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Dive into the research topics where Sufian Alnemrat is active.

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Featured researches published by Sufian Alnemrat.


Langmuir | 2011

Adsorption of Ethane, Ethylene, Propane, and Propylene on a Magnesium-Based Metal–Organic Framework

Zongbi Bao; Sufian Alnemrat; Liang Yu; Igor Vasiliev; Qilong Ren; Xiuyang Lu; Shuguang Deng

Separation of olefin/paraffin is an energy-intensive and difficult separation process in petrochemical industry. Energy-efficient adsorption process is considered as a promising alternative to the traditional cryogenic distillation for separating olefin/paraffin mixtures. In this work, we explored the feasibility of adsorptive separation of olefin/paraffin mixtures using a magnesium-based metal-organic framework, Mg-MOF-74. Adsorption equilibria and kinetics of ethane, ethylene, propane, and propylene on a Mg-MOF-74 adsorbent were determined at 278, 298, and 318 K and pressures up to 100 kPa. A dual-site Sips model was used to correlate the adsorption equilibrium data, and a micropore diffusion model was applied to extract the diffusivities from the adsorption kinetics data. A grand canonical Monte Carlo simulation was conducted to calculate the adsorption isotherms and to elucidate the adsorption mechanisms. The simulation results showed that all four adsorbate molecules are preferentially adsorbed on the open metal sites where each metal site binds one adsorbate molecule. Propylene and propane have a stronger affinity to the Mg-MOF-74 adsorbent than ethane and ethylene because of their significant dipole moments. Adsorption equilibrium selectivity, combined equilibrium and kinetic selectivity, and adsorbent selection parameter for pressure swing adsorption processes were estimated. The relatively high values of adsorption selectivity suggest that it is feasible to separate ethylene/ethane, propylene/propane, and propylene/ethylene pairs in a vacuum swing adsorption process using Mg-MOF-74 as an adsorbent.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

A temperature-mapping molecular sensor for polyurethane-based elastomers

Brian P. Mason; M. Whittaker; James R. Hemmer; S. Arora; A. Harper; Sufian Alnemrat; A. McEachen; Sameh Helmy; J. Read de Alaniz; Joseph P. Hooper

We present a crosslinked polyurethane elastomer featuring a thermochromic molecular sensor for local temperature analysis. The thermochrome is a modified donor-acceptor Stenhouse adduct (DASA) that was dispersed homogeneously into the polymer blend in minuscule amounts. Rapid temperature jump measurements in a pyroprobe and impacts in a Hopkinson bar show that the DASA has suitable kinetics for detecting localized temperature increase following impact or rapid heating. The thermochrome retains a signature of the peak temperature in the elastomer, allowing post-mortem mapping of micron-scale temperature localization in materials such as explosive and propellant composites. We demonstrate the concept by using the kinetics of the DASA activation to determine peak temperatures reached during bullet perforation of the polyurethane.


Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Elucidation of the Fe(III) Gallate Structure in Historical Iron Gall Ink

Aldo Ponce; Lynn B. Brostoff; Sarah K. Gibbons; Peter Y. Zavalij; Carol Viragh; Joseph P. Hooper; Sufian Alnemrat; Karen Gaskell; Bryan W. Eichhorn

Synthetic, structural, spectroscopic and aging studies conclusively show that the main colorant of historical iron gall ink (IGI) is an amorphous form of Fe(III) gallate·xH2O (x = ∼1.5-3.2). Comparisons between experimental samples and historical documents, including an 18th century hand-written manuscript by George Washington, by IR and Raman spectroscopy, XRD, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and Mössbauer spectroscopy confirm the relationship between the model and authentic samples. These studies settle controversy in the cultural heritage field, where an alternative structure for Fe(III) gallate has been commonly cited.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Oxidation of ligand-protected aluminum clusters: an ab initio molecular dynamics study.

