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Dive into the research topics where Patrick J. Roach is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick J. Roach.


Science | 2009

Complementary Active Sites Cause Size-Selective Reactivity of Aluminum Cluster Anions with Water

Patrick J. Roach; W. Hunter Woodward; A. W. Castleman; Arthur C. Reber; Shiv N. Khanna

The reactions of metal clusters with small molecules often depend on cluster size. The selectivity of oxygen reactions with aluminum cluster anions can be well described within an electronic shell model; however, not all reactions are subject to the same fundamental constraints. We observed the size selectivity of aluminum cluster anion reactions with water, which can be attributed to the dissociative chemisorption of water at specific surface sites. The reactivity depends on geometric rather than electronic shell structure. Identical arrangements of multiple active sites in Al16–, Al17–, and Al18– result in the production of H2 from water.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Multiple valence superatoms

Jose Ulises Reveles; Shiv N. Khanna; Patrick J. Roach; A. W. Castleman

We recently demonstrated that, in gas phase clusters containing aluminum and iodine atoms, an Al13 cluster behaves like a halogen atom, whereas an Al14 cluster exhibits properties analogous to an alkaline earth atom. These observations, together with our findings that Al13− is inert like a rare gas atom, have reinforced the idea that chosen clusters can exhibit chemical behaviors reminiscent of atoms in the periodic table, offering the exciting prospect of a new dimension of the periodic table formed by cluster elements, called superatoms. As the behavior of clusters can be controlled by size and composition, the superatoms offer the potential to create unique compounds with tailored properties. In this article, we provide evidence of an additional class of superatoms, namely Al7−, that exhibit multiple valences, like some of the elements in the periodic table, and hence have the potential to form stable compounds when combined with other atoms. These findings support the contention that there should be no limitation in finding clusters, which mimic virtually all members of the periodic table.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Reactivity of Aluminum Cluster Anions with Water: Origins of Reactivity and Mechanisms for H2 Release

Arthur C. Reber; Shiv N. Khanna; Patrick J. Roach; W. Hunter Woodward; A. W. Castleman

The reactivity of aluminum anion clusters with water was found to exhibit variations with size, with some clusters exhibiting negligible reactivity, others absorbing one or more water, while even others releasing H(2) with addition of multiple waters. (Roach, P.J., Woodward, W.H. et al. Science, 2009, 323, 492). Herein, we provide further details on the role of complementary active sites in the breaking of the O-H bond on the cluster. We examine the reactions of Al(n)(-) + H(2)O where n = 7-18, and show how the complementary active sites may be best identified. The clusters with active sites are found to be reactive, and clusters with barriers to reactivity have an absence of paired active sites. The role of charge in the reactivity is considered, which could account for the observed increase in reactivity at large sizes. The H(2) release in the reactivity of Al(17)(-) with multiple water molecules is also studied by comparing multiple reaction pathways, and the selective H(2) production is explained by the first water inducing a new active site. A mechanism for transferring hydroxyl groups on the surface of the cluster is also discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Al4H7− is a resilient building block for aluminum hydrogen cluster materials

Patrick J. Roach; Arthur C. Reber; Woodward Wh; Shiv N. Khanna; A. W. Castleman

The formation and oxygen etching of AlnHm− clusters are characterized in a flow reactor experiment with first-principles theoretical investigations to demonstrate the exceptional stability of Al4H7−. The origin of the preponderance of Al4H7− in the mass spectra of hydrogenated aluminum anions and its resistance to O2 etching are discussed. Al4H7− is shown to have the ability to bond with ionic partners to form stable hydrides through addition of an alkali atom [XAl4H7 (X = Li-Cs)]. An intuitive model that can predict the existence of stable hydrogenated cluster species is proposed. The potential synthetic utility of the superatom assemblies built on these units is addressed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Edge-induced active sites enhance the reactivity of large aluminum cluster anions with alcohols.

Arthur C. Reber; Patrick J. Roach; Woodward Wh; Shiv N. Khanna; A. W. Castleman

Understanding the emergence of properties from the size-selective cluster regime to larger nanoparticles is one of the principal goals of nanoscience. We have measured the size-selective reactivity of aluminum cluster anions with alcohols. All clusters with more than 20 atoms are found to be reactive, while Al11(-), Al13(-), and Al20(-) show enhanced resistance to oxidation at smaller sizes. The reactivity of aluminum cluster anions with water, methanol, and tert-butyl alcohol all exhibit patterns that require complementary active sites (Lewis acid, Lewis base) on adjacent atoms. Theoretical investigations reveal that at small sizes, the location of reactive pairs occurs on specific active sites, but at larger sizes the reactive pairs begin to accumulate on the edges between facets, marking the transition from the nonscalable size-dependent regime to the scalable regime where the nanoparticles are universally reactive.


Science | 2005

Al Cluster Superatoms as Halogens in Polyhalides and as Alkaline Earths in Iodide Salts

D. E. Bergeron; Patrick J. Roach; A. W. Castleman; N. O. Jones; Shiv N. Khanna


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2007

Spin Accommodation and Reactivity of Aluminum Based Clusters with O2

Arthur C. Reber; Shiv N. Khanna; Patrick J. Roach; William Woodward; A. Welford Castleman


Physical Review B | 2010

Crystal field effects on the reactivity of aluminum-copper cluster anions

Patrick J. Roach; W. Hunter Woodward; Arthur C. Reber; Shiv N. Khanna; A. W. Castleman


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Structural, electronic, and chemical properties of multiply iodized aluminum clusters

N. O. Jones; J. Ulises Reveles; Shiv N. Khanna; D. E. Bergeron; Patrick J. Roach; A. W. Castleman


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

Reactions of Al n I x - with Methyl Iodide: The Enhanced Stability of Al7I and the Chemical Significance of Active Centers

Denis E. Bergeron; Patrick J. Roach; A. Welford Castleman; N. O. Jones; J. Ulises Reveles; Shiv N. Khanna

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Shiv N. Khanna

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Arthur C. Reber

Virginia Commonwealth University

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A. W. Castleman

Pennsylvania State University

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A. Welford Castleman

Pennsylvania State University

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W. Hunter Woodward

Pennsylvania State University

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D. E. Bergeron

Pennsylvania State University

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J. Ulises Reveles

Virginia Commonwealth University

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N. O. Jones

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Denis E. Bergeron

Pennsylvania State University

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Jose Ulises Reveles

Virginia Commonwealth University

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