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Dive into the research topics where Guo Shiou Foo is active.

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Featured researches published by Guo Shiou Foo.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2011

How carboxylic groups improve the performance of single-walled carbon nanotube electrochemical capacitors?

Jianmin Shen; Andong Liu; Yu Tu; Guo Shiou Foo; Chunboon Yeo; Mary B. Chan-Park; Rongrong Jiang; Yuan Chen

Single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNTs) is a promising material candidate for fabricating high-performance electrodes in electrochemical capacitors. An intriguing question is what are the key material characteristics of SWCNTs that influence the performance of SWCNT-based capacitors? We grafted SWCNTs with different amounts of carboxylic groups by a surfactant free method. Their density was quantified using a fluorescence labeling method, ranging from 7.3 to 353.2 nmol m−2. SWCNTs were also characterized by scanning electron microscope, N2 physisorption, ultraviolet-visible-near-infrared absorption, Fourier transform infrared, Raman, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Functionalized SWCNTs show a minor increase in their microspores and mesopores volume, and the total surface area stays ∼322.8 m2 g−1. We correlated SWCNT physiochemical properties with the performance of assembled two-electrode SWCNT capacitors. The specific capacitance, power density and energy density increase with increasing carboxylic group density, reaching the maximum at 146.1 F g−1, 308.8 kW kg−1 and 13.0 Wh kg−1 at the density of ∼250–350 nmol m−2. Potentiostatic electrochemical impedance spectroscopy analysis reveals that introducing an appropriate concentration of carboxylic groups plays two key roles: (1) it decreases the surface resistivity of SWCNT films, thus significantly reducing the equivalent series resistances of capacitors and (2) it enhances the surface wettability of SWCNTs, which not only offers more accessible sites for the physisorption of free electrolyte ions on SWCNT surfaces, but also increases ionic conductivity at electrode–electrolyte interfaces. These results and analysis provide a fundamental understanding of the effect of functionalization on the performance of SWCNT-based electrochemical capacitors, and shed light on a pathway by which electrochemical capacitors can be further improved for practical applications.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Important Roles of Enthalpic and Entropic Contributions to CO2 Capture from Simulated Flue Gas and Ambient Air Using Mesoporous Silica Grafted Amines

Mustafa A. Alkhabbaz; Praveen Bollini; Guo Shiou Foo; Carsten Sievers; Christopher W. Jones

The measurement of isosteric heats of adsorption of silica supported amine materials in the low pressure range (0-0.1 bar) is critical for understanding the interactions between CO2 and amine sites at low coverage and hence to the development of efficient amine adsorbents for CO2 capture from flue gas and ambient air. Heats of adsorption for an array of silica-supported amine materials are experimentally measured at low coverage using a Calvet calorimeter equipped with a customized dosing manifold. In a series of 3-aminopropyl-functionalized silica materials, higher amine densities resulted in higher isosteric heats of adsorption, clearly showing that the density/proximity of amine sites can influence the amine efficiency of adsorbents. In a series of materials with fixed amine loading but different amine types, strongly basic primary and secondary amine materials are shown to have essentially identical heats of adsorption near 90 kJ/mol. However, the adsorption uptakes vary substantially as a function of CO2 partial pressure for different primary and secondary amines, demonstrating that entropic contributions to adsorption may play a key role in adsorption at secondary amine sites, making adsorption at these sites less efficient at the low coverages that are important to the direct capture of CO2 from ambient air. Thus, while primary amines are confirmed to be the most effective amine types for CO2 capture from ambient air, this is not due to enhanced enthalpic contributions associated with primary amines over secondary amines, but may be due to unfavorable entropic factors associated with organization of the second alkyl chain on the secondary amine during CO2 adsorption. Given this hypothesis, favorable entropic factors may be the main reason primary amine based adsorbents are more effective under air capture conditions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Effect of Amine Surface Coverage on the Co-Adsorption of CO2 and Water: Spectral Deconvolution of Adsorbed Species

Stephanie A. Didas; Miles A. Sakwa-Novak; Guo Shiou Foo; Carsten Sievers; Christopher W. Jones

Three primary amine materials functionalized onto mesoporous silica with low, medium, and high surface amine coverages are prepared and evaluated for binary CO2/H2O adsorption under dilute conditions. Enhancement of amine efficiency due to humid adsorption is most pronounced for low surface amine coverage materials. In situ FT-IR spectra of adsorbed CO2 on these materials suggest this enhancement may be associated with the formation of bicarbonate species during adsorption on materials with low surface amine coverage, though such species are not observed on high surface coverage materials. On the materials with the lowest amine loading, bicarbonate is observed on longer time scales of adsorption, but only after spectral contributions from rapidly forming alkylammonium carbamate species are removed. This is the first time that direct evidence for bicarbonate formation, which is known to occur in liquid aqueous amine solutions, has been presented for CO2 adsorption on solid amine adsorbents.