Sufian Alnemrat; Joseph P. Hooper

We report Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics simulations of the oxidation of ligand-protected aluminum clusters that form a prototypical cluster-assembled material. These clusters contain a small aluminum core surrounded by a monolayer of organic ligand. The aromatic cyclopentadienyl ligands form a strong bond with surface Al atoms, giving rise to an organometallic cluster that crystallizes into a low-symmetry solid and is briefly stable in air before oxidizing. Our calculations of isolated aluminum/cyclopentadienyl clusters reacting with oxygen show minimal reaction between the ligand and O2 molecules at simulation temperatures of 500 and 1000 K. In all cases, the reaction pathway involves O2 diffusing through the ligand barrier, splitting into atomic oxygen upon contact with the aluminum, and forming an oxide cluster with aluminum/ligand bonds still largely intact. Loss of individual aluminum-ligand units, as expected from unimolecular decomposition calculations, is not observed except following significant oxidation. These calculations highlight the role of the ligand in providing a steric barrier against oxidizers and in maintaining the large aluminum surface area of the solid-state cluster material.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Predicting Temperature-Dependent Solid Vapor Pressures of Explosives and Related Compounds Using a Quantum Mechanical Continuum Solvation Model

Sufian Alnemrat; Joseph P. Hooper

Temperature-dependent vapor pressures of solid explosives and their byproducts are calculated to an accuracy of 0.32 log units using a modified form of the conductor-like screening model for real solvents (COSMO-RS). Accurate predictions for solids within COSMO-RS require correction for the free energy of fusion as well as other effects such as van der Waals interactions. Limited experimental data on explosives is available to determine these corrections, and thus we have extended the COSMO-RS model by introducing a quantitative structure-property relationship to estimate a lumped correction factor using only information from standard quantum chemistry calculations. This modification improves the COSMO-RS estimate of ambient vapor pressure by more than 1 order of magnitude for a range of nitrogen-rich explosives and their derivatives, bringing the theoretical predictions to within typical experimental error bars for vapor pressure measurements. The estimated temperature dependence of these vapor pressures also agrees well with available experimental data, which is particularly important for estimating environmental transport and gas evolution for buried explosives or environmentally contaminated locations. This technique is then used to predict vapor pressures for a number of explosives and degradation products for which experimental data is not readily available.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Ab initio metadynamics simulations of oxygen/ligand interactions in organoaluminum clusters

Sufian Alnemrat; Joseph P. Hooper

Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics combined with a metadynamics algorithm is used to study the initial interaction of O2 with the low-valence organoaluminum clusters Al4Cp4 (Cp=C5H5) and Al4Cp4* (Cp*=C5[CH3]5). Prior to reaction with the aluminum core, simulations suggest that the oxygen undergoes a hindered crossing of the steric barrier presented by the outer ligand monolayer. A combination of two collective variables based on aluminum/oxygen distance and lateral oxygen displacement was found to produce distinct reactant, product, and transition states for this process. In the methylated cluster with Cp* ligands, a broad transition state of 45 kJ/mol was observed due to direct steric interactions with the ligand groups and considerable oxygen reorientation. In the non-methylated cluster the ligands distort away from the oxidizer, resulting in a barrier of roughly 34 kJ/mol with minimal O2 reorientation. A study of the oxygen/cluster system fixed in a triplet multiplicity suggests that the spin state does not affect the initial steric interaction with the ligands. The metadynamics approach appears to be a promising means of analyzing the initial steps of such oxidation reactions for ligand-protected clusters.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Adsorption of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene on the ZnO (21¯1¯0) surface: A density functional theory study of the detection mechanism of ZnO nanowire chemiresistors

Sufian Alnemrat; Gary T. Brett; Joseph P. Hooper

We report first-principles calculations of the adsorption of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), a prototypical nitroaromatic explosive, on the ZnO (21¯1¯0) surface. This surface is common among ZnO chemiresistors being considered for trace explosive detection. Recent work has achieved 60 ppb detection of TNT using a ZnO nanowire array, but the physical mechanism of sensing is unclear. Our results indicate that TNT strongly chemisorbs via interactions between the oxygen on the nitro groups and surface zinc, creating surface states within the gap. We present a theoretical estimate showing the strong effect of these surface states on the depletion layer of ZnO nanowires.


