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Institution

ExxonMobil

CompanyIrving, Texas, United States
About: ExxonMobil is a company organization based out in Irving, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Polymerization. The organization has 16969 authors who have published 23758 publications receiving 535713 citations. The organization is also known as: Exxon Mobil Corporation & Exxon Mobil Corp..
Topics: Catalysis, Polymerization, Polymer, Hydrocarbon, Alkyl


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the size-dependent physical and chemical properties of clusters, the methods of synthesis of macroscopic amounts of size-selected clusters with desired properties, and most importantly, the possibility of their controlled assembly into new materials with novel properties.
Abstract: The Panel was charged with assessing the present scientific understanding of the size-dependent physical and chemical properties of clusters, the methods of synthesis of macroscopic amounts of size-selected clusters with desired properties, and most importantly, the possibility of their controlled assembly into new materials with novel properties. The Panel was composed of both academic and industrial scientists from the physics, chemistry, and materials science communities, and met in January 1988.In materials (insulators, semiconductors, and metals) with strong chemical bonding, there is extensive spatial delocalization of valence electrons, and therefore the bulk physical properties which depend upon these electrons develop only gradually with cluster size. Recent research using supersonic-jet, gas-aggregation, colloidal, and chemical-synthetic methods indeed clearly establishes that intermediate size clusters have novel and hybrid properties, between the molecular and bulk solid-state limits. A scientific understanding of these transitions in properties has only been partially achieved, and the Panel believes that this interdisciplinary area of science is at the very heart of the basic nature of materials. In Sec. V (Future Challenges and Opportunities), a series of basic questions for future research are detailed. Each question has an obvious impact on our potential ability to create new materials.Present methods for the synthesis of useful amounts of size-selected clusters, with surface chemical properties purposefully controlled and/or modified, are almost nonexistent, and these fundamentally limit our ability to explore the assembly of clusters into potentially novel materials. While elegant spectroscopic and chemisorption studies of size-selected clusters have been carried out using molecular-beam technologies, there are no demonstrated methods for recovery and accumulation of such samples. Within the past year, the first reports of the chemical synthesis of clusters with surfaces chemically modified have been reported for limited classes of materials. Apparatus for the accumulation and consolidation of nanophase materials have been developed, and the first promising studies of their physical properties are appearing. In both the chemical and nanophase synthesis areas, clusters with a distribution of sizes and shapes are being studied. Progress on macroscopic synthetic methods for size-selected clusters of controlled surface properties is the most important immediate goal recognized by the Panel. Simultaneous improvement in physical characterization will be necessary to guide synthesis research.Assuming such progress will occur, the Panel suggests that self-assembly of clusters into new elemental polymorphs and new types of nanoscale heterogeneous materials offers an area of intriguing technological promise. The electrical and optical properties of such heterogeneous materials could be tailored in very specific ways. Such ideas are quite speculative at this time; their implementation critically depends upon controlled modification of cluster surfaces, and upon development of characterization and theoretical tools to guide experiments.The Panel concluded that a number of genuinely novel ideas had been enunciated, and that in its opinion some would surely lead to exciting new science and important new materials.

464 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This analysis provides the DRP community with a range of possible outcomes which can be expected depending on the solver and its setup, and falls within the ranges consistent with the relevant laboratory data.

453 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Yacov Kantor1, Itzhak Webman1
TL;DR: In this paper, the macroscopic elastic moduli of an elastic percolating network in the critical region were studied and a microscopic elastic Hamiltonian was used, which contains a bending energy term.
Abstract: We study the macroscopic elastic moduli of an elastic percolating network in the critical region. A microscopic elastic Hamiltonian is used, which contains a bending energy term. We find that the rigidity threshold of this system is identical to the percolation threshold ${p}_{c}$. By considering the elastic properties of elements of the infinite percolation cluster we calculate the critical exponent $\ensuremath{\tau}$ which describes the behavior of the elastic stiffness near ${p}_{c}$ for $d=6$ and obtain a lower bound on $\ensuremath{\tau}$ for $dl6$. $\ensuremath{\tau}$ is considerably higher than the conductivity exponent $t$, suggesting that the elastic problem belongs to a different universality class.

452 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using x-ray absorption spectroscopy, the likely identity of the compounds involved in chelating Ni within the leaf tissues of the hyperaccumulator and non-accumulators were determined and it was revealed that the majority of leaf Ni in the hyper Accumulator was associated with the cell wall, with the remaining Ni being associated with citrate and His.
Abstract: The ability of Thlaspi goesingense Halacsy to hyperaccumulate Ni appears to be governed by its extraordinary degree of Ni tolerance. However, the physiological basis of this tolerance mechanism is unknown. We have investigated the role of vacuolar compartmentalization and chelation in this Ni tolerance. A direct comparison of Ni contents of vacuoles from leaves of T. goesingense and from the non-tolerant non-accumulator Thlaspi arvense L. showed that the hyperaccumulator accumulates approximately 2-fold more Ni in the vacuole than the non-accumulator under Ni exposure conditions that were non-toxic to both species. Using x-ray absorption spectroscopy we have been able to determine the likely identity of the compounds involved in chelating Ni within the leaf tissues of the hyperaccumulator and non-accumulator. This revealed that the majority of leaf Ni in the hyperaccumulator was associated with the cell wall, with the remaining Ni being associated with citrate and His, which we interpret as being localized primarily in the vacuolar and cytoplasm, respectively. This distribution of Ni was remarkably similar to that obtained by cell fractionation, supporting the hypothesis that in the hyperaccumulator, intracellular Ni is predominantly localized in the vacuole as a Ni-organic acid complex.

449 citations


Authors

Showing all 16987 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David A. Weitz1781038114182
Avelino Corma134104989095
Peter Hall132164085019
James A. Dumesic11861558935
Robert H. Crabtree11367848634
Costas M. Soukoulis10864450208
Nicholas J. Turro104113153827
Edwin L. Thomas10460640819
Israel E. Wachs10342732029
Andrew I. Cooper9938934700
Michael J. Zaworotko9751944441
Enrique Iglesia9641631934
Yves J. Chabal9451933820
George E. Gehrels9245430560
Ping Sheng9059337141
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20234
202236
2021302
2020340
2019366
2018438