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Dive into the research topics where Eric E. Finney is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric E. Finney.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Transition-Metal Nanocluster Size vs Formation Time and the Catalytically Effective Nucleus Number: A Mechanism-Based Treatment

Murielle A. Watzky; Eric E. Finney; Richard G. Finke

A mechanism-based equation for the size of a forming transition-metal nanocluster vs time has been derived based on the Finke-Watzky two-step mechanism for transition-metal nanocluster nucleation (A --> B, rate constant k1) and autocatalytic growth (A + B --> 2B, rate constant k2), where A is the nanocluster precursor and B is the growing nanocluster. The resultant equation expresses nanocluster diameter as a function of time, D(t), in terms of k1, k2, the initial concentration of the nanocluster precursor complex, [A]0, and the number of catalytically effective nuclei derived from either (i) the final nanocluster size, D(f), or (ii) the number of atoms in the average catalytically effective nucleus, N*, and the induction period time, t ind (N* being by definition the number of atoms present in the average size nucleus at the end of the induction period and when observable catalysis begins). By fitting experimentally determined nanocluster size vs time data using this equation, evidence for the validity of the equation is obtained for Ir(0) nanoclusters formed from the well-studied system of H2 reduction of the precursor [(1,5-COD)Ir x P2W15Nb3O62](8-). The D(t) equation is then used to determine N* for nine prior Ir(0) nanocluster preparations from five different [(1,5-COD)Ir(+)]n [anion(n-)] precursors. Also given is a relationship allowing one to interconvert between nanocluster size data and nanocluster precursor concentration data, again when the two-step nucleation and growth mechanism has been shown to apply. Some of the key experimental factors that are known to affect the kinetics of nanocluster formation, and therefore nanocluster size, are also summarized. A look ahead to needed future work is also provided.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2008

Nanocluster nucleation and growth kinetic and mechanistic studies: A review emphasizing transition-metal nanoclusters

Eric E. Finney; Richard G. Finke


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

A mechanism for transition-metal nanoparticle self-assembly.

Claire Besson; Eric E. Finney; Richard G. Finke


Chemistry of Materials | 2005

Nanocluster Nucleation, Growth, and Then Agglomeration Kinetic and Mechanistic Studies: A More General, Four-Step Mechanism Involving Double Autocatalysis

Claire Besson; Eric E. Finney; Richard G. Finke


Chemistry of Materials | 2009

Is There a Minimal Chemical Mechanism Underlying Classical Avrami-Erofe'ev Treatments of Phase-Transformation Kinetic Data?

Eric E. Finney; Richard G. Finke


Chemistry of Materials | 2008

The Four-Step, Double-Autocatalytic Mechanism for Transition-Metal Nanocluster Nucleation, Growth, and Then Agglomeration: Metal, Ligand, Concentration, Temperature, and Solvent Dependency Studies

Eric E. Finney; Richard G. Finke


Chemistry of Materials | 2009

Fitting and Interpreting Transition-Metal Nanocluster Formation and Other Sigmoidal-Appearing Kinetic Data: A More Thorough Testing of Dispersive Kinetic vs Chemical-Mechanism-Based Equations and Treatments for 4-Step Type Kinetic Data

Eric E. Finney; Richard G. Finke


Inorganica Chimica Acta | 2006

Is it homogeneous Pt(II) or heterogeneous Pt(0)n catalysis? Evidence that Pt(1,5-COD)Cl2 and Pt(1,5-COD)(CH3)2 plus H2 form heterogeneous, nanocluster plus bulk-metal Pt(0) hydrogenation catalysts

Eric E. Finney; Richard G. Finke


Chemistry of Materials | 2012

Gold Nanocluster Agglomeration Kinetic Studies: Evidence for Parallel Bimolecular Plus Autocatalytic Agglomeration Pathways as a Mechanism-Based Alternative to an Avrami-Based Analysis

Eric E. Finney; Shawn P. Shields; William E. Buhro; Richard G. Finke


ACS Catalysis | 2015

Agglomerative Sintering of an Atomically Dispersed Ir1/Zeolite Y Catalyst: Compelling Evidence Against Ostwald Ripening but for Bimolecular and Autocatalytic Agglomeration Catalyst Sintering Steps

Ercan Bayram; Jing Lu; Ceren Aydin; Nigel D. Browning; Saim Özkar; Eric E. Finney; Bruce C. Gates; Richard G. Finke

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Bruce C. Gates

University of California

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Ceren Aydin

University of California

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Ercan Bayram

Colorado State University

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Jing Lu

University of California

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Nigel D. Browning

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Shawn P. Shields

Washington University in St. Louis

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William E. Buhro

Washington University in St. Louis

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