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Aluminum cluster stability

The CPF approach gives quantitative reement with the experimental spectroscopic constants (24-25) for the ground state of Cu2 when large one-particle basis sets are used, provided that relativistic effects are included and the 3d electrons are correlated. In addition, CPF calculations have given (26) a potential surface for Cus that confirms the Jahn-Teller stabilization energy and pseudorotational barrier deduced (27-28) from the Cus fluorescence spectra (29). The CPF method has been used (9) to study clusters of up to six aluminum atoms. [Pg.19]

The linear CO stretching frequency for the carbonylated platinum colloid while lower than that found for surface bound CO, is in the range reported for the platinum carbonyl clusters [Pt 3 (CO) 6 ] n / sind we find that the carbonylated colloid is easily transformed into the molecular cluster [Pt 12 (CO) 24 ] (10) reaction with water. The cluster was isolated in 50 yield based on platinum content of the precipitate by extraction with tetraethylammonium bromide in methanol from the aluminum hydroxide precipitated when water is added to the aluminoxane solution. The isolation of the platinum carbonyl cluster reveals nothing about the size or structure of the colloidal platinum particles, but merely emphasizes the high reactivity of metals in this highly dispersed state. The cluster isolated is presumably more a reflection of the stability of the [Pt3(CO)6]n family of clusters than a clue to the nuclearity of the colloidal metal particles - in a similar series of experiments with colloidal cobalt with a mean particle size of 20A carbonylation results in the direct formation of Co2(CO)8. [Pg.165]

The structure of gas-phase clusters has not been determined. The adoption of gas-phase electron diffraction techniques to cluster beams has provided some data, mostly averaged structural parameters. " There is experimental evidence in several systems that structures do exist with unusual stability, especially for alkali metals.Theoretical calculations suggest that these stabilities are due to electronic shell closings in the evolution of the electronic structure of a globular, close-packed cluster. Calculations suggest that aluminum also exhibits this behavior. [Pg.220]

The size, location, and structure of platinum clusters in H-mordenite were modeled by molecular mechanics energy minimization and molecular dynamics simulation techniques [96G1]. It was suggested that the relative stability of monoatomic platinum sites in aluminosilicate mordenites is related to the specific aluminum insertion in T sites of the framework structure. The structural features of the platinum cluster confined to the 12-ring main channel are almost independent of the total Pt content and strongly dependent upon the surrounding zeolite structural field. [Pg.9]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.135 ]




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