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Dive into the research topics where Renée Siegel is active.

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Featured researches published by Renée Siegel.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Enhancing the Water Stability of Al‐MIL‐101‐NH2 via Postsynthetic Modification

Thomas Wittmann; Renée Siegel; Nele Reimer; Wolfgang Milius; Norbert Stock; Jürgen Senker

The resistance of metal-organic frameworks towards water is a very critical issue concerning their practical use. Recently, it was shown for microporous MOFs that the water stability could be increased by introducing hydrophobic pendant groups. Here, we demonstrate a remarkable stabilisation of the mesoporous MOF Al-MIL-101-NH2 by postsynthetic modification with phenyl isocyanate. In this process 86 % of the amino groups were converted into phenylurea units. As a consequence, the long-term stability of Al-MIL-101-URPh in liquid water could be extended beyond a week. In water saturated atmospheres Al-MIL-101-URPh decomposed at least 12-times slower than the unfunctionalised analogue. To study the underlying processes both materials were characterised by Ar, N2 and H2 O sorption measurements, powder X-ray diffraction, thermogravimetric and chemical analysis as well as solid-state NMR and IR spectroscopy. Postsynthetic modification decreased the BET equivalent surface area from 3363 to 1555 m(2)  g(-1) for Al-MIL-101-URPh and reduced the mean diameters of the mesopores by 0.6 nm without degrading the structure significantly and reducing thermal stability. In spite of similar water uptake capacities, the relative humidity-dependent uptake of Al-MIL-101-URPh is slowed and occurs at higher relative humidity values. In combination with (1) H-(27) Al D-HMQC NMR spectroscopy experiments this favours a shielding mechanism of the Al clusters by the pendant phenyl groups and rules out pore blocking.


Langmuir | 2013

Porosity of Pillared Clays Studied by Hyperpolarized 129Xe NMR Spectroscopy and Xe Adsorption Isotherms

Caroline D. Keenan; Markus M. Herling; Renée Siegel; Nikolaus Petzold; Clifford R. Bowers; E. A. Rössler; Josef Breu; Jürgen Senker

The influence of the layer charge on the microstructure was studied for a series of three hybrid pillared interlayered clays based on the organic dication Me(2)DABCO(2+) and charge reduced synthetic fluorohectorites. To get a detailed picture of the local arrangements within the interlayer space, multinuclear solid-state NMR spectroscopy was performed in conjunction with high-resolution (129)Xe MAS NMR, temperature-dependent wide-line 1D and 2D (129)Xe NMR, and Ar/Ar(l) and Xe/Xe(l) physisorption measurements. The resulting layer charge (x) for the three samples are 0.48, 0.44, and 0.39 per formula unit (pfu). The samples exhibit BET equivalent surfaces between 150 and 220 m(2)/g and pore volumes which increase from 0.06 to 0.11 cm(3)/g while the layer charge reduces. 1D and 2D (1)H, (13)C, (19)F, and (29)Si MAS data reveal that the postsynthetic charge reduction induces regions with higher defect concentrations within the silicate layers. Although the pillars tend to avoid these defect-rich regions, a homogeneous and regular spacing of the Me(2)DABCO(2+) pillars is established. Both the Ar/Ar(l) physisorption and (129)Xe NMR measurements reveal comparable pore dimensions. The trend of the temperature-dependent wide-line (129)Xe spectra as well as the exchange in the EXSY spectra is typical for a narrow 2D pore system. (129)Xe high-resolution experiments allow for a detailed description of the microstructure. For x = 0.48 a bimodal distribution with pore diameters between 5.9 and 6.4 Å is observed. Reducing the layer charge leads to a more homogeneous pore structure with a mean diameter of 6.6 Å (x = 0.39). The adsorption enthalpies ΔH(ads) determined from the temperature-dependent (129)Xe chemical shift data fit well to the ones derived from the Xe/Xe(l) physisorption measurements in the high-pressure limit while the magnitude of ΔH(ads) in the low-pressure limit is significantly larger. Thus, the (129)Xe data are influenced by adsorbate-adsorbent as well as adsorbate-adsorbate interactions.