Small | 2014

Electronic Property Modification of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes by Encapsulation of Sulfur-Terminated Graphene Nanoribbons

Andrew Pollack; Sufian Alnemrat; Thomas W. Chamberlain; Andrei N. Khlobystov; Joseph P. Hooper; Sebastian Osswald

The use of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as cylindrical reactor vessels has become a viable means for synthesizing graphene nanoribbons (GNRs). While previous studies demonstrated that the size and edge structure of the as-produced GNRs are strongly dependent on the diameter of the tubes and the nature of the precursor, the atomic interactions between GNRs and surrounding CNTs and their effect on the electronic properties of the overall system are not well understood. Here, it is shown that the functional terminations of the GNR edges can have a strong influence on the electronic structure of the system. Analysis of SWCNTs before and after the insertion of sulfur-terminated GNRs suggests a metallization of the majority of semiconducting SWCNTs. This is indicated by changes in the radial breathing modes and the D and G band Raman features, as well as UV-vis-NIR absorption spectra. The variation in resonance conditions of the nanotubes following GNR insertion make direct (n,m) assignment by Raman spectroscopy difficult. Thus, density functional theory calculations of representative GNR/SWCNT systems are performed. The results confirm significant changes in the band structure, including the development of a metallic state in the semiconducting SWCNTs due to sulfur/tube interactions. The GNR-induced metallization of semiconducting SWCNTs may offer a means of controlling the electronic properties of bulk CNT samples and eliminate the need for a physical separation of semiconducting and metallic tubes.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2014

Quantum molecular dynamics simulations of the oxidation of aluminum-cyclopentadienyl clusters

Sufian Alnemrat; Joseph P. Hooper

We report Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics simulations of the oxidation of aluminum-cyclopentadienyl clusters currently being considered as novel fuels or energetic materials. These clusters contain a small aluminum core surrounded by a single organic ligand layer. The aromatic cyclopentadienyl ligands form a very strong bond with surface Al atoms, giving rise to a stable organometallic cluster which crystallizes into a low-symmetry solid-state material. Our calculations of an isolated cluster in oxygen show minimal reaction between the ligand and oxygen molecules at simulation temperatures of 300 and 1000 K. Rather, in all cases O2 diffuses through the ligand barrier, splits into atomic oxygen upon contact with the aluminum, and forms an amorphous aluminum oxide core. Loss of aluminum-ligand units, as expected from bond strength calculations, is not observed except following significant oxidation. We present simple metrics to quantitatively compare the steric barrier of the outer ligands that limits the oxidation process.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2014

The role of equilibrium volume and magnetism on the stability of iron phases at?high pressures

Sufian Alnemrat; Joseph P. Hooper; Igor Vasiliev; Boris Kiefer

The present study provides new insights into the pressure dependence of magnetism by tracking the hybridization between crystal orbitals for pressures up to 600 GPa in the known hcp, bcc and fcc iron. The Birch-Murnaghan equation of state parameters are; bcc: V0 = 11.759 A(3)/atom, K0 = 177.72 GPa; hcp: V0 = 10.525 A(3)/atom, K0 = 295.16 GPa; and fcc: V0 = 10.682 A(3)/atom, K0 = 274.57 GPa. These parameters compare favorably with previous studies. Consistent with previous studies we find that the close-packed hcp and fcc phases are non-magnetic at pressures above 50 GPa and 60 GPa, respectively. The principal features of magnetism in iron are predicted to be invariant, at least up to ∼6% overextension of the equilibrium volume. Our results predict that magnetism for overextended fcc iron disappears via an intermediate spin state. This feature suggests that overextended lattices can be used to stabilize particular magnetic states. The analysis of the orbital hybridization shows that the magnetic bcc structure at high pressures is stabilized by splitting the majority and minority spin bands. The bcc phase is found to be magnetic at least up to 600 GPa; however, magnetism is insufficient to stabilize the bcc phase itself, at least at low temperatures. Finally, the analysis of the orbital contributions to the total energy provides evidence that non-magnetic hcp and fcc phases are likely more stable than bcc at core earth pressures.

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Igor Vasiliev

New Mexico State University

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Dennis H. Mayo

Naval Surface Warfare Center

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Boris Kiefer

New Mexico State University

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Brian P. Mason

Naval Surface Warfare Center

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Liang Yu

New Mexico State University

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