Nanoparticles in Catalysis

7 January 2008

Catalysts are basically nanoparticles and these nanoparticles varying in sizes between 1 to 20 nm are composed of clusters of atoms. During the application, these nanoparticles restructure and thereby these improve the surface mobility. There are two types of nanocluster catalysts.

Enzymes are the natural catalysts. In most of the cases, these enzymes are composed of inorganic nanoclusters. High molecular weight proteins mostly surround these inorganic nanoclusters and these enzymes usually work in aqueous medium. These enzymes in human and plants are responsible for overall growth.

The next and most important type of catalyst is synthetic catalyst. Synthetic catalysts can also be of two types homogeneous and heterogeneous and these are often metal nanoclusters. heterogeneous systems generally operate at high temperature and sometimes upto 1000K. In heterogeneous system, the reactant and product flow in gas phase enabling to remove the product molecule from the catalyst bed.

del.icio.us:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  digg:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  spurl:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  wists:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  simpy:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  newsvine:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  blinklist:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  furl:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  reddit:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  fark:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  blogmarks:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  Y!:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  smarking:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  magnolia:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  segnalo:Nanoparticles in Catalysis  gifttagging:Nanoparticles in Catalysis

Top Of Page | Trackback

If you found this page useful, consider linking to it. Simply copy and paste the code below into your web site.

It will look like this: Nanoparticles in Catalysis

Leave a Reply