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Thierry Loiseau

Researcher at Lille University of Science and Technology

Publications -  218
Citations -  15296

Thierry Loiseau is an academic researcher from Lille University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Crystal structure & Gallium phosphate. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 207 publications receiving 13865 citations. Previous affiliations of Thierry Loiseau include university of lille & Institut Universitaire de France.

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Open-Framework Inorganic Materials.

TL;DR: Aluminosilicate zeolites such as UTD-1 belong to a family of nanoporous inorganic materials that find utility in catalysis, separation, and ion exchange.
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A Rationale for the Large Breathing of the Porous Aluminum Terephthalate (MIL‐53) Upon Hydration

TL;DR: Analysis of the hydration process by solid-state NMR has clearly indicated that the trapped water molecules interact with the carboxylate groups through hydrogen bonds, but do not affect the hydroxyl species bridging the aluminum atoms.
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Different Adsorption Behaviors of Methane and Carbon Dioxide in the Isotypic Nanoporous Metal Terephthalates MIL-53 and MIL-47

TL;DR: A distinct step in the isotherm occurs during the adsorption of CO2 on MIL-53 at 304 K and it is suggested that a breathing behavior is induced in MIL- 53 during CO2 adsorptive activity.
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Hydrogen adsorption in the nanoporous metal-benzenedicarboxylate M(OH)(O2C–C6H4–CO2)(M = Al3+, Cr3+), MIL-53

TL;DR: Hydrogen adsorption has been studied in the nanoporous metal-benzenedicarboxylate M(OH)(O2C-C6H4-CO2) (M = Al3+, Cr3+); these solids show a hydrogen storage capacity of 3.8 and 3.1 wt.% respectively when loaded at 77 K under 1.6 MPa.
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Comparative study of hydrogen sulfide adsorption in the MIL-53(Al, Cr, Fe), MIL-47(V), MIL-100(Cr), and MIL-101(Cr) metal-organic frameworks at room temperature.

TL;DR: Hydrogen sulfide gravimetric isotherm adsorption measurements highlighted the regenerability of MIL-53(Al, Cr, Fe) and MIL-47(V) MOFs after H(2)S treatment, whereas MIL-100 and Mil-101 CH(4) advertisersorption capacities were significantly decreased.