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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Marchionni is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Marchionni.


Chemsuschem | 2009

Ethanol Oxidation on Electrocatalysts Obtained by Spontaneous Deposition of Palladium onto Nickel-Zinc Materials

Valentina Bambagioni; Claudio Bianchini; Jonathan Filippi; Werner Oberhauser; Andrea Marchionni; Francesco Vizza; Rinaldo Psaro; Laura Sordelli; Maria Luisa Foresti; Massimo Innocenti

Ni-Zn and Ni-Zn-P alloys supported on Vulcan XC-72 are effective materials for the spontaneous deposition of palladium through redox transmetalation with Pd(IV) salts. The materials obtained, Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C and Pd-(Ni-Zn-P)/C, have been characterized by a variety of techniques. The analytical and spectroscopic data show that the surface of Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C and Pd-(Ni-Zn-P)/C contain very small, highly dispersed, and highly crystalline palladium clusters as well as single palladium sites, likely stabilized by interaction with oxygen atoms from Ni--O moieties. As a reference material, a nanostructured Pd/C material was prepared by reduction of an aqueous solution of PdCl(2)/HCl with ethylene glycol in the presence of Vulcan XC-72. In Pd/C, the Pd particles are larger, less dispersed, and much less crystalline. Glassy carbon electrodes coated with the Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C and Pd-(Ni-Zn-P)/C materials, containing very low Pd loadings (22-25 microg cm(-2)), were studied for the oxidation of ethanol in alkaline media in half cells and provided excellent results in terms of both specific current (as high as 3600 A g(Pd)(-1) at room temperature) and onset potential (as low as -0.6 V vs Ag/AgCl/KCl(sat)).


Nature Communications | 2014

Nanotechnology makes biomass electrolysis more energy efficient than water electrolysis

Yan‐Xin Chen; Alessandro Lavacchi; Hamish A. Miller; Manuela Bevilacqua; Jonathan Filippi; Massimo Innocenti; Andrea Marchionni; Werner Oberhauser; Lianqin Wang; Francesco Vizza

The energetic convenience of electrolytic water splitting is limited by thermodynamics. Consequently, significant levels of hydrogen production can only be obtained with an electrical energy consumption exceeding 45 kWh kg(-1)H2. Electrochemical reforming allows the overcoming of such thermodynamic limitations by replacing oxygen evolution with the oxidation of biomass-derived alcohols. Here we show that the use of an original anode material consisting of palladium nanoparticles deposited on to a three-dimensional architecture of titania nanotubes allows electrical energy savings up to 26.5 kWh kg(-1)H2 as compared with proton electrolyte membrane water electrolysis. A net energy analysis shows that for bio-ethanol with energy return of the invested energy larger than 5.1 (for example, cellulose), the electrochemical reforming energy balance is advantageous over proton electrolyte membrane water electrolysis.


Chemsuschem | 2013

Electrooxidation of Ethylene Glycol and Glycerol on Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C Anodes in Direct Alcohol Fuel Cells

Andrea Marchionni; Manuela Bevilacqua; Claudio Bianchini; Yan‐Xin Chen; Jonathan Filippi; Paolo Fornasiero; Alessandro Lavacchi; Hamish A. Miller; Lianqin Wang; Francesco Vizza

The electrooxidation of ethylene glycol (EG) and glycerol (G) has been studied: in alkaline media, in passive as well as active direct ethylene glycol fuel cells (DEGFCs), and in direct glycerol fuel cells (DGFCs) containing Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C as an anode electrocatalyst, that is, Pd nanoparticles supported on a Ni-Zn phase. For comparison, an anode electrocatalyst containing Pd nanoparticles (Pd/C) has been also investigated. The oxidation of EG and G has primarily been investigated in half cells. The results obtained have highlighted the excellent electrocatalytic activity of Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C in terms of peak current density, which is as high as 3300 A g(Pd)(-1) for EG and 2150 A g(Pd)(-1) for G. Membrane-electrode assemblies (MEA) have been fabricated using Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C anodes, proprietary Fe-Co/C cathodes, and Tokuyama A-201 anion-exchange membranes. The MEA performance has been evaluated in either passive or active cells fed with aqueous solutions of 5 wt % EG and 5 wt % G. In view of the peak-power densities obtained in the temperature range from 20 to 80 °C, at Pd loadings as low as 1 mg cm(-2) at the anode, these results show that Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C can be classified amongst the best performing electrocatalysts ever reported for EG and G oxidation.