CrystEngComm | 2014

Influence of fluorine side-group substitution on the crystal structure formation of benzene-1,3,5-trisamides

Christoph S. Zehe; Marko Schmidt; Renée Siegel; Klaus Kreger; Venita Daebel; Sandra Ganzleben; Hans-Werner Schmidt; Jürgen Senker

By a combination of powder X-ray diffraction, multidimensional and multinuclear solid-state NMR spectroscopy and quantum chemical calculations, we were able to determine the crystal structure of 1,3,5-tris(2-fluoro-2-methylpropionylamino)benzene. Solid-state NMR experiments guided the structure solution by predicting the content of the asymmetric unit and the presence of a NH⋯OC hydrogen bond network. In addition to real-space structure solution and Rietveld refinement, quantitative symmetry-based 19F19F double-quantum recoupling experiments provided a cost function to determine the positions of the methyl groups and fluorine atoms. The structure solution of this particular fluorine-substituted trisamide illustrates the impact of fluorine side-group substitution on the common columnar packing motif of benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxamides. As also in the case 1,3,5-tris(2,2-dimethylpropionylamino)benzene, the supramolecular aggregation is then guided by the formation of triple helical NH⋯OC hydrogen bond networks within the individual columns. In contrast, the substitution of one methyl group by a fluorine atom in each side chain results in a two-dimensional NH⋯OC hydrogen bond pattern, leading to a lamellar crystal structure with only van der Waals interactions between the layers. Since fluorine is not involved in the hydrogen bond network and both chemical units exhibit a similar steric demand, the fundamental differences of the packing are most probably caused by changes in the molecular polarity.


CrystEngComm | 2013

NMR-crystallographic study of two-dimensionally self-assembled cyclohexane-based low-molecular-mass organic compounds

Marko Schmidt; Christoph S. Zehe; Renée Siegel; Johannes U. Heigl; Christoph Steinlein; Hans-Werner Schmidt; Jürgen Senker

Using a combined approach based on scanning electron microscopy, powder X-ray diffraction as well as 1D and 2D multinuclear solid-state NMR spectroscopy, we were able to determine the morphology and the crystal structures for a set of three supramolecular compounds with different hydrogen bonding motifs, namely N,N′-(cyclohexane-trans-1,4-diyl)bis(2,2-dimethylpropanamide) 1, 1,1′-(cyclohexane-trans-1,4-diyl)bis(3-tert-butylurea) 2 and N1,N4-bis(tert-butylcarbamoyl)cyclohexane-trans-1,4-dicarboxamide 3. Based on a complete signal assignment of the 1D solid-state MAS NMR spectra (1H, 13C, 15N) employing 2D HETCOR experiments and a quantitative evaluation of the corresponding resonances, the content of the asymmetric unit was determined to one half of a molecule. Probing the molecular configuration with 1H–1H double-quantum experiments revealed an intramolecular hydrogen bond for compound 3 while 1 and 2 form exclusively intermolecular H-bonds. Ab initio structure solutions applying real space methods with an included close-contact penalty were carried out for all compounds. The following Rietveld refinements led to excellent wRp-values between 2.5% and 4.1%. Compounds 1 and 2 crystallise isostructurally in the monoclinic space group P21/c exhibiting a pseudo-biaxial hydrogen bond motif. 3 crystallises in the triclinic space group P with intermolecular head-to-tail hydrogen bonds connecting the molecules to one-dimensional ribbons. Nevertheless, all compounds grow in a sheet-like morphology with lateral dimensions of several hundred micrometres indicating a fast growth in two dimensions along two of the crystal axes. Since all three molecules possess inversion symmetry cancelling the molecular dipole moment the growth mechanism itself has to be dominantly driven by the formation of hydrogen bond networks.


Langmuir | 2017

Two-Step Delamination of Highly Charged, Vermiculite-like Layered Silicates via Ordered Heterostructures

Matthias Daab; Sabine Rosenfeldt; Hussein Kalo; Matthias Stöter; Beate Bojer; Renée Siegel; Stephan Förster; Jürgen Senker; Josef Breu

Because of strong Coulomb interactions, the delamination of charged layered materials becomes progressively more difficult with increasing charge density. For instance, highly charged sodium fluorohectorite (Na0.6Mg2.4Li0.6Si4O10F2, Na-Hec) cannot be delaminated directly by osmotic swelling in water because its layer charge exceeds the established limit for osmotic swelling of 0.55 per formula unit Si4O10F2. Quite surprisingly, we found that this hectorite at the border of the smectite and vermiculite group can, however, be utterly delaminated into 1-nm-thick platelets with a high aspect ratio (24 000) in a two-step process. The hectorite is first converted by partial ion exchange into a one-dimensionally ordered, interstratified heterostructure with strictly alternating Na+ and n-butylammonium (C4) interlayers. This heterostructure then spontaneously delaminates into uniform single layers upon immersion in water whereas neither of the homoionic phases (Na-Hec and C4-Hec) swells osmotically. The delamination of more highly charged synthetic layered silicates is a key step to push the aspect ratio beyond the current limits.


ACS Omega | 2017

Understanding the Formation of CaAl2Si2O8 in Melilite-Based Glass-Ceramics: Combined Diffraction and Spectroscopic Studies

Amarnath R. Allu; Sathravada Balaji; Dilshat U. Tulyaganov; Glenn C. Mather; Fabian Margit; Maria J. Pascual; Renée Siegel; Wolfgang Milius; Jürgen Senker; D. A. Agarkov; V. V. Kharton; J.M.F. Ferreira

An assessment is undertaken for the formation of anorthite crystalline phase in a melilite-based glass composition (CMAS: 38.7CaO–9.7MgO–12.9Al2O3–38.7SiO2 mol %), used as a sealing material in solid oxide fuel cells, in view of the detrimental effect of anorthite on the sealing properties. Several advanced characterization techniques are employed to assess the material after prolonged heat treatment, including neutron powder diffraction (ND), X-ray powder diffraction (XRD), 29Si and 27Al magic-angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS-NMR), and in situ Raman spectroscopy. ND, 29Si MAS-NMR, and 27Al MAS-NMR results revealed that both Si and Al adopt tetrahedral coordination and participate in the formation of the network structure. In situ XRD measurements for the CMAS glass demonstrate the thermal stability of the glass structure up to 850 °C. Further heat treatment up to 900 °C initiates the precipitation of melilite, a solid solution of akermanite/gehlenite crystalline phase. Qualitative XRD data for glass-ceramics (GCs) produced after heat treatment at 850 °C for 500 h revealed the presence of anorthite along with the melilite crystalline phase. Rietveld refinement of XRD data indicated a high fraction of glassy phase (∼67%) after the formation of crystalline phases. The 29Si MAS-NMR spectra for the CMAS-GC suggest the presence of structural units in the remaining glassy phase with a polymerization degree higher than dimer units, whereas the 27Al MAS-NMR spectra revealed that most Al3+ cations exhibit a 4-fold coordination. In situ Raman spectroscopy data indicate that the formation of anorthite crystalline phase initiated after 240 h of heat treatment at 850 °C owing to the interaction between the gehlenite crystals and the remaining glassy phase.


Solid State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance | 2015

Influence of proton coupling on symmetry-based homonuclear 19F dipolar recoupling experiments

Christoph S. Zehe; Renée Siegel; Jürgen Senker

We study the efficiency of two symmetry based homonuclear (19)F double-quantum recoupling sequences for moderate (R142(6)) and ultra-fast (R144(5)) MAS under the influence of strong (1)H-(1)H and (1)H-(19)F dipolar interactions and (1)H continuous wave decoupling. Simulations based on various spin systems derived from the organic solid 1,3,5-tris(2-fluoro-2-methylpropionylamino)benzene (F-BTA), used as a model system, reveal that the strong-decoupling limit is not accessible even for moderate spinning speeds. Additionally, for the no-decoupling limit improved DQ efficiencies are predicted for both moderate and ultra-fast MAS. Strong perturbations of build-up curves can be avoided by additional stabilisation through supercycling. Additional (1)H cw decoupling during (19)F recoupling rapidly reduces the maximum DQ efficiency when deviating from the no-decoupling limit. These effects were confirmed by experimental data on F-BTA. For moderate spinning the influence of (1)H-(1)H and (1)H-(19)F couplings is markedly stronger compared to ultra-fast MAS. For the latter case those influences reduce to a constant scaling if only short excitation times up to the first minimum are taken into account. Based on this analysis the experimental build-up curves of 1,3,5-tris(2-fluoro-2-methylpropionylamino)benzene can be refined with homonuclear (19)F spin systems which allow to probe even subtle structural differences for the fluorine atoms of F-BTA.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Probing Interactions of N-Donor Molecules with Open Metal Sites within Paramagnetic Cr-MIL-101 – A Solid-State NMR Spectroscopic and DFT Study

Thomas Wittmann; Arobendo Mondal; Carsten B. L. Tschense; Johannes J. Wittmann; Ottokar Klimm; Renée Siegel; Björn Corzilius; Birgit Weber; Martin Kaupp; Juergen Senker

Understanding host-guest interactions is one of the key requirements for adjusting properties in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). In particular, systems with coordinatively unsaturated Lewis acidic metal sites feature highly selective adsorption processes. This is attributed to strong interactions with Lewis basic guest molecules. Here we show that a combination of 13C MAS NMR spectroscopy with state-of-the-art density functional theory (DFT) calculations allows one to unravel the interactions of water, 2-aminopyridine, 3-aminopyridine, and diethylamine with the open metal sites in Cr-MIL-101. The 13C MAS NMR spectra, obtained with ultrafast magic-angle spinning, are well resolved, with resonances distributed over 1000 ppm. They present a clear signature for each guest at the open metal sites. Based on competition experiments this leads to the following binding preference: water < diethylamine ≈ 2-aminopyridine < 3-aminopyridine. Assignments were done by exploiting distance sum relations derived from spin-lattice relaxation data and 13C{1H} REDOR spectral editing. The experimental data were used to validate NMR shifts computed for the Cr-MIL-101 derivatives, which contain Cr3O clusters with magnetically coupled metal centers. While both approaches provide an unequivocal assignment and the arrangement of the guests at the open metal sites, the NMR data offer additional information about the guest and framework dynamics. We expect that our strategy has the potential for probing the binding situation of adsorbate mixtures at the open metal sites of MOFs in general and thus accesses the microscopic interaction mechanisms for this important material class, which is essential for deriving structure-property relationships.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2018

