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Tungsten

About: Tungsten is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 35225 publications have been published within this topic receiving 456213 citations. The topic is also known as: W & element 74.


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Journal ArticleDOI
Gang Gu1, Bo Zheng1, Wei-Qiang Han1, Siegmar Roth1, Jie Liu1 
TL;DR: In this article, a simple method was discovered to prepare tungsten oxide nanowires directly from Tungsten metal using high resolution tunneling electron microscopy (HRTEM) and energy dispersive X-ray scattering (EDX), respectively.
Abstract: A simple method was discovered to prepare tungsten oxide nanowires directly from tungsten metal. The structure and composition of the nanowires were characterized by high resolution tunneling electron microscopy (HRTEM) and energy dispersive X-ray scattering (EDX), respectively. The growth mechanism and potential applications of this material are discussed.

274 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that there are two causes for a strong interaction between nickel species and the support: incorporation of nickel ions in the surface layers of the support during impregnation, and solid-state diffusion during calcination of the catalysts.

274 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Fang Xie1, Li Gong1, Xu Liu1, Y.T. Tao1, Weihong Zhang1, Shanghui Chen1, Hui Meng1, J. Chen1 
TL;DR: In this article, an X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) system was used to produce uniform tungsten cone arrays during high-energy ion beam bombardment.

273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The X-ray absorption near-edge spectra (XANES) of the L1 tungsten edge in WO3/Al2O3 samples indicate that the symmetry of the Tungsten environment depends on both the surface coverage and the presence of coordinated water as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The X-ray absorption near-edge spectra (XANES) of the L1 tungsten edge in WO3/Al2O3 samples indicate that the symmetry of the tungsten environment depends on both the surface coverage and the presence of coordinated water. At coverages of less than 1/3 monolayer, in the absence of coordinated water, the XANES spectrum indicates a distorted tetrahedral structure for the surface tungsten oxide species. Samples exposed to air at room temperature have water molecules coordinated to the surface tungsten oxide species and produce an octahedral site symmetry, but the water is removed by heating to 500 "C. The Raman spectra of the W03/A1203 samples are consistent with a distorted tetrahedral tungsten oxide environment and, in addition, show features due to W=O and W-0-W bonds. These results suggest that the surface tungsten oxide is present as both isolated and dimeric tetrahedra. At coverages approaching a monolayer, in the absence of coordinated water, a significant fraction of the surface tungsten oxide sites appears to have a distorted octahedral environment in the XANES spectra. At this high coverage the effect of coordinated water molecules is much less evident than at low coverage. The Raman results, however, only provide information about the tetrahedral component because the Raman cross section of the tetrahedral tungsten oxide is much higher than the octahedral tungsten oxide. The Raman spectra show features of W4 and W-0-W bonds in the tetrahedral fraction of the surface tungsten oxide monolayer on alumina. These observations are consistent with a surface complex where the supported tungsten oxide has formed a polymeric structure on the alumina support composed of W04 and W06 units jointed in infinite chains.

273 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,055
20222,162
2021902
20201,216
20191,447
20181,372