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Form immobile electron

Chemoselectivity describes the preferred formation of one out of several products due to the selective interaction of a reagent with the substrate. In electroorganic conversion, the electrode is the reagent that can influence the reaction course in several ways The electrode material can form immobilized organometallics or oxides that can shift the conversion like mediators from an outer sphere electron transfer to a more selective inner sphere electron transfer [134]. Overvoltages can suppress the hydrogen evolution in cathodic reduction... [Pg.415]

At room temperature carbon monoxide is adsorbed readily while simultaneously the semiconductivity is decreased (98). Probably a covalent bond is formed between CO and the copper ions of the surface, thus immobilizing electrons for the electron transfer in the lattice. Whether the bonding of the CO molecule is caused by donating two electrons from the... [Pg.57]

The degree of enzyme purity will ultimately affect fuel cell performance, particularly when enzyme preparations are used to form immobilized films on electrode surfaces in DET reactions. Contaminating proteins that do not provide electron transfer effectively foul the electrode. When enzyme immobilization techniques are specific to the enzyme, then enzyme purity may not be as much as an issue, but rarely the immobilization technique is absolutely specific to the cathodic or anodic enzyme. For example, an attractive immobilization strategy is to link a particular enzyme to an electrode via its cofactor (e.g., flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), etc.) [59]. The cofactor is linked to the electrode material first and then the apoenzyme is allowed to naturally bind to the cofactor all other proteins in the enzyme preparation that cannot bind the cofactor remain unbound and can be removed. Enzymes used in fuel cells are not so unique, and proteins in the immobilizing preparation may use the same cofactor but not the same fuel during fuel cell analysis or operation. [Pg.133]

Nucleic acids, DNA and RNA, are attractive biopolymers that can be used for biomedical applications [175,176], nanostructure fabrication [177,178], computing [179,180], and materials for electron-conduction [181,182]. Immobilization of DNA and RNA in well-defined nanostructures would be one of the most unique subjects in current nanotechnology. Unfortunately, a silica surface cannot usually adsorb duplex DNA in aqueous solution due to the electrostatic repulsion between the silica surface and polyanionic DNA. However, Fujiwara et al. recently found that duplex DNA in protonated phosphoric acid form can adsorb on mesoporous silicates, even in low-salt aqueous solution [183]. The DNA adsorption behavior depended much on the pore size of the mesoporous silica. Plausible models of DNA accommodation in mesopore silica channels are depicted in Figure 4.20. Inclusion of duplex DNA in mesoporous silicates with larger pores, around 3.8 nm diameter, would be accompanied by the formation of four water monolayers on the silica surface of the mesoporous inner channel (Figure 4.20A), where sufficient quantities of Si—OH groups remained after solvent extraction of the template (not by calcination). [Pg.134]


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Immobilized form

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