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Dive into the research topics where Anna Fischer is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Fischer.


ACS Nano | 2012

Formation Mechanism of Colloidal Silver Nanoparticles: Analogies and Differences to the Growth of Gold Nanoparticles

Jörg Polte; Xenia Tuaev; Maria Wuithschick; Anna Fischer; Andreas F. Thuenemann; Klaus Rademann; Ralph Kraehnert; Franziska Emmerling

The formation mechanisms of silver nanoparticles using aqueous silver perchlorate solutions as precursors and sodium borohydride as reducing agent were investigated based on time-resolved in situ experiments. This contribution addresses two important issues in colloidal science: (i) differences and analogies between growth processes of different metals such as gold and silver and (ii) the influence of a steric stabilizing agent on the growth process. The results reveal that a growth due to coalescence is a fundamental growth principle if the monomer-supplying chemical reaction is faster than the actual particle formation.


ACS Nano | 2008

Synthesis of Ternary Metal Nitride Nanoparticles Using Mesoporous Carbon Nitride as Reactive Template

Anna Fischer; Jens Müller; Markus Antonietti; Arne Thomas

Mesoporous graphitic carbon nitride was used as both a nanoreactor and a reactant for the synthesis of ternary metal nitride nanoparticles. By infiltration of a mixture of two metal precursors into mesoporous carbon nitride, the pores act first as a nanoconfinement, generating amorphous mixed oxide nanoparticles. During heating and decomposition, the carbon nitride second acts as reactant or, more precisely, as a nitrogen source, which converts the preformed mixed oxide nanoparticles into the corresponding nitride (reactive templating). Using this approach, ternary metal nitride particles with diameters smaller 10 nm composed of aluminum gallium nitride (Al-Ga-N) and titanium vanadium nitride (Ti-V-N) were synthesized. Due to the confinement effect of the carbon nitride matrix, the composition of the resulting metal nitride can be easily adjusted by changing the concentration of the preceding precursor solution. Thus, ternary metal nitride nanoparticles with continuously adjustable metal composition can be produced.


Chemsuschem | 2012

Water Oxidation by Electrodeposited Cobalt Oxides—Role of Anions and Redox‐Inert Cations in Structure and Function of the Amorphous Catalyst

Marcel Risch; Katharina Klingan; Franziska Ringleb; Petko Chernev; Ivelina Zaharieva; Anna Fischer; Holger Dau

For the production of nonfossil fuels, water oxidation by inexpensive cobalt-based catalysts is of high interest. Films for the electrocatalysis of water oxidation were obtained by oxidative self-assembly (electrodeposition) from aqueous solutions containing, apart from Co, either K, Li or Ca with either a phosphate, acetate or chloride anion. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the Co K-edge revealed clusters of edge-sharing CoO(6) octahedra in all films, but the size or structural disorder of the Co-oxido clusters differed. Whereas potassium binding is largely unspecific, CaCo(3) O(4) cubanes, which resemble the CaMn(3) O(4) cubane of the biological catalyst in oxygenic photosynthesis, may form, as suggested by XAS at the Ca K-edge. Cyclic voltammograms in a potassium phosphate buffer at pH 7 revealed that no specific combination of anions and redox-inactive cations is required for catalytic water oxidation. However, the anion type modulates not only the size (or order) of the Co-oxido clusters, but also electrodeposition rates, redox potentials, the capacity for oxidative charging, and catalytic currents. On these grounds, structure-activity relations are discussed.