Chemsuschem | 2012

Energy Efficiency Enhancement of Ethanol Electrooxidation on Pd–CeO2/C in Passive and Active Polymer Electrolyte‐Membrane Fuel Cells

Valentina Bambagioni; Claudio Bianchini; Yan‐Xin Chen; Jonathan Filippi; Paolo Fornasiero; Massimo Innocenti; Alessandro Lavacchi; Andrea Marchionni; Werner Oberhauser; Francesco Vizza

Pd nanoparticles have been generated by performing an electroless procedure on a mixed ceria (CeO(2))/carbon black (Vulcan XC-72) support. The resulting material, Pd-CeO(2)/C, has been characterized by means of transmission electron microscopy (TEM), inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES), and X-ray diffraction (XRD) techniques. Electrodes coated with Pd-CeO(2)/C have been scrutinized for the oxidation of ethanol in alkaline media in half cells as well as in passive and active direct ethanol fuel cells (DEFCs). Membrane electrode assemblies have been fabricated using Pd-CeO(2)/C anodes, proprietary Fe-Co cathodes, and Tokuyama anion-exchange membranes. The monoplanar passive and active DEFCs have been fed with aqueous solutions of 10 wt% ethanol and 2 M KOH, supplying power densities as high as 66 mW cm(-2) at 25 °C and 140 mW cm(-2) at 80 °C. A comparison with a standard anode electrocatalyst containing Pd nanoparticles (Pd/C) has shown that, at even metal loading and experimental conditions, the energy released by the cells with the Pd-CeO(2)/C electrocatalyst is twice as much as that supplied by the cells with the Pd/C electrocatalyst. A cyclic voltammetry study has shown that the co-support ceria contributes to the remarkable decrease of the onset oxidation potential of ethanol. It is proposed that ceria promotes the formation at low potentials of species adsorbed on Pd, Pd(I)-OH(ads), that are responsible for ethanol oxidation.


Angewandte Chemie | 2010

A Biologically Inspired Organometallic Fuel Cell (OMFC) That Converts Renewable Alcohols into Energy and Chemicals

Samuel P. Annen; Valentina Bambagioni; Manuela Bevilacqua; Jonathan Filippi; Andrea Marchionni; Werner Oberhauser; Hartmut Schönberg; Francesco Vizza; Claudio Bianchini; Hansjörg Grützmacher

The simultaneous conversion of alcohols and sugars into energy and chemicals is a target of primary importance in sustainable chemistry. The realization of such a process provides renewable energy with no CO2 emission and, at the same time, leads to the production of industrially relevant feedstocks, such as aldehydes, ketones, and carboxylic acids, from biomasses. Two established types of fuel cells operating in alkaline media can convert the free energy of alcohols (RCH2OH) into electrical energy and the corresponding carboxylate product: the direct alcohol fuel cell (DAFC), and the enzymatic biofuel cell (EBFC). 8] In a DAFC, an alcohol such as ethanol (CH3CH2OH) is selectively converted into acetate (CH3COO ) and the electrolyte is an anionexchange membrane. On the anode, ethanol is oxidized, releasing four electrons [Eq. (1)] that are utilized to reduce one oxygen molecule to four hydroxide ions on the cathode [Eq. (2)]. Efficient devices of this type have been recently developed for a variety of renewable alcohols and polyalcohols, such as ethylene glycol, glycerol, 1,2-propandiol, and C6 and C5 sugars. [3–6] (For drawings of a DAFC, a EBFC, and typical power density curves, see the Supporting Information, Figure S1 a–d).


