Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Zinc sulfide photocorrosion

The mechanism of photocorrosion seems to be the same for zinc and cadmium sulfide. For the latter it was investigated in detail for colloids [26] and crystals as discussed in the following [56]. In the absence of air, anodic photocorrosion (Eq. 15) ... [Pg.2616]

Hydrazone cyclization and hydroalkylation [138-140] are rare examples of reactions conducted on a preparative scale, since the products were isolated in milligram amounts and not just identified in solution. As already mentioned in Section 6.2.5, photocorrosion of the semiconductor photocatalyst often prevents its use in preparative chemistry. This is very true also for colloidal semiconductors although the pseudo-homogeneous nature of their solutions allows one to conduct classical mechanistic investigations, until now they were too labile to be used in preparative chemistry [107, 141, 142]. In contrast to the above-mentioned reactions, in recent years we have isolated novel compounds on a gram-scale employing photostable zinc and cadmium sulfide powders as photocatalysts [97, 107, 143-145]. During this work we found also a new reaction type which was classified as semiconductor photocatalysis type B [45]. In contrast to type A reactions, where at least one oxidized and one reduced product is formed, type B reactions afford only one unique product, i.e., the semiconductor catalyzes a photoaddition reaction (see below). [Pg.2623]


See other pages where Zinc sulfide photocorrosion is mentioned: [Pg.374]    [Pg.2615]    [Pg.2618]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.106]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.103 , Pg.104 ]




SEARCH



Photocorrosion

Zinc sulfide

© 2024 chempedia.info