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Dive into the research topics where Glen A. Ferguson is active.

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Featured researches published by Glen A. Ferguson.


ACS Nano | 2013

Size-dependent subnanometer Pd cluster (Pd4, Pd6, and Pd17) water oxidation electrocatalysis

Gihan Kwon; Glen A. Ferguson; Christopher J. Heard; Eric C. Tyo; Chunrong Yin; Janae DeBartolo; Sönke Seifert; Randall E. Winans; A. Jeremy Kropf; Jeffrey Greeley; Roy L. Johnston; Larry A. Curtiss; Michael J. Pellin; Stefan Vajda

Water oxidation is a key catalytic step for electrical fuel generation. Recently, significant progress has been made in synthesizing electrocatalytic materials with reduced overpotentials and increased turnover rates, both key parameters enabling commercial use in electrolysis or solar to fuels applications. The complexity of both the catalytic materials and the water oxidation reaction makes understanding the catalytic site critical to improving the process. Here we study water oxidation in alkaline conditions using size-selected clusters of Pd to probe the relationship between cluster size and the water oxidation reaction. We find that Pd4 shows no reaction, while Pd6 and Pd17 deposited clusters are among the most active (in terms of turnover rate per Pd atom) catalysts known. Theoretical calculations suggest that this striking difference may be a demonstration that bridging Pd-Pd sites (which are only present in three-dimensional clusters) are active for the oxygen evolution reaction in Pd6O6. The ability to experimentally synthesize size-specific clusters allows direct comparison to this theory. The support electrode for these investigations is ultrananocrystalline diamond (UNCD). This material is thin enough to be electrically conducting and is chemically/electrochemically very stable. Even under the harsh experimental conditions (basic, high potential) typically employed for water oxidation catalysts, UNCD demonstrates a very wide potential electrochemical working window and shows only minor evidence of reaction. The system (soft-landed Pd4, Pd6, or Pd17 clusters on a UNCD Si-coated electrode) shows stable electrochemical potentials over several cycles, and synchrotron studies of the electrodes show no evidence for evolution or dissolution of either the electrode material or the clusters.


Topics in Catalysis | 2012

Exploring Computational Design of Size-Specific Subnanometer Clusters Catalysts

Glen A. Ferguson; Faisal Mehmood; Rees B. Rankin; Jeffery P. Greeley; Stefan Vajda; Larry A. Curtiss

Computational design of catalysts is currently an area of significant interest. While this area has made great strides in recent years, these methods have mainly been applied to solid heterogeneous catalysts. An emerging class of catalysts with very promising properties is that constructed from clusters of atoms at or below the nanoscale. The use of computational catalyst design methods for the construction and optimization of subnanometer clusters, however, has not yet been extensively explored. In this review, we discuss recent work on subnanometer catalysts in our group and discuss how computational catalyst design principles are being explored for this class of materials. Specifically, the origin of activity and selectivity for supported metal clusters that catalyze the production of propene and propylene oxide are discussed along with the implications of these studies for implementing a descriptor-based catalyst optimization. The extension of these ideas for designing a catalyst for methanol decomposition is then discussed and an application of a descriptor-based scheme for the optimization of methanol decomposition by subnanometer catalyst is shown.


Chemsuschem | 2013

Magnetism in lithium-oxygen discharge product

Jun Lu; Hun Ji Jung; Kah Chun Lau; Zhengcheng Zhang; John A. Schlueter; Peng Du; Rajeev S. Assary; Jeffrey Greeley; Glen A. Ferguson; Hsien Hau Wang; Jusef Hassoun; Hakim Iddir; Jigang Zhou; Lucia Zuin; Yongfeng Hu; Yang-Kook Sun; Bruno Scrosati; Larry A. Curtiss; K. Amine

Nonaqueous lithium-oxygen batteries have a much superior theoretical gravimetric energy density compared to conventional lithium-ion batteries, and thus could render long-range electric vehicles a reality. A molecular-level understanding of the reversible formation of lithium peroxide in these batteries, the properties of major/minor discharge products, and the stability of the nonaqueous electrolytes is required to achieve successful lithium-oxygen batteries. We demonstrate that the major discharge product formed in the lithium-oxygen cell, lithium peroxide, exhibits a magnetic moment. These results are based on dc-magnetization measurements and a lithium-oxygen cell containing an ether-based electrolyte. The results are unexpected because bulk lithium peroxide has a significant band gap. Density functional calculations predict that superoxide-type surface oxygen groups with unpaired electrons exist on stoichiometric lithium peroxide crystalline surfaces and on nanoparticle surfaces; these computational results are consistent with the magnetic measurement of the discharged lithium peroxide product as well as EPR measurements on commercial lithium peroxide. The presence of superoxide-type surface oxygen groups with spin can play a role in the reversible formation and decomposition of lithium peroxide as well as the reversible formation and decomposition of electrolyte molecules.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

Carbocation Stability in H-ZSM5 at High Temperature.

