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Metallocarbohedryne

A metallocarbohedryne (met-car) is any one of a family of chemical compounds with the generic molecular formula M
8
C
12
, where M is a transition metal such as titanium, vanadium, zirconium, niobium, hafnium, molybdenum, chromium, or iron.

These compounds have similar properties and a similar molecular structure, with the eight metal atoms at the corners of a somewhat distorted cube, and the twelve carbon atoms, in pairs, placed diagonally across the faces of the cube. The structure can also be described as two intersecting tetrahedra of metal atoms, with the carbon atoms placed in pairs along the edges of one tetrahedron. They have been extensively studied in the gas phase, and sometimes dispersed in solid materials, but so far have not been produced in bulk or in solution.[1] Nevertheless, they have attracted interest because of their stability and symmetry, a relatively low ionization potential, delayed extraction, and possibly interesting magnetic properties.[2] Some authors suggest that they may eventually find applications in electronics and catalysis.[2]

The name is also used for the corresponding cations M
8
Cn+
12
and anions M
8
Cn-
12
.[3]

The first papers used the name metallo-carbohedrene (with or without the hyphen) for this type of compound.[3][4][5]

History edit

The earliest known member of this family is the cation Ti
8
C+
12
, discovered by Guo, kerns, and Castleman in 1992 while researching the dehydrogenation of various hydrocarbons (including methane, acetylene, ethylene, benzene, and propylene) with titanium atoms, in the gas phase. Although fullerenes like C
60
were already known, that may have been the first cage-like molecule with metal atoms replacing carbon at some corners of the mesh. They observed that the cluster would bind eight ammonia molecules, indicating that the eight titanium atoms were exposed.[3] They also observed the analogous cations with vanadium, zirconium, or hafnium substituted for titanium, the corresponding neutral molecules, and the anion V
8
C
12
.[4]

Synthesis edit

Metallocarbohedrynes can be readily generated by vaporizing the desired metal with a laser, in an atmosphere containing the suitable hydrocarbon.[3] The technique can produce mixed clusters, such as Ti
8-x
Zr
x
C
12
.[1]

They have been also detected, at a concentration of 1% or less, in the soot generated by an electric arc between two Ti-C electrodes.[1]

Structure edit

The structure of these clusters has been extensively investigated since their discovery. At first, the 20 atoms of Ti
8
C+
12
were conjectured to be arranged as the vertices of a dodecahedron, with the titanium atoms at the corners of a cube, and two carbon atom pairs, on opposite faces, aligned with each set of four parallel edges of the cube. This structure was conjectured to be analogous to that of the hypothetical dodecahedral fullerene C
20
.[3] However, this claim was soon disputed by Linus Pauling[6] who proposed an alternative arrangement—with the titanium atoms still at the corners of a cube, but with the carbon atoms pushed inwards so as to be nearly coplanar with the faces of that cube.

Theoretical studies edit

The first ab initio theoretical investigations of the structure of Ti
8
C
12
(by Li and others, Methfessel and others, in 1993) indicated a slightly distorted version of the dodecahedron proposed by Guo and others, with C-C distances 139 pm and Ti-C distances 199 pm. In this model, the eight titanium atoms were still equivalent and located at the corners of a cube, with C-C pairs parallel to edges, so that the molecule would have the symmetry group  . Nevertheless, they found the atoms are almost equidistant from the center, (260 pm for C, 262 pm for Ti). The electronic structure however was quite unlike that of graphite and C
60
.[7][8]

Several other models were proposed. Ceulemans and Fowler proposed a ring of 12 carbon atoms capped by two Ti
4
tetrahedra.[1] Khan proposed a cage of 12 carbons at the vertices of a cuboctahedron, surrounded by an elongated cage of metal atoms.[1]

Eventually a consensus was reached on a structure proposed by Dance and others, in which the metal atoms are divided in two groups of four ("outer" or "o-", and "inner" or "i-"), at the vertices of two intersecting concentric regular tetrahedra, with different radii and opposite orientations; and the six carbon pairs are aligned with the edges of the larger tetrahedron. This structure can be seen as a deformation of the original proposal, by pulling four vertices of the cube slightly outwards, and rotating the carbon pairs by 45 degrees. Its symmetry group is   instead of  ,[5][9] and it was predicted to have considerably lower energy (by 300 kcal/mol). Indeed, the formation of Ti
8
C
12
with the Dance structure was predicted to be energetically favored (exothermic) relative to metallic titanium and graphite.[1]

Acceptance of this structure was delayed because the yields of the various clusters Ti
8-x
Zr
x
C
12
in Guo's process suggested that the eight metal atom sites were equivalent. In particular, the cluster Ti
4
Zr
4
C
12
did not seem to be exceptionally stable. However, the energy difference between placing the four zirconium atoms in the inner positions, rather than the outer ones, was eventually computed to be only 0.5 kcal/mol.[1]

