Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Colin Park is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Colin Park.


Catalysis Communications | 2001

Promotion of the yield and graphitic nature of filamentous carbon grown from Ni/SiO2 doped with lithium bromide

Colin Park; Mark A. Keane

Abstract The catalyzed growth of ordered filamentous carbon from a hydrogen/ethylene feedstock has been studied using Ni/SiO 2 doped with LiBr. The introduction of the alkali halide resulted in a significant increase in carbon yield while the catalytically generated carbon exhibited a higher degree of structural order. The latter has been determined from high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) and temperature programmed oxidation (TPO) analyses. Carbon yield and structural enhancement is linked to a restructuring of the active sites that facilitates a destructive chemisorption of ethylene and the dissolution and precipitation of carbon in an ordered fashion.


ChemPhysChem | 2001

Filamentous Carbon Growth on Nickel/Silica: Potassium and Bromine as Catalyst Promotors

Colin Park; Mark A. Keane

In a previous Communication, we reported the catalytic growth of highly ordered carbon filaments during the hydrodechlorination of chlorobenzene over nickel/silica at the remarkably low temperature of 553 K. This low temperature growth was attributed to the presence of bromine and potassium on the catalyst surface, which facilitated a restructuring of the active sites leading to a destructive chemisorption of the reactant that preceded the dissolution and precipitation of carbon in an ordered fashion. In this paper, we examine the effect of bromine and potassium built into (by impregnation with KOH, HBr and KBr) a Ni/SiO2 parent sample on filamentous carbon production through ethylene decomposition. The parent catalyst delivered a low yield of carbon (0.2 g(C)g(cat)(-1)) and promoted the competing hydrogenation (to ethane) step to the same degree; hydrogenolysis to methane represented the only other significant reaction. The nature of the carbon deposition has been characterised by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) and temperature-programmed oxidation (TPO). Impregnation with KOH resulted in little change in carbon yield but the hydrogenolysis step was completely suppressed. A combination of CO chemisorption/temperature programmed desorption has been employed to probe the electronic structure of the nickel sites where the presence of potassium limited CO uptake in contrast to surface bromine which served, through electron withdrawal, to strengthen the CO-Ni interaction. Incorporation of bromine into the catalyst resulted in a marked increase in nickel particle size and a dramatic enhancement of carbon yield; the sample treated with KBr delivered the appreciably higher carbon yield of 7.6 g(C)g(cat)(-1)). While the presence of bromine on the surface served to enhance carbon deposition, the additional incorporation of potassium raised the degree of order in the carbon growth.


Solid State Ionics | 2001

Growth of filamentous carbon from lithium and cesium bromide doped Ni/SiO2 catalysts

Colin Park; Mark A. Keane

Abstract The catalytic growth of filamentous carbon, from the decomposition of ethylene, has been studied over the temperature range 673–898 K using Ni/SiO2 doped with LiBr and CsBr. Promotion/inhibition effects due to the presence of these adatoms have been assessed; an optimum alakali metal loading is reported for Li, while the presence of Cs inhibited the reaction at all temperatures. Transmission electron microscopy has been used to characterise the ordered nature of the filamentous carbon growth.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2000

Interaction of Phenol and Chlorophenols with Activated Carbon and Synthetic Zeolites in Aqueous Media

Brando Okolo; Colin Park; Mark A. Keane


Journal of Catalysis | 2002

Carbon–Chlorine and Carbon–Bromine Bond Cleavage in the Catalytic Hydrodehalogenation of Halogenated Aromatics

Colin Park; Claudia Menini; J.L. Valverde; Mark A. Keane


Langmuir | 2001

Controlled Growth of Highly Ordered Carbon Nanofibers from Y Zeolite Supported Nickel Catalysts

Colin Park; Mark A. Keane


Journal of Molecular Catalysis A-chemical | 2001

Gas phase dehydration of C6 alcohols promoted by Y zeolite and supported nafion catalysts

Colin Park; Mark A. Keane


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2000

Low-Temperature (553 K) Catalytic Growth of Highly Ordered Carbon Filaments during Hydrodechlorination Reactions

Claudia Menini; Colin Park; Rik Brydson; Mark A. Keane


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2002

Growth of Filamentous Carbon from the Surface of Ni/SiO2 Doped with Alkali Metal Bromides

Colin Park; Mark A. Keane


Surfactant science series | 2003

Effectiveness of carbon nanofibers in the removal of phenol-based organics from aqueous media

Colin Park; Mark A. Keane

Collaboration


Dive into the Colin Park's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge