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Daniel M. Meier

Other affiliations: ETH Zurich
Bio: Daniel M. Meier is an academic researcher from Zurich University of Applied Sciences/ZHAW. The author has contributed to research in topics: Infrared spectroscopy & Catalysis. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 22 publications receiving 441 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel M. Meier include ETH Zurich.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Dongmei Jiang1, Tamas Mallat1, Daniel M. Meier1, Atsushi Urakawa1, Alfons Baiker1 
TL;DR: In this article, a combined catalytic, spectroscopic, thermogravimetric, and electron microscopic study indicates that the reaction occurs at the surface of the latent porous framework and both bpy and water are involved in the active complex.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The energy surfaces revealed the reasons for the negligible presence of energetically stable conformers and explained the experimentally observed temperature dependence of the populations and identified four new conformers.
Abstract: Conformational space of cinchonidine has been explored by means of ab initio potential and free energy surfaces, and the temperature-induced changes of conformational populations were studied by a combined NOESY-DFT analysis. The DFT-derived potential energy surface investigation identified four new conformers. Among them, Closed(7) is substantially relevant to fully understand the conformational behavior. The energy surfaces gave access to the favored transformation pathways at different temperatures (280-320 K). They also revealed the reasons for the negligible presence of energetically stable conformers and explained the experimentally observed temperature dependence of the populations.

65 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, Cinnamyl alcohol was oxidized to cinnamaldehyde in a continuous fixed-bed reactor with molecular oxygen over an alumina-supported palladium catalyst in supercritical carbon dioxide modified with toluene.

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Polarization-modulation infrared reflection−absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) was applied to study the liquid-phase oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde on a Pd film as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Polarization-modulation infrared reflection−absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS), facilitating simultaneous selective detection of liquid phase and surface bound species, was applied to study the liquid-phase oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde on a Pd film. Experiments under aerobic and anaerobic conditions revealed significantly higher activity under anaerobic conditions and higher selectivity under aerobic conditions. Under anaerobic conditions toluene was the major side product. CO2 and benzoic acid, not yet detected by in situ IR during this reaction, were observed as degradation and side products in the liquid phase. Enhanced formation of CO2 and benzoic acid was observed under aerobic conditions where no surface signals could be detected. In contrast, under anaerobic conditions CO formed by decarbonylation of benzaldehyde was observed on the Pd (111) surface, delayed with respect to the formation profile of benzaldehyde in the liquid phase. Both CO and oxygen were found to poison the surface ...

45 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, a simple transient method, replacing the chiral modifier in the reactor feed with a second modifier that gives the opposite enantiomer of the product in excess, was used to investigate the competition of cinchona alkaloids on a commercial Pt/Al2O3 catalyst.

35 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
30 Aug 2013-Science
TL;DR: Metal-organic frameworks are porous materials that have potential for applications such as gas storage and separation, as well as catalysis, and methods are being developed for making nanocrystals and supercrystals of MOFs for their incorporation into devices.
Abstract: Crystalline metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are formed by reticular synthesis, which creates strong bonds between inorganic and organic units. Careful selection of MOF constituents can yield crystals of ultrahigh porosity and high thermal and chemical stability. These characteristics allow the interior of MOFs to be chemically altered for use in gas separation, gas storage, and catalysis, among other applications. The precision commonly exercised in their chemical modification and the ability to expand their metrics without changing the underlying topology have not been achieved with other solids. MOFs whose chemical composition and shape of building units can be multiply varied within a particular structure already exist and may lead to materials that offer a synergistic combination of properties.

10,934 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a family of isoreticular MOFs, based on the UiO-66 structure, was obtained from the three different linker ligands H2N−H2BDC, O2N −H2BDDC, and Br−H 2BDC and the physicochemical and chemical investigation of these materials demonstrate that this class of MOFs retains high thermal and chemical stabilities, even with functional groups present at the linker units.
Abstract: The development in the field MOF materials is moving from the discovery of new structures toward applications of the most promising materials. In most cases, specialized applications require incorporation of functional chemical groups. This work is a systematic investigation of the effect that simple substituents attached to the aromatic linker have on the stability and property to the parent MOF. A family of isoreticular MOFs, based on the UiO-66 structure was obtained from the three different linker ligands H2N−H2BDC, O2N−H2BDC, and Br−H2BDC. The physicochemical and chemical investigation of these materials demonstrate that this class of MOFs retains high thermal and chemical stabilities, even with functional groups present at the linker units. The results demonstrate the possibility of incorporating active functional groups into the UiO-66 structure almost without losing its exceptionally high thermal and chemical stability. It has been established that the functional groups, at least in the amino func...