In 2003, Hou and others predicted a slight displacement of two of the carbon pairs, that reduced the symmetry group to  [10] A similar conclusion had been reached by Chen and others. However, later studies by Lou and Nordlander concluded that the   form had lower energy (by about 70 kcal/mol)[1] However, the zinc cluster Zn
8
C
12
was predicted to have the symmetrical dodecahedral ( ) structure suggested by Guo for the titanium cluster.[1]

Electronically, Ti
8
C
12
is believed to have a metallic character, with 80 delocalized valence electrons. Its static polarizability was computed to be of the same order of magnitude as that of the fullerene C
60
.[1]

Spectroscopy and ionization edit

Pilgrim and Duncan observed in 1993 that Ti
8
C+
12
can be dissociated by visible light. Ti
7
C+
12
is a fragment of Ti
8
C+
12
[11]

In 1998, Sakurai and Castleman measured ionization potentials of Ti
8-x
Zr
x
C
12
via near threshold photoionization spectroscopy. In particular, they got 4.40 eV of for Ti
8
C
12
and 3.95 eV for Zr
8
C
12
. The former value was said to be more consistent with the   structure than the   one.[12]

The infrared spectrum of neutral Ti
8
C
12
and of Ti
8
C+
12
cations was studied by van Heijnsbergen and others, starting 1999. They measured clusters in the gas phase, accumulated as cations in an ion trap. They saw evidence that the loss of one electron from Ti
8
C
12
to Ti
8
C+
12
does not change the structure significantly.[13][14]

In 2004, Martínez and others computed from theoretical models the optical absorption spectrum of Ti
8
C
12
and V
8
C
12
. They predicted a broad spectrum for both, with high absorption starting at about 8 eV and centered around 12–14 eV.[2]

Reactions edit

The chemistry of Ti
8
C
12
and it analogs was studied in the gas phase, already by Castleman's and others. After creation, the ionized clusters were separated from other species by mass spectrometry, and injected into a drift tube containing the gaseous reactant, diluted in helium.[1]

With theoretical computations, Huo and others predicted that the clusters Ti
8
C
12
and Mo
8
C
12
could bind 4 carbonyls, at outer metal atoms.[10]

Potential applications edit

While the clusters have yet to be produced in bulk, they have been investigated theoretically for possible use as catalysts.