Chemsuschem | 2014

Water Oxidation by Amorphous Cobalt-Based Oxides: Volume Activity and Proton Transfer to Electrolyte Bases

Katharina Klingan; Franziska Ringleb; Ivelina Zaharieva; Jonathan Heidkamp; Petko Chernev; Diego González-Flores; Marcel Risch; Anna Fischer; Holger Dau

Water oxidation in the neutral pH regime catalyzed by amorphous transition-metal oxides is of high interest in energy science. Crucial determinants of electrocatalytic activity were investigated for a cobalt-based oxide film electrodeposited at various thicknesses on inert electrodes. For water oxidation at low current densities, the turnover frequency (TOF) per cobalt ion of the bulk material stayed fully constant for variation of the thickness of the oxide film by a factor of 100 (from about 15 nm to 1.5 μm). Thickness variation changed neither the nanostructure of the outer film surface nor the atomic structure of the oxide catalyst significantly. These findings imply catalytic activity of the bulk hydrated oxide material. Nonclassical dependence on pH was observed. For buffered electrolytes with pKa values of the buffer base ranging from 4.7 (acetate) to 10.3 (hydrogen carbonate), the catalytic activity reflected the protonation state of the buffer base in the electrolyte solution directly and not the intrinsic catalytic properties of the oxide itself. It is proposed that catalysis of water oxidation occurs within the bulk hydrated oxide film at the margins of cobalt oxide fragments of molecular dimensions. At high current densities, the availability of a proton-accepting base at the catalyst-electrolyte interface controls the rate of water oxidation. The reported findings may be of general relevance for water oxidation catalyzed at moderate pH by amorphous transition-metal oxides.


Chemsuschem | 2008

High-surface-area TiO2 and TiN as catalysts for the C-C coupling of alcohols and ketones

Anna Fischer; Philippe Makowski; Jens-Oliver Müller; Markus Antonietti; Arne Thomas; Frédéric Goettmann

To design more sustainable processes for the alkylation of ketones, the use of both atom-ineffective leaving groups such as halides and boron as well as noble-metal-based catalysts should be avoided. For that purpose, high-surface-area titanium nitride was prepared from high-surface-area titanium dioxide using cyanamide as a transcription agent. The resulting nitride as well as the initial oxide proved to be effective and versatile catalysts for the alkylation of ketones with alcohols. Interestingly, the TiN catalyst yields unsaturated compounds, while the oxide-based catalyst mainly yields saturated coupling products. As a result of its metallic properties, TiN shows a strong tendency to catalyse the dehydrogenation of alcohols, which then undergo aldol condensation with ketones. In contrast, TiO(2) promotes the direct nucleophilic attack of ketones on alcohols.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

A Sustainable Template for Mesoporous Zeolite Synthesis

Robin J. White; Anna Fischer; Caren Goebel; Arne Thomas

A generalized synthesis of high-quality, mesoporous zeolite (e.g., MFI-type) nanocrystals is presented, based on a biomass-derived, monolithic N-doped carbonaceous template. As an example, ZSM-5 single crystals with desirable large-diameter (12-16 nm) intracrystalline mesopores are synthesized. The platform provides scope to optimize template dimensions and chemistry for the synthesis of a range of micro-/mesoporous crystalline zeolites in a cost-effective and highly flexible manner.


Chemsuschem | 2015

Mesoporous Carbon Nitride-Tungsten Oxide Composites for Enhanced Photocatalytic Hydrogen Evolution

Kamalakannan Kailasam; Anna Fischer; Guigang Zhang; Jinshui Zhang; Michael Schwarze; Marc Schröder; Xinchen Wang; Reinhard Schomäcker; Arne Thomas

Composites of mesoporous polymeric carbon nitride and tungsten(VI) oxide show very high photocatalytic activity for the evolution of hydrogen from water under visible light and in the presence of sacrificial electron donors. Already addition of very small amounts of WO3 yields up to a twofold increase in the efficiency when compared to bulk carbon nitrides and their composites and more notably even to the best reported mesoporous carbon nitride-based photocatalytic materials. The higher activity can be attributed to the high surface area and synergetic effect of the carbon nitrides and the WO3 resulting in improved charge separation through a photocatalytic solid-state Z-scheme mechanism.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Development of cellular magnetic dipoles in magnetotactic bacteria.

