Denisia Popolan
Free University of Berlin
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Featured researches published by Denisia Popolan.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2004
Liana D. Socaciu; Jan Hagen; Jérôme Le Roux; Denisia Popolan; Thorsten M. Bernhardt; L. Wöste; Stefan Vajda
Reactions of free silver anions Agn- (n = 1 - 13) with O2, CO, and their mixtures are investigated in a temperature controlled radio frequency ion trap setup. Cluster anions Agn- (n = 1 - 11) readily react with molecular oxygen to yield AgnOm- (m = 2, 4, or 6) oxide products. In contrast, no reaction of the silver cluster anions with carbon monoxide is detected. However, if silver cluster anions are exposed to the mixture of O2 and CO, new reaction products and a pronounced, discontinuous size dependence in the reaction behavior is observed. In particular, coadsorption complexes Agn(CO)O2- are detected for cluster sizes with n = 4 and 6 and, the most striking observation, in the case of the larger odd atom number clusters Ag7-, Ag9-, and Ag11-, the oxide product concentration decreases while a reappearance of the bare metal cluster signal is observed. This leads to the conclusion that carbon monoxide reacts with the activated oxygen on these silver clusters and indicates the prevalence of a catalytic reaction cycle.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2009
Thorsten M. Bernhardt; Jan Hagen; Sandra M. Lang; Denisia Popolan; Liana D. Socaciu-Siebert; L. Wöste
A detailed analysis of experimentally obtained temperature-dependent gas-phase kinetic data for the oxygen and carbon monoxide adsorption on small anionic gold (Au(n)(-), n = 1-3), silver (Ag(n)(-), n = 1-5), and binary silver-gold (Ag(n)Au(m)(-), n + m = 2, 3) clusters is presented. The Lindemann energy transfer model in conjunction with statistical unimolecular reaction rate theory is employed to determine the bond dissociation energies E(0) of the observed metal cluster complexes with O(2) and CO. The accuracy limits of the obtained binding energies are evaluated by applying different transition-state models. The assumptions involved in the data evaluation procedure as well as possible sources of error are discussed. The thus-derived binding energies of O(2) to pure silver and binary silver-gold cluster anions are generally in excellent agreement with previously reported theoretical values. In marked contrast, the binding energies of O(2) and CO to Au(2)(-) and Au(3)(-) determined via temperature-dependent reaction kinetics are consistently lower than the theoretically predicted values.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011
Denisia Popolan; Nössler M; Roland Mitrić; Thorsten M. Bernhardt; Bonacić-Koutecký
Temperature-dependent gas-phase reaction kinetics measurements and equilibrium thermodynamics under multicollision conditions in conjunction with ab initio DFT calculations were employed to determine the binding energies of carbon monoxide to triatomic silver-gold binary cluster cations and anions. The binding energies of the first CO molecule to the trimer clusters increase with increasing gold content and with changing charge from negative to positive. Thus, the reactivity of the binary clusters can be sensitively tuned by varying charge state and composition. Also, multiple CO adsorption on the clusters was investigated. The maximum number of adsorbed CO molecules was found to strongly depend on cluster charge and composition as well. Most interestingly, the cationic carbonyl complex Au(3)(CO)(4)(+) is formed at cryogenic temperature, whereas for the anion, only two CO molecules are adsorbed, leading to Au(3)(CO)(2)(-). All other trimer clusters adsorb three CO molecules in the case of the cations and are completely inert to CO in our experiment in the case of the anions.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011
Denisia Popolan; Thorsten M. Bernhardt
The oxidation of carbon monoxide with nitrous oxide on mass-selected Au(3)(+) and Ag(3)(+) clusters has been investigated under multicollision conditions in an octopole ion trap experiment. The comparative study reveals that for both gold and silver cations carbon dioxide is formed on the clusters. However, whereas in the case of Au(3)(+) the cluster itself acts as reactive species that facilitates the formation of CO(2) from N(2)O and CO, for silver the oxidized clusters Ag(3)O(x)(+) (n=1-3) are identified as active in the CO oxidation reaction. Thus, in the case of the silver cluster cations N(2)O is dissociated and one oxygen atom is suggested to directly react with CO, whereas a second kind of oxygen strongly bound to silver is acting as a substrate for the reaction.
ChemInform | 2005
Thorsten M. Bernhardt; Liana D. Socaciu; Jan Hagen; Denisia Popolan; Jérôme Le Roux; Ulrich Heiz; Ludger Woeste
A review; in general, reaction mechanisms in heterogeneous catalysis are difficult to reveal, because of the complexity of the reaction system. Our approach employs mass-selected metal clusters as well-defined model reaction centers. Chem. reactions on these clusters are investigated in a temp. controlled radio frequency (rf)-ion trap setup. Product ion concns. as a function of storage time enable the detn. of reaction kinetics and reaction mechanisms of free clusters. As an example, the CO combustion reaction on small gold clusters is studied. It is known that supported gold clusters with few atoms up to nm size exhibit relevant catalytic properties. Our ion trap measurements reveal catalytic activity already for neg. charged gold dimers. When the reaction kinetics are investigated as a function of temp., an intermediate product with CO and O2 coadsorbed can be isolated. In contrast, small at. silver clusters have not been found relevant for catalytic oxidn. processes so far. Our investigations show for the first time evidence for a strongly size dependent catalytic activity of Agn-. [on SciFinder(R)]
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004
Jan Hagen; Liana D. Socaciu; Jérôme Le Roux; Denisia Popolan; Thorsten M. Bernhardt; L. Wöste; Roland Mitrić; and Holger Noack; Vlasta Bonačić-Koutecký
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2010
Denisia Popolan; Melanie Nößler; Roland Mitrić; Thorsten M. Bernhardt; Vlasta Bonačić-Koutecký
ChemPhysChem | 2005
Thorsten M. Bernhardt; Jan Hagen; Liana D. Socaciu; Roland Mitrić; Andreas Heidenreich; Jérôme Le Roux; Denisia Popolan; Mihai Vaida; L. Wöste; Vlasta Bonačić-Koutecký; Joshua Jortner
Chemical Physics Letters | 2013
Irene Fleischer; Denisia Popolan; Marjan Krstić; Vlasta Bonačić-Koutecký; Thorsten M. Bernhardt
International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2007
Jan Hagen; Liana D. Socaciu-Siebert; Jérôme Le Roux; Denisia Popolan; Stefan Vajda; Thorsten M. Bernhardt; L. Wöste