Desulfurization of oil edit

Specifically, in 2004 Liu and others have simulated the decomposition of thiophene C
4
H
4
S
by three hydrogen molecules to 2-butene C
4
H
8
and hydrogen disulfide H
2
S
, catalyzed by a neutral Ti
8
C
12
. This reaction is an important step in the removal of sulfur from oil. They predicted that the first H
2
molecule would spontaneously dissociate in contact with the C
2
pairs, and each H atom would then migrate to the adjacent outer titanium atom ("o-Ti"). The thiophene would then react exothermally with each H atom in turn, yielding a butadiene attached to an o-Ti and the sulfur atom attached at the nearby inner titanium ("i-Ti") atom. A second H
2
molecule would then dissociate at the o-Ti site and turn butadiene into 2-butene. A third H
2
would dissociate at an o-Ti site, and the two atoms would migrate to the i-Ti atom bearing the sulfur atom, and convert it into H
2
S
.[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Rohmer, Marie-Madeleine; Bénard, Marc; Poblet, Josep-M. (2000). "Structure, Reactivity, and Growth Pathways of Metallocarbohedrenes M
    8
    C
    12
    and Transition Metal/Carbon Clusters and Nanocrystals: A Challenge to Computational Chemistry". Chemical Reviews. 100 (2): 495–542. doi:10.1021/cr9803885. PMID 11749244.
  2. ^ a b c Martínez, J.I.; Castro, A.; Rubio, A.; Poblet, J.M.; Alonso, J.A. (2004). "Calculation of the optical spectrum of the Ti
    8
    C
    12
    and V
    8
    C12
    Met-Cars". Chemical Physics Letters. 398 (4–6): 292. doi:10.1016/j.cplett.2004.09.058. hdl:10261/98132.
  3. ^ a b c d e Guo, B. C.; Kerns, K. P.; Castleman, A. W. (1992). "Ti
    8
    C+
    12
    -Metallo-Carbohedrenes: A New Class of Molecular Clusters?". Science. 255 (5050): 1411–3. doi:10.1126/science.255.5050.1411. PMID 17801229. S2CID 42112003.
  4. ^ a b Guo, B. C.; Wei, S.; Purnell, J.; Buzza, S.; Castleman, A. W. (1992). "Metallo-Carbohedrenes [M
    8
    C+
    12
    (M = V, Zr, Hf, and Ti)]: A Class of Stable Molecular Cluster Ions". Science. 256 (5056): 515–6. doi:10.1126/science.256.5056.515. PMID 17787948. S2CID 34038508.
  5. ^ a b Rohmer, Marie-Madeleine; Benard, Marc; Bo, Carles; Poblet, Josep-M. (1995). "Ab Initio SCF and CI Investigations on Titanium-Carbon Clusters: Metallocarbohedrenes Ti
    8
    C
    12
    and Cfc Crystallites Ti14C13". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 117: 508–517. doi:10.1021/ja00106a059.
  6. ^ Pauling, L (1992). "Molecular structure of Ti
    8
    C
    12
    and related complexes". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 89 (17): 8175–8176. doi:10.1073/pnas.89.17.8175. PMC 49879. PMID 11607323.
  7. ^ Methfessel, M; Van Schilfgaarde, M; Scheffler, M (1993). "Electronic structure and bonding in the metallocarbohedrene Ti
    8
    C
    12
    " (PDF). Physical Review Letters. 70 (1): 29–32. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.70.29. PMID 10053250.
  8. ^ Li, Zhi-Qiang; Gu, Bing-lin; Han, Ru-Shan; Zheng, Qing-qi (1993). "Structure and electronic properties of Ti
    8
    C
    12
    cluster". Zeitschrift für Physik D. 27 (3): 275. doi:10.1007/BF01436544. S2CID 124199334.
  9. ^ Xia, H B; Tian, D C; Jin, Z Z; Wang, L L (1994). "First-principles calculation of the electronic structure of Ti
    8
    C
    12
    and Zr
    8
    C
    12
    ". Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter. 6 (23): 4269. doi:10.1088/0953-8984/6/23/006.
  10. ^ a b Hou, Hua; Muckerman, James T.; Liu, Ping; Rodriguez, José A. (2003). "Computational Study of the Geometry and Properties of the Metcars Ti
    8
    C
    12
    and Mo
    8
    C
    12
    ". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 107 (44): 9344. doi:10.1021/jp0357976.
  11. ^ J. S. Pilgrim, M. A. Duncan (1993). "Metallo-carbohedrenes: chromium, iron, and molybdenum analogs". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 115 (15): 6958–696. doi:10.1021/ja00068a065.
  12. ^ Sakurai, H.; Castleman, A. W. (1998). "Ionization Potentials for the Titanium, Zirconium, and the Mixed Metal Met-Cars". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 102 (51): 10486. Bibcode:1998JPCA..10210486S. doi:10.1021/jp983287j.
  13. ^ Van Heijnsbergen, Deniz; von Helden, Gert; Duncan, Michael A.; Van Roij, André J. A.; Meijer, Gerard (1999). "Vibrational Spectroscopy of Gas-Phase Metal-Carbide Clusters and Nanocrystals" (PDF). Physical Review Letters. 83 (24): 4983. Bibcode:1999PhRvL..83.4983V. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.83.4983. hdl:2066/98975.
  14. ^ Van Heijnsbergen, Deniz; Duncan, Michael A; Meijer, Gerard; von Helden, Gert (2001). "Infrared spectroscopy of Ti
    8
    C
    12
    'met-car' cations". Chemical Physics Letters. 349 (3–4): 220. doi:10.1016/S0009-2614(01)01230-1.
    .
  15. ^ Liu, Ping; Rodriguez, José A.; Muckerman, James T. (2004). "The Ti
    8
    C
    12
    Metcar: A New Model Catalyst for Hydrodesulfurization". The Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 108 (49): 18796. doi:10.1021/jp045460j.