Chemsuschem | 2010

Self-Sustainable Production of Hydrogen, Chemicals, and Energy from Renewable Alcohols by Electrocatalysis

Valentina Bambagioni; Manuela Bevilacqua; Claudio Bianchini; Jonathan Filippi; Alessandro Lavacchi; Andrea Marchionni; Francesco Vizza; Pei Kang Shen

The selective and simultaneous production of hydrogen and chemicals from renewable alcohols, such as ethanol, glycerol, and ethylene glycol, can be accomplished by means of electrolyzers in which the anode electrocatalyst is appropriately designed to promote the partial and selective oxidation of the alcohol. In the electrolyzers described herein, the production of 1 kg of hydrogen from aqueous ethanol occurs with one-third the amount of energy required by a traditional H(2)/O(2) electrolyzer, by virtue of the much lower oxidation potential of ethanol to acetate vs. water to oxygen in alkaline media (E(0)=0.10 V vs. 1.23 V). The self-sustainability of H(2) production is ensured by the simultaneous production of 25 kg of potassium acetate for every kg of H(2), if the promoting co-electrolyte is KOH.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Detectors | 2007

Detectors and flux instrumentation for future neutrino facilities

T. Abe; H. Aihara; C. Andreopoulos; A. Ankowski; A. Badertscher; G. Battistoni; A. Blondel; J. Bouchez; A. Bross; A. Bueno; L. Camilleri; A. Cazes; A. Cervera-Villanueva; G. De Lellis; F. Di; M. Ellis; A. Ereditato; C. Fukushima; E. Gschwendtner; M. Iwasaki; K. Kaneyuki; Y. Karadzhov; V. Kashikhin; Y. Kawai; M. Komatsu; E. Kozlovskaya; Y. Kudenko; A. Kusaka; H. Kyushima; A. Longhin

This report summarises the conclusions from the detector group of the International Scoping Study of a future Neutrino Factory and Super-Beam neutrino facility. The baseline detector options for each possible neutrino beam are defined as follows: 1. A very massive (Megaton) water Cherenkov detector is the baseline option for a sub-GeV Beta Beam and Super Beam facility. 2. There are a number of possibilities for either a Beta Beam or Super Beam (SB) medium energy facility between 1-5 GeV. These include a totally active scintillating detector (TASD), a liquid argon TPC or a water Cherenkov detector. 3. A 100 kton magnetized iron neutrino detector (MIND) is the baseline to detect the wrong sign muon final states (golden channel) at a high energy (20-50 GeV) neutrino factory from muon decay. A 10 kton hybrid neutrino magnetic emulsion cloud chamber detector for wrong sign tau detection (silver channel) is a possible complement to MIND, if one needs to resolve degeneracies that appear in the δ-θ13 parameter space.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2015

Electro-oxidation of ethylene glycol and glycerol at palladium-decorated FeCo@Fe core-shell nanocatalysts for alkaline direct alcohol fuel cells : functionalized MWCNT supports and impact on product selectivity

Omobosede O. Fashedemi; Hamish A. Miller; Andrea Marchionni; Francesco Vizza; Kenneth I. Ozoemena

Half-cell reactions and alkaline direct ethylene glycol and glycerol fuel cells (DEGFC and DGFC) have been studied on Pd-based ternary core–shell (FeCo@Fe@Pd) nanocatalyst using multi-walled carbon nanotubes bearing carboxylic (MWCNT-COOH) and sulfonic acid (MWCNT-SO3H) as supporting platforms. The core–shell–shell nature of this nanocatalyst, obtained via the “microwave-induced top-down nanostructuring and decoration”, was clearly proven from atomic resolution transmission electron microscopy (ARTEM). The functional groups of the MWCNTs show a huge impact on the physico-chemical properties of the FeCo@Fe@Pd nanocatalyst towards the electrocatalytic oxidation of EG and GLY in alkaline media. The FeCo@Fe@Pd on –COOH-treated MWCNTs showed the small particle size of ca. 7.4 nm, uniform loading of the catalyst on the support, large electrochemically-active surface area and enhanced electrocatalytic activity compared to the FeCo@Fe@Pd on –SO3H-bearing MWCNTs. As a preliminary test, FeCo@Fe@Pd/MWCNT-COOH was used for passive, air-breathing anion-exchange membrane based fuel cells (AEM-DEGFC and AEM-DGFC). The analysis of the exhaust products, established using NMR spectroscopy, revealed a high selectivity towards the complete oxidation of both EG and GLY under benign experimental conditions.