Chemsuschem | 2015

Synergistic Effect between Defect Sites and Functional Groups on the Hydrolysis of Cellulose over Activated Carbon

Guo Shiou Foo; Carsten Sievers

The chemical oxidation of activated carbon by H2 O2 and H2 SO4 is investigated, structural and chemical modifications are characterized, and the materials are used as catalysts for the hydrolysis of cellulose. Treatment with H2 O2 enlarges the pore size and imparts functional groups such as phenols, lactones, and carboxylic acids. H2 SO4 treatment targets the edges of carbon sheets primarily, and this effect is more pronounced with a higher temperature. Adsorption isotherms demonstrate that the adsorption of oligomers on functionalized carbon is dominated by van der Waals forces. The materials treated chemically are active for the hydrolysis of cellulose despite the relative weakness of most of their acid sites. It is proposed that a synergistic effect between defect sites and functional groups enhances the activity by inducing a conformational change in the glucan chains if they are adsorbed at defect sites. This activates the glycosidic bonds for hydrolysis by in-plane functional groups.


Chemsuschem | 2017

Elucidation of Surface Species through in Situ FTIR Spectroscopy of Carbon Dioxide Adsorption on Amine-Grafted SBA-15

Guo Shiou Foo; Jason J. Lee; Chia-Hsin Chen; Sophia E. Hayes; Carsten Sievers; Christopher W. Jones

The nature of the surface species formed through the adsorption of CO2 on amine-grafted mesoporous silica is investigated through in situ FTIR spectroscopy with the aid of 15 N dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) and 13 C NMR spectroscopy. Primary, secondary, and tertiary amines are functionalized onto a mesoporous SBA-15 silica. Both isotopically labeled 13 CO2 and natural-abundance CO2 are used for accurate FTIR peak assignments, which are compared with assignments reported previously. The results support the formation of monomeric and dimeric carbamic acid species on secondary amines that are stabilized differently to the monocarbamic acid species on primary amines. Furthermore, the results from isotopically labelled 13 CO2 experiments suggest the existence of two carbamate species on primary amines, whereas only one species is observed predominantly on secondary amines. The analysis of the IR peak intensities and frequencies indicate that the second carbamate species on primary amines is probably more asymmetric in nature and forms in a relatively smaller amount. Only the formation of bicarbonate ions at a low concentration is observed on tertiary amines; therefore, physisorbed water on the surface plays a role in the hydrolysis of CO2 even if water is not added intentionally and dry gases are used. This suggests that a small amount of bicarbonate ions could be expected to form on primary and secondary amines, which are more hydrophilic than tertiary amines, and these low concentration species are difficult to observe on such samples.


Nature Communications | 2017

Taming interfacial electronic properties of platinum nanoparticles on vacancy-abundant boron nitride nanosheets for enhanced catalysis

Wenshuai Zhu; Zili Wu; Guo Shiou Foo; Xiang Gao; Mingxia Zhou; Bin Liu; Gabriel M. Veith; Peiwen Wu; Katie L. Browning; Ho Nyung Lee; Huaming Li; Sheng Dai; Huiyuan Zhu

Taming interfacial electronic effects on Pt nanoparticles modulated by their concomitants has emerged as an intriguing approach to optimize Pt catalytic performance. Here, we report Pt nanoparticles assembled on vacancy-abundant hexagonal boron nitride nanosheets and their use as a model catalyst to embrace an interfacial electronic effect on Pt induced by the nanosheets with N-vacancies and B-vacancies for superior CO oxidation catalysis. Experimental results indicate that strong interaction exists between Pt and the vacancies. Bader charge analysis shows that with Pt on B-vacancies, the nanosheets serve as a Lewis acid to accept electrons from Pt, and on the contrary, when Pt sits on N-vacancies, the nanosheets act as a Lewis base for donating electrons to Pt. The overall-electronic effect demonstrates an electron-rich feature of Pt after assembling on hexagonal boron nitride nanosheets. Such an interfacial electronic effect makes Pt favour the adsorption of O2, alleviating CO poisoning and promoting the catalysis.


