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Zhong Li

Researcher at Nanjing Tech University

Publications -  8
Citations -  406

Zhong Li is an academic researcher from Nanjing Tech University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ionic liquid & Adsorption. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications receiving 287 citations.

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Brønsted Acidic Ionic Liquid Modified Magnetic Nanoparticle: An Efficient and Green Catalyst for Biodiesel Production

TL;DR: In this article, a surface-functionalized magnetic nanoparticle supported dual Bronsted acidic ionic liquid was synthesized by immobilizing 1-(propyl-3-sulfonate) imidazolium hydrogen sulfate [SO3H-(CH2)3-HIM][HSO4] onto the surface of Fe3O4@SiO2 using 3-chloropropyltrimethoxysilane as the linker.
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Design of ZIF-8/ion copolymer hierarchically porous material: Coordination effect on the adsorption and diffusion for carbon dioxide

TL;DR: In this article, a new CO2 adsorbent (ZPMAC) was constructed by a facile in-situ growth of ZIF-8 onto the surface of a mesoporous amino-functionalized ion copolymer (PMAC).
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Heterogenization of ionic liquid based on mesoporous material as magnetically recyclable catalyst for biodiesel production

TL;DR: In this article, a magnetically separable nanocatalyst was fabricated by covalent bonding of 3-sulfopropyl-1-(3-propyltrimethoxysilane) imidazolium hydrogen sulfate ([SO3H-PIM-TMSP]HSO4) on mesoporous silica modified Fe3O4 nanoparticle.
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Fabrication of Magnetic NH2-MIL-88B (Fe) Confined Brønsted Ionic Liquid as an Efficient Catalyst in Biodiesel Synthesis

TL;DR: A magnetically recyclable and efficient catalyst for biodiesel synthesis was fabricated by confining the Bronsted ionic liquid 1,4-butanediyl-3,3′-bis(3-sulfopropyl) imidazolium dihydrogensulfate in an amino-functionalized magnetic metal-organic-framework composite (Fe3O4@NH2-MIL-88B(Fe)) through a simple and efficient strategy via the amino groups as discussed by the authors.
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Surface engineering of a chromium metal-organic framework with bifunctional ionic liquids for selective CO2 adsorption: Synergistic effect between multiple active sites.

TL;DR: The multiple adsorption sites originating from IL and MOF were found to synergistically affect the CO2 capture performance of the composite and a possible two-step mechanism was proposed to reveal the manner in which CO2 bound to the IL-incorporated frameworks.