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Christopher J. Kiely

Researcher at Lehigh University

Publications -  389
Citations -  33224

Christopher J. Kiely is an academic researcher from Lehigh University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Nanoparticle. The author has an hindex of 84, co-authored 374 publications receiving 29156 citations. Previous affiliations of Christopher J. Kiely include Rice University & University of Liverpool.

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Light alkane oxidation using catalysts prepared by chemical vapour impregnation: tuning alcohol selectivity through catalyst pre-treatment

TL;DR: In this paper, the active site structure and/or oxidation state of the Fe species in Fe/ZSM-5 (30) catalysts have been used for the oxidation of methane and ethane using aqueous hydrogen peroxide as oxidant.
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Synthesis of highly uniform and composition-controlled gold–palladium supported nanoparticles in continuous flow

TL;DR: A millifluidic approach for the production of oxide supported monometallic Au and bimetallic AuPd nanoparticles in a continuous fashion and the relative ease of scalability makes the proposed methodology appealing not only for small-scale laboratory purposes, but also for the industrial-scale production of supported metal nanoparticles.
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Electron microscopy studies of the thermal stability of gold nanoparticle arrays

TL;DR: In this article, a series of monolayer protected gold nanoparticle colloidal solutions have been prepared with average sizes in the 2-15nm range, and the thermal stability of these selfassembled gold nanoparticles rafts as a function of particle size, heating method, heating rate and ligand identity have been assessed.
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Selective photocatalytic oxidation of benzene for the synthesis of phenol using engineered Au-Pd alloy nanoparticles supported on titanium dioxide

TL;DR: The selectivity of photocatalytic phenol production from the direct oxidation of benzene can be enhanced by fine adjustment of the morphology and composition of Au-Pd metal nanoparticles supported on titanium dioxide thereby suppressing the decomposition of Benzene and evolution of phenolic compounds.