加州大学伯克利分校化学与生物分子工程系导师教师师资介绍简介-Alexander Katz

本站小编 Free考研考试/2022-09-10

Title
Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

Department
Dept of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering


Faculty URL
https://chemistry.berkeley.edu/faculty/cbe/katz

Research Group
http://www.cchem.berkeley.edu/katzgrp/home/

Email
katz@cchem.berkeley.edu

Phone
(510) 643-3248

Fax
510) 642-4778


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Research Expertise and Interest
chemical engineering, nanoengineering, catalytic imprinted silicas, catalysts in biological systems, catalysis, chemical sensing

Research Description
Molecular Engineering of Single-Site Solid Catalysts and Functional Materials
We are a catalysis group that focuses on understanding how catalysts functions given a certain molecular active-site structure.? This approach enables and is invaluable to the rational design of catalysts for emerging applications.? These applications require catalysts of high activity and selectivity whereas conventional approaches often optimize one at the expense of the other.? Our group is currently active in four areas:
Grafted metallocalixarene sites on inorganic-oxide surfaces, where the calixarene enforces site isolation as well as an optimized coordination geometry surrounding the metal atom;
Supported molecular metal clusters bound with calixarenes, where the calixarene enforces accessibility to open sites on the metal surface while preventing aggregation via coalescence;
Use of weak-acid sites on surfaces for biomass depolymerization, where high activity, selectivity, and lack of leaching even in the presence of metal salts can be obtained in a manner not possible with strong acids; and
Delaminated zeolites, where the high external surface area enables reactions with bulky molecules that conventionally could not fit inside a zeolitic micropore.? The role of the zeolite framework in these materials is to template a preferential coordination environment surrounding a Lewis-acid metal heteroatom site for catalysis, which cannot be accomplished with conventional amorphous materials, which lack framework rigidity and order of the crystalline material.
We are also active in a fifth area that deals with assembly of complex organic-inorganic interfaces, which are geared for stabilizing systems that are applicable to coatings.? ??