1,430 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The chemistry of copper is extremely rich because it can easily access Cu0, CuI, CuII, and CuIII oxidation states allowing it to act through one-electron or two-Electron processes, which feature confer a remarkably broad range of activities allowing copper to catalyze the oxidation and oxidative union of many substrates.
Abstract: The chemistry of copper is extremely rich because it can easily access Cu0, CuI, CuII, and CuIII oxidation states allowing it to act through one-electron or two-electron processes. As a result, both radical pathways and powerful two-electron bond forming pathways via organmetallic intermediates, similar to those of palladium, can occur. In addition, the different oxidation states of copper associate well with a large number of different functional groups via Lewis acid interactions or π-coordination. In total, these feature confer a remarkably broad range of activities allowing copper to catalyze the oxidation and oxidative union of many substrates. Oxygen is a highly atom economical, environmentally benign, and abundant oxidant, which makes it ideal in many ways.1 The high activation energies in the reactions of oxygen require that catalysts be employed.2 In combination with molecular oxygen, the chemistry of copper catalysis increases exponentially since oxygen can act as either a sink for electrons (oxidase activity) and/or as a source of oxygen atoms that are incorporated into the product (oxygenase activity). The oxidation of copper with oxygen is a facile process allowing catalytic turnover in net oxidative processes and ready access to the higher CuIII oxidation state, which enables a range of powerful transformations including two-electron reductive elimination to CuI. Molecular oxygen is also not hampered by toxic byproducts, being either reduced to water, occasionally via H2O2 (oxidase activity) or incorporated into the target structure with high atom economy (oxygenase activity). Such oxidations using oxygen or air (21% oxygen) have been employed safely in numerous commodity chemical continuous and batch processes.3 However, batch reactors employing volatile hydrocarbon solvents require that oxygen concentrations be kept low in the head space (typically <5–11%) to avoid flammable mixtures, which can limit the oxygen concentration in the reaction mixture.4,5,6 A number of alternate approaches have been developed allowing oxidation chemistry to be used safely across a broader array of conditions. For example, use of carbon dioxide instead of nitrogen as a diluent leads to reduced flammability.5 Alternately, water can be added to moderate the flammability allowing even pure oxygen to be employed.6 New reactor designs also allow pure oxygen to be used instead of diluted oxygen by maintaining gas bubbles in the solvent, which greatly improves reaction rates and prevents the build up of higher concentrations of oxygen in the head space.4a,7 Supercritical carbon dioxide has been found to be advantageous as a solvent due its chemical inertness towards oxidizing agents and its complete miscibility with oxygen or air over a wide range of temperatures.8 An number of flow technologies9 including flow reactors,10 capillary flow reactors,11 microchannel/microstructure structure reactors,12 and membrane reactors13 limit the amount of or afford separation of hydrocarbon/oxygen vapor phase thereby reducing the potential for explosions. Enzymatic oxidizing systems based upon copper that exploit the many advantages and unique aspects of copper as a catalyst and oxygen as an oxidant as described in the preceding paragraphs are well known. They represent a powerful set of catalysts able to direct beautiful redox chemistry in a highly site-selective and stereoselective manner on simple as well as highly functionalized molecules. This ability has inspired organic chemists to discover small molecule catalysts that can emulate such processes. In addition, copper has been recognized as a powerful catalyst in several industrial processes (e.g. phenol polymerization, Glaser-Hay alkyne coupling) stimulating the study of the fundamental reaction steps and the organometallic copper intermediates. These studies have inspiried the development of nonenzymatic copper catalysts. For these reasons, the study of copper catalysis using molecular oxygen has undergone explosive growth, from 30 citations per year in the 1980s to over 300 citations per year in the 2000s. A number of elegant reviews on the subject of catalytic copper oxidation chemistry have appeared. Most recently, reviews provide selected coverage of copper catalysts14 or a discussion of their use in the aerobic functionalization of C–H bonds.15 Other recent reviews cover copper and other metal catalysts with a range of oxidants, including oxygen, but several reaction types are not covered.16 Several other works provide a valuable overview of earlier efforts in the field.17 This review comprehensively covers copper catalyzed oxidation chemistry using oxygen as the oxidant up through 2011. Stoichiometric reactions with copper are discussed, as necessary, to put the development of the catalytic processes in context. Mixed metal systems utilizing copper, such as palladium catalyzed Wacker processes, are not included here. Decomposition reactions involving copper/oxygen and model systems of copper enzymes are not discussed exhaustively. To facilitate analysis of the reactions under discussion, the current mechanistic hypothesis is provided for each reaction. As our understanding of the basic chemical steps involving copper improve, it is expected that many of these mechanisms will evolve accordingly.

1,326 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review covers advances in the MOF field from the past three years, focusing on applications, including gas separation, catalysis, drug delivery, optical and electronic applications, and sensing.
Abstract: Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) represent a new class of hybrid organic-inorganic supramolecular materials comprised of ordered networks formed from organic electron donor linkers and metal cations. They can exhibit extremely high surface areas, as well as tunable pore size and functionality, and can act as hosts for a variety of guest molecules. Since their discovery, MOFs have enjoyed extensive exploration, with applications ranging from gas storage to drug delivery to sensing. This review covers advances in the MOF field from the past three years, focusing on applications, including gas separation, catalysis, drug delivery, optical and electronic applications, and sensing. We also summarize recent work on methods for MOF synthesis and computational modeling.

1,193 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
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528 citations