Damien Faivre; Anna Fischer; Inés García-Rubio; Giovanni Mastrogiacomo; Andreas U. Gehring

Magnetotactic bacteria benefit from their ability to form cellular magnetic dipoles by assembling stable single-domain ferromagnetic particles in chains as a means to navigate along Earths magnetic field lines on their way to favorable habitats. We studied the assembly of nanosized membrane-encapsulated magnetite particles (magnetosomes) by ferromagnetic resonance spectroscopy using Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense cultured in a time-resolved experimental setting. The spectroscopic data show that 1), magnetic particle growth is not synchronized; 2), the increase in particle numbers is insufficient to build up cellular magnetic dipoles; and 3), dipoles of assembled magnetosome blocks occur when the first magnetite particles reach a stable single-domain state. These stable single-domain particles can act as magnetic docks to stabilize the remaining and/or newly nucleated superparamagnetic particles in their adjacencies. We postulate that docking is a key mechanism for building the functional cellular magnetic dipole, which in turn is required for magnetotaxis in bacteria.


ACS Nano | 2013

Magnetic Silver Hybrid Nanoparticles for Surface-Enhanced Resonance Raman Spectroscopic Detection and Decontamination of Small Toxic Molecules

Xiao Xia Han; Annette Schmidt; Gernot U. Marten; Anna Fischer; Inez M. Weidinger; Peter Hildebrandt

Magnetic hybrid assemblies of Ag and Fe3O4 nanoparticles with biocompatibly immobilized myoglobin (Mb) were designed to detect and capture toxic targets (NO2-, CN-, and H2O2). Mb was covalently attached to chitosan-coated magnetic silver hybrid nanoparticles (M-Ag-C) via glutaraldehyde that serves as a linker for the amine groups of Mb and chitosan. As verified by surface-enhanced resonance Raman (SERR) spectroscopy, this immobilization strategy preserves the native structure of the bound Mb as well as the binding affinity for small molecules. On the basis of characteristic spectral markers, binding of NO2-, CN-, and H2O2 could be monitored and quantified, demonstrating the high sensitivity of this approach with detection limits of 1 nM for nitrite, 0.2 μM for cyanide, and 10 nM for H2O2. Owing to the magnetic properties, these particles were collected by an external magnet to achieve an efficient decontamination of the solutions as demonstrated by SERR spectroscopy. Thus, the present approach combines the highly sensitive analytical potential of SERR spectroscopy with an easy approach for decontamination of aqueous solutions with potential applications in food and in environmental and medical safety control.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

A Molecular Approach to Self‐Supported Cobalt‐Substituted ZnO Materials as Remarkably Stable Electrocatalysts for Water Oxidation

Johannes Pfrommer; Michael Lublow; Anahita Azarpira; Caren Göbel; Marcel Lücke; Alexander Steigert; Martin Pogrzeba; Prashanth W. Menezes; Anna Fischer; Thomas Schedel-Niedrig; Matthias Driess

In regard to earth-abundant cobalt water oxidation catalysts, very recent findings show the reorganization of the materials to amorphous active phases under catalytic conditions. To further understand this concept, a unique cobalt-substituted crystalline zinc oxide (Co:ZnO) precatalyst has been synthesized by low-temperature solvolysis of molecular heterobimetallic Co(4-x)Zn(x) O4 (x = 1-3) precursors in benzylamine. Its electrophoretic deposition onto fluorinated tin oxide electrodes leads after oxidative conditioning to an amorphous self-supported water-oxidation electrocatalyst, which was observed by HR-TEM on FIB lamellas of the EPD layers. The Co-rich hydroxide-oxidic electrocatalyst performs at very low overpotentials (512 mV at pH 7; 330 mV at pH 12), while chronoamperometry shows a stable catalytic current over several hours.

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Arne Thomas

Technical University of Berlin

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Inez M. Weidinger

Technical University of Berlin

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Michael Lublow

Technical University of Berlin

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Peter Hildebrandt

Technical University of Berlin

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Amandine Guiet

Technical University of Berlin

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Holger Dau

Free University of Berlin

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Ingo Zebger

Technical University of Berlin

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