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Ammonia typical bands

In the present work low temperature adsoi ption of fluoroform and CO, were used to characterize surface basicity of silica, both pure and exposed to bases. It was found that adsorption of deuterated ammonia results in appearance of a new CH stretching vibration band of adsorbed CHF, with the position typical of strong basic sites, absent on the surface of pure silica. Low-frequency shift of mode of adsorbed CO, supports the conclusion about such basicity induced by the presence of H-bonded bases. [Pg.56]

Infrared spectroscopy has been used for many years to probe acid sites in zeolites. Typically, strong bases such as ammonia or pyridine are adsorbed, and the relative or absolute intensities of bands due to Lewis acid adducts or protonated Bronsted acid adducts are measured. The basicity of ammonia or pyridine is however much stronger than that of most hydrocarbon reactants in zeolite catalysed reactions. Such probe molecules therefore detect all of the acid sites in a zeolite, including those weaker acid sites which do not participate in the catalytic reaction. Interest has recently grown in using much more weakly basic probe molecules which will be more sensitive to variations in acid strength. It is also important in studying smaller pore zeolites to use probe molecules which can easily access all of the available pore volume. [Pg.110]

The spectra of the annealed carbons (D—H, D—N) (Fig. 4) confirm the observation that heat treatment under vacuum or in ammonia diminishes the content of oxygen surface complexes, especially that of strongly acidic surface groups. There the band typical of carboxylic structures disappears and the bands of the remaining surface oxygen complexes are much reduced. [Pg.150]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.134 ]




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