below the detection limit of the SEC-ATR-FTIR were identified using ion chromatography (IC). We report the formation of glycolate (H3C2O3–) and glyoxylate (HC2O3–) with trace amounts of oxalate (C2O42–), indicating that C–C coupling reactions proceed in these systems. Changes to the oxidation state of surface Cu were measured using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, which showed a reduction in Cu(0) and an increase in Cu(OH)2, indicating surface oxidation. 
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  4. null (Ed.)
  5. The structure of zymonic acid (systematic name: 4-hydroxy-2-methyl-5-oxo-2,5-dihydrofuran-2-carboxylic acid), C 6 H 6 O 5 , which had previously eluded crystallographic determination, is presented here for the first time. It forms by intramolecular condensation of parapyruvic acid, which is the product of aldol condensation of pyruvic acid. A redetermination of the crystal structure of pyruvic acid (systematic name: 2-oxopropanoic acid), C 3 H 4 O 3 , at low temperature (90 K) and with increased precision, is also presented [for the previous structure, see: Harata et al. (1977). Acta Cryst. B 33 , 210–212]. In zymonic acid, the hydroxylactone ring is close to planar (r.m.s. deviation = 0.0108 Å) and the dihedral angle between the ring and the plane formed by the bonds of the methyl and carboxylic acid carbon atoms to the ring is 88.68 (7)°. The torsion angle of the carboxylic acid group relative to the ring is 12.04 (16)°. The pyruvic acid molecule is almost planar, having a dihedral angle between the carboxylic acid and methyl-ketone groups of 3.95 (6)°. Intermolecular interactions in both crystal structures are dominated by hydrogen bonding. The common R 2 2 (8) hydrogen-bonding motif links carboxylic acid groups on adjacent molecules in both structures. In zymonic acid, this results in dimers about a crystallographic twofold of space group C 2/ c , which forces the carboxylic acid group to be disordered exactly 50:50, which scrambles the carbonyl and hydroxyl groups and gives an apparent equalization of the C—O bond lengths [1.2568 (16) and 1.2602 (16) Å]. The other hydrogen bonds in zymonic acid (O—H...O and weak C—H...O), link molecules across a 2 1 -screw axis, and generate an R 2 2 (9) motif. These hydrogen-bonding interactions propagate to form extended pleated sheets in the ab plane. Stacking of these zigzag sheets along c involves only van der Waals contacts. In pyruvic acid, inversion-related molecules are linked into R 2 2 (8) dimers, with van der Waals interactions between dimers as the only other intermolecular contacts. 
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