Chemsuschem | 2014

Aminosilanes Grafted to Basic Alumina as CO2 Adsorbents—Role of Grafting Conditions on CO2 Adsorption Properties

Sumit Bali; Johannes Leisen; Guo Shiou Foo; Carsten Sievers; Christopher W. Jones

Solid oxide-supported amine sorbents for CO2 capture are amongst the most rapidly developing classes of sorbent materials for CO2 capture. Herein, basic γ supports are used as hosts for amine sites through the grafting of 3-aminopropyltrimethoxysilane to the alumina surface under a variety of conditions, yielding the expected surface-grafted alkylamine groups, as demonstrated by FTIR spectroscopy and (29)Si and (13)C cross-polarization magic-angle spinning (CPMAS NMR) spectroscopy. Grafting amine sites on the surface in the presence of water leads to a high density of amine sites on the surface whereas simultaneously creating a unique type of aluminum species on the surface, as demonstrated by both 1D and 2D (27)Al MAS NMR spectroscopy. The thus prepared sorbents result in higher CO2 adsorption capacities and amine efficiencies compared to sorbents prepared in the absence of water or similar amine loading sorbents prepared using silica supports. In situ FTIR spectra of the sorbents exposed to CO2 at various pressures show no distinct difference in the nature of the adsorbed CO2 species on alumina- versus silica-supported amines, whereas water adsorption isotherms show that the improved performance of the amine-grafted alumina support is not a consequence of retained water on the more hydrophobic aminoalumina materials. The findings demonstrate that amine-grafted, basic alumina materials can be tuned to be more efficient than the corresponding silica-supported materials at comparable amine loadings, further demonstrating that the properties of amine sites can be tuned by controlling or adjusting the support surface properties.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Understanding DABCO Nanorotor Dynamics in Isostructural Metal-Organic Frameworks

Nicholas C. Burtch; Ariana Torres-Knoop; Guo Shiou Foo; Johannes Leisen; Carsten Sievers; Bernd Ensing; David Dubbeldam; Krista S. Walton

Flexible framework dynamics present in the subset of metal-organic frameworks known as soft porous crystals give rise to interesting structural properties that are unique to this class of materials. In this work, we use experiments and molecular simulation to understand the highly dynamic nanorotor behavior of the 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (DABCO) ligand in the pillared Zn-DMOF and Zn-DMOF-TM (TM = tetramethyl) structures. While DABCO is known to be displaced in the presence of water in the parent Zn-DMOF structure, the Zn-DMOF-TM variation is highly stable even after adsorbing significant amounts of water vapor. The dynamics of DABCO in the presence of water guest molecules is therefore also explored in the Zn-DMOF-TM structure via in situ NMR and IR experiments. This analysis shows that the rotational motion of the DABCO linkers is dependent on water content, but not a likely source of water instability because the dynamics are fast and largely unaffected by the presence of methyl functional groups.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Direct Neutron Spectroscopy Observation of Cerium Hydride Species on a Cerium Oxide Catalyst

Zili Wu; Franklin Feng Tao; Luke L. Daemen; Guo Shiou Foo; Luan Nguyen; Xiaoyan Zhang; Ariana Beste; Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta

Ceria has recently shown intriguing hydrogenation reactivity in catalyzing alkyne selectively to alkenes. However, the mechanism of the hydrogenation reaction, especially the activation of H2, remains experimentally elusive. In this work, we report the first direct spectroscopy evidence for the presence of both surface and bulk Ce-H species upon H2 dissociation over ceria via in situ inelastic neutron scattering spectroscopy. Combined with in situ ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, IR, and Raman spectroscopic studies, the results together point to a heterolytic dissociation mechanism of H2 over ceria, leading to either homolytic products (surface OHs) on a close-to-stoichiometric ceria surface or heterolytic products (Ce-H and OH) with the presence of induced oxygen vacancies in ceria. The finding of this work has significant implications for understanding catalysis by ceria in both hydrogenation and redox reactions where hydrogen is involved.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Controlling Reaction Selectivity through the Surface Termination of Perovskite Catalysts

Felipe Polo-Garzon; Shize Yang; Victor Fung; Guo Shiou Foo; Elizabeth E. Bickel; Matthew F. Chisholm; De-en Jiang; Zili Wu

Although perovskites have been widely used in catalysis, tuning of their surface termination to control reaction selectivity has not been well established. In this study, we employed multiple surface-sensitive techniques to characterize the surface termination (one aspect of surface reconstruction) of SrTiO3 (STO) after thermal pretreatment (Sr enrichment) and chemical etching (Ti enrichment). We show, by using the conversion of 2-propanol as a probe reaction, that the surface termination of STO can be controlled to greatly tune catalytic acid/base properties and consequently the reaction selectivity over a wide range, which is not possible with single-metal oxides, either SrO or TiO2 . Density functional theory (DFT) calculations explain well the selectivity tuning and reaction mechanism on STO with different surface termination. Similar catalytic tunability was also observed on BaZrO3 , thus highlighting the generality of the findings of this study.

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Carsten Sievers

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Zili Wu

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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De-en Jiang

University of California

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Christopher W. Jones

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Felipe Polo-Garzon

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Matthew M. Yung

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Sheng Dai

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Victor Fung

University of California

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Allyson K. Rogers

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Chaitanya K. Narula

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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