Glen A. Ferguson; Lei Cheng; Lintao Bu; Seonah Kim; David J. Robichaud; Mark R. Nimlos; Larry A. Curtiss; Gregg T. Beckham

Zeolites are common catalysts for multiple industrial applications, including alcohol dehydration to produce olefins, and given their commercial importance, reaction mechanisms in zeolites have long been proposed and studied. Some proposed reaction mechanisms for alcohol dehydration exhibit noncyclic carbocation intermediates or transition states that resemble carbocations, and several previous studies suggest that the tert-butyl cation is the only noncyclic cation more stable than the corresponding chemisorbed species with the hydrocarbon bound to the framework oxygen (i.e., an alkoxide). To determine if carbocations can exist at high temperatures in zeolites, where these catalysts are finding new applications for biomass vapor-phase upgrading (∼500 °C), the stability of carbocations and the corresponding alkoxides were calculated with two ONIOM embedding methods (M06-2X/6-311G(d,p):M06-2X/3-21G) and (PBE-D3/6-311G(d,p):PBE-D3/3-21G) and plane-wave density functional theory (DFT) using the PBE functional corrected with entropic and Tkatchenko-Scheffler van der Waals corrections. The embedding methods tested are unreliable at finding minima for primary carbocations, and only secondary or higher carbocations can be described with embedding methods consistent with the periodic DFT results. The relative energy between the carbocations and alkoxides differs significantly between the embedding and the periodic DFT methods. The difference is between ∼0.23 and 14.30 kcal/mol depending on the molecule, the model, and the functional chosen for the embedding method. At high temperatures, the pw-DFT calculations predict that the allyl, isopropyl, and sec-butyl cations exhibit negligible populations while acetyl and tert-butyl cations exhibit significant populations (>10%). Moreover, the periodic DFT results indicate that mechanisms including secondary and tertiary carbocations intermediates or carbocations stabilized by adjacent oxygen or double bonds are possible at high temperatures relevant to some industrial uses of zeolite catalysts, although as the minority species in most cases.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Quaternary amine-induced peptide degradation via cyclization.

Chistopher Trong-Linh Than; Glen A. Ferguson; Krishnan Raghavachari

In this study, we investigated intramolecular cyclizations in peptides containing quaternary amines. Two types of cyclization reactions are studied: (a) those involving a trimethylammonium butyric acid (TMAB) charge tag and (b) those involving trimethylated lysine. Both types of reactions result in the release of trimethylamine via an S(N)2 mechanism involving a lone pair of electrons on the oxygen or nitrogen. In the case of the TMAB charge tag cyclization, the oxygen attack mechanism leading to a five-membered ring is the preferred pathway. In the trimethylated lysine cyclizations, the preferred pathway involves the nitrogen nucleophile resulting in the formation of a six-membered ring. The similarities and differences between the two reactions are analyzed.


Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2012

Solvent Oligomerization during SEI Formation on Model Systems for Li-Ion Battery Anodes

Hadi Tavassol; Joseph W. Buthker; Glen A. Ferguson; Larry A. Curtiss; Andrew A. Gewirth


ACS Catalysis | 2016

Role of the Support and Reaction Conditions on the Vapor-Phase Deoxygenation of m-Cresol over Pt/C and Pt/TiO2 Catalysts

Michael B. Griffin; Glen A. Ferguson; Daniel A. Ruddy; Mary J. Biddy; Gregg T. Beckham


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Stable Subnanometer Cobalt Oxide Clusters on Ultrananocrystalline Diamond and Alumina Supports: Oxidation State and the Origin of Sintering-Resistance

Glen A. Ferguson; Chunrong Yin; Gihan Kwon; Eric C. Tyo; Sungsik Lee; Jeffrey Greeley; Peter Zapol; Byeongdu Lee; Sönke Seifert; Randall E. Winans; Stefan Vajda; Larry A. Curtiss


Journal of Catalysis | 2013

Structure-Activity Relationships for Propane Oxidative Dehydrogenation by Anatase Supported Vanadium Oxide Monomers and Dimers

Lei Cheng; Glen A. Ferguson; Stan Zygmunt; Larry A. Curtiss


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Structure-specific reactivity of alumina-supported monomeric vanadium oxide species

Hack Sung Kim; Glen A. Ferguson; Lei Cheng; Stan Zygmunt; Peter C. Stair; Larry A. Curtiss

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Larry A. Curtiss

Argonne National Laboratory

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Krishnan Raghavachari

Indiana University Bloomington

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Stefan Vajda

Argonne National Laboratory

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Randall E. Winans

Argonne National Laboratory

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Byeongdu Lee

Argonne National Laboratory

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Gregg T. Beckham

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Hakim Iddir

Argonne National Laboratory

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John A. Schlueter

Argonne National Laboratory

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Jun Lu

Northwestern University

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