Structure and Crystallization of Alkaline-Earth Aluminosilicate Glasses: Prevention of the Alumina-Avoidance Principle

Amarnath R. Allu; Anuraag Gaddam; Sudheer Ganisetti; Sathravada Balaji; Renée Siegel; Glenn C. Mather; Margit Fabian; Maria J. Pascual; Nicoletta Ditaranto; Wolfgang Milius; Jürgen Senker; D. A. Agarkov; V. V. Kharton; J.M.F. Ferreira

Aluminosilicate glasses are considered to follow the Al-avoidance principle, which states that Al-O-Al linkages are energetically less favorable, such that, if there is a possibility for Si-O-Al linkages to occur in a glass composition, Al-O-Al linkages are not formed. The current paper shows that breaching of the Al-avoidance principle is essential for understanding the distribution of network-forming AlO4 and SiO4 structural units in alkaline-earth aluminosilicate glasses. The present study proposes a new modified random network (NMRN) model, which accepts Al-O-Al linkages for aluminosilicate glasses. The NMRN model consists of two regions, a network structure region (NS-Region) composed of well-separated homonuclear and heteronuclear framework species and a channel region (C-Region) of nonbridging oxygens (NBOs) and nonframework cations. The NMRN model accounts for the structural changes and devitrification behavior of aluminosilicate glasses. A parent Ca- and Al-rich melilite-based CaO-MgO-Al2O3-SiO2 (CMAS) glass composition was modified by substituting MgO for CaO and SiO2 for Al2O3 to understand variations in the distribution of network-forming structural units in the NS-region and devitrification behavior upon heat treating. The structural features of the glass and glass-ceramics (GCs) were meticulously assessed by advanced characterization techniques including neutron diffraction (ND), powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), 29Si and 27Al magic angle spinning (MAS)-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and in situ Raman spectroscopy. ND revealed the formation of SiO4 and AlO4 tetrahedral units in all the glass compositions. Simulations of chemical glass compositions based on deconvolution of 29Si MAS NMR spectral analysis indicate the preferred formation of Si-O-Al over Si-O-Si and Al-O-Al linkages and the presence of a high concentration of nonbridging oxygens leading to the formation of a separate NS-region containing both SiO4 and AlO4 tetrahedra (Si/Al) (heteronuclear) in addition to the presence of Al[4]-O-Al[4] bonds; this region coexists with a predominantly SiO4-containing (homonuclear) NS-region. In GCs, obtained after heat treatment at 850 °C for 250 h, the formation of crystalline phases, as revealed from Rietveld refinement of XRD data, may be understood on the basis of the distribution of SiO4 and AlO4 structural units in the NS-region. The in situ Raman spectra of the GCs confirmed the formation of a Si/Al structural region, as well as indicating interaction between the Al/Si region and SiO4-rich region at higher temperatures, leading to the formation of additional crystalline phases.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2018

Two-site jumps in dimethyl sulfone studied by one- and two-dimensional 17O NMR spectroscopy

J. Beerwerth; Michael Storek; Dominik Greim; J. Lueg; Renée Siegel; B. Cetinkaya; Wolf Hiller; Herbert Zimmermann; Jürgen Senker; Roland Böhmer

Polycrystalline dimethyl sulfone is studied using central-transition oxygen-17 exchange NMR. The quadrupolar and chemical shift tensors are determined by combining quantum chemical calculations with line shape analyses of rigid-lattice spectra measured for stationary and rotating samples at several external magnetic fields. Quantum chemical computations predict that the largest principal axes of the chemical shift anisotropy and electrical field gradient tensors enclose an angle of about 73°. This prediction is successfully tested by comparison with absorption spectra recorded at three different external magnetic fields. The experimental one-dimensional motionally narrowed spectra and the two-dimensional exchange spectrum are compatible with model calculations involving jumps of the molecules about their two-fold symmetry axis. This motion is additionally investigated by means of two-time stimulated-echo spectroscopy which allows for a determination of motional correlation functions over a wider temperature range than previously reported using carbon and deuteron NMR. On the basis of suitable second-order quadrupolar frequency distributions, sin-sin stimulated-echo amplitudes are calculated for a two-site model in the limit of vanishing evolution time and compared with experimental findings. The present study thus establishes oxygen-17 NMR as a powerful method that will be particularly useful for the study of solids and liquids devoid of nuclei governed by first-order anisotropies.

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Josef Breu

University of Bayreuth

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