Chemcatchem | 2015

Energy Efficiency of Alkaline Direct Ethanol Fuel Cells Employing Nanostructured Palladium Electrocatalysts

Lianqin Wang; Alessandro Lavacchi; Manuela Bevilacqua; Marco Bellini; Paolo Fornasiero; Jonathan Filippi; Massimo Innocenti; Andrea Marchionni; Hamish A. Miller; Francesco Vizza

Carbon supported nanostructured palladium or palladium alloys are considered the best performing anode electrocatalysts currently employed in alkaline electrolyte membrane direct ethanol fuel cells (AEM‐DEFCs). High initial peak power densities are generally obtained as Pd preferentially favors the selective oxidation of ethanol forming acetate thus avoiding strongly poisoning intermediates such as CO. However, few studies exist that investigate DEFC performance in terms of both energy efficiency and discharge energy density, as well as power density depending on the concentration of fuel. In this paper we have determined such parameters for room temperature air breathing AEM‐DEFCs equipped with Pd based anodes, anion exchange membranes and FeCo/C cathode electrocatalysts. Combined with the optimization of the fuel composition a maximum energy efficiency of ≈7 % was obtained for this AEM‐DEFC. Such a performance suggests that devices of this type are suitable for supplying low power applications such as small portable electronic devices.


Journal of Energy Chemistry | 2013

Synergistic effect between few layer graphene and carbon nanotube supports for palladium catalyzing electrochemical oxidation of alcohols

Bruno F. Machado; Andrea Marchionni; Revathi Bacsa; Marco Bellini; Julien Beausoleil; Werner Oberhauser; Francesco Vizza; Philippe Serp

Abstract Few layer graphene (FLG), multi-walled carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and a nanotube-graphene composite (CNT-FLG) were used as supports for palladium nanoparticles. The catalysts, which were characterized by transmission electron microscopy, Raman spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction, were used as anodes in the electrooxidation of ethanol, ethylene glycol and glycerol in half cells and in passive direct ethanol fuel cells. Upon Pd deposition, a stronger interaction was found to occur between the metal and the nanotube-graphene composite and the particle size was significantly smaller in this material (6.3 nm), comparing with nanotubes and graphene alone (8 and 8.4 nm, respectively). Cyclic voltammetry experiments conducted with Pd/CNT, Pd/FLG and Pd/CNT-FLG in 10 wt% ethanol and 2 M KOH solution, showed high specific currents of 1.48,2.29 and 2.51 mA·µg−1Pd, respectively. Moreover, the results obtained for ethylene glycol and glycerol oxidation highlighted the excellent electrocatalytic activity of Pd/CNT-FLG in terms of peak current density (up to 3.70 mA·µg−1Pd for ethylene glycol and 1.84 mA·μg−1Pd for glycerol, respectively). Accordingly, Pd/CNT-FLG can be considered as the best performing one among the electrocatalysts ever reported for ethylene glycol oxidation, especially considering the low metal loading used in this work. Direct ethanol fuel cells at room temperature were studied by obtaining power density curves and undertaking galvanostatic experiments. The power density outputs using Pd/CNT, Pd/FLG and Pd/CNT-FLG were 12.1, 16.3 and 18.4 mW·cm−2, respectively. A remarkable activity for ethanol electrooxidation was shown by Pd/CNT-FLG anode catalyst. In a constant current experiment, the direct ethanol fuel cell containing Pd/CNT-FLG could continuously deliver 20 mA·cm−2 for 9.5 h during the conversion of ethanol into acetate of 30%, and the energy released from the cell was about 574 J.

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Francesco Vizza

National Research Council

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Marco Bellini

National Research Council

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