metallocarbohedryne, metallocarbohedryne, family, chemical, compounds, with, generic, molecular, formula, where, transition, metal, such, titanium, vanadium, zirconium, niobium, hafnium, molybdenum, chromium, iron, these, compounds, have, similar, properties, . A metallocarbohedryne met car is any one of a family of chemical compounds with the generic molecular formula M8 C12 where M is a transition metal such as titanium vanadium zirconium niobium hafnium molybdenum chromium or iron These compounds have similar properties and a similar molecular structure with the eight metal atoms at the corners of a somewhat distorted cube and the twelve carbon atoms in pairs placed diagonally across the faces of the cube The structure can also be described as two intersecting tetrahedra of metal atoms with the carbon atoms placed in pairs along the edges of one tetrahedron They have been extensively studied in the gas phase and sometimes dispersed in solid materials but so far have not been produced in bulk or in solution 1 Nevertheless they have attracted interest because of their stability and symmetry a relatively low ionization potential delayed extraction and possibly interesting magnetic properties 2 Some authors suggest that they may eventually find applications in electronics and catalysis 2 The name is also used for the corresponding cations M8 Cn 12 and anions M8 Cn 12 3 The first papers used the name metallo carbohedrene with or without the hyphen for this type of compound 3 4 5 Contents 1 History 2 Synthesis 3 Structure 3 1 Theoretical studies 4 Spectroscopy and ionization 5 Reactions 6 Potential applications 7 Desulfurization of oil 8 See also 9 ReferencesHistory editThe earliest known member of this family is the cation Ti8 C 12 discovered by Guo kerns and Castleman in 1992 while researching the dehydrogenation of various hydrocarbons including methane acetylene ethylene benzene and propylene with titanium atoms in the gas phase Although fullerenes like C60 were already known that may have been the first cage like molecule with metal atoms replacing carbon at some corners of the mesh They observed that the cluster would bind eight ammonia molecules indicating that the eight titanium atoms were exposed 3 They also observed the analogous cations with vanadium zirconium or hafnium substituted for titanium the corresponding neutral molecules and the anion V8 C 12 4 Synthesis editMetallocarbohedrynes can be readily generated by vaporizing the desired metal with a laser in an atmosphere containing the suitable hydrocarbon 3 The technique can produce mixed clusters such as Ti8 x Zrx C12 1 They have been also detected at a concentration of 1 or less in the soot generated by an electric arc between two Ti C electrodes 1 Structure editThe structure of these clusters has been extensively investigated since their discovery At first the 20 atoms of Ti8 C 12 were conjectured to be arranged as the vertices of a dodecahedron with the titanium atoms at the corners of a cube and two carbon atom pairs on opposite faces aligned with each set of four parallel edges of the cube This structure was conjectured to be analogous to that of the hypothetical dodecahedral fullerene C20 3 However this claim was soon disputed by Linus Pauling 6 who proposed an alternative arrangement with the titanium atoms still at the corners of a cube but with the carbon atoms pushed inwards so as to be nearly coplanar with the faces of that cube Theoretical studies edit The first ab initio theoretical investigations of the structure of Ti8 C12 by Li and others Methfessel and others in 1993 indicated a slightly distorted version of the dodecahedron proposed by Guo and others with C C distances 139 pm and Ti C distances 199 pm In this model the eight titanium atoms were still equivalent and located at the corners of a cube with C C pairs parallel to edges so that the molecule would have the symmetry group Th displaystyle T h nbsp Nevertheless they found the atoms are almost equidistant from the center 260 pm for C 262 pm for Ti The electronic structure however was quite unlike that of graphite and C60 7 8 Several other models were proposed Ceulemans and Fowler proposed a ring of 12 carbon atoms capped by two Ti4 tetrahedra 1 Khan proposed a cage of 12 carbons at the vertices of a cuboctahedron surrounded by an elongated cage of metal atoms 1 Eventually a consensus was reached on a structure proposed by Dance and others in which the metal atoms are divided in two groups of four outer or o and inner or i at the vertices of two intersecting concentric regular tetrahedra with different radii and opposite orientations and the six carbon pairs are aligned with the edges of the larger tetrahedron This structure can be seen as a deformation of the original proposal by pulling four vertices of the cube slightly outwards and rotating the carbon pairs by 45 degrees Its symmetry group is Td displaystyle T d nbsp instead of Th displaystyle T h nbsp 5 9 and it was predicted to have considerably lower energy by 300 kcal mol Indeed the formation of Ti8 C12 with the Dance structure was predicted to be energetically favored exothermic relative to metallic titanium and graphite 1 Acceptance of this structure was delayed because the yields of the various clusters Ti8 x Zrx C12 in Guo s process suggested that the eight metal atom sites were equivalent In particular the cluster Ti4 Zr4 C12 did not seem to be exceptionally stable However the energy difference between placing the four zirconium atoms in the inner positions rather than the outer ones was eventually computed to be only 0 5 kcal mol 1 In 2003 Hou and others predicted a slight displacement of two of the carbon pairs that reduced the symmetry group to D2d displaystyle D 2d nbsp 10 A similar conclusion had been reached by Chen and others However later studies by Lou and Nordlander concluded that the Td displaystyle T d nbsp form had lower energy by about 70 kcal mol 1 However the zinc cluster Zn8 C12 was predicted to have the symmetrical dodecahedral Th displaystyle T h nbsp structure suggested by Guo for the titanium cluster 1 Electronically Ti8 C12 is believed to have a metallic character with 80 delocalized valence electrons Its static polarizability was computed to be of the same order of magnitude as that of the fullerene C60 1 Spectroscopy and ionization editPilgrim and Duncan observed in 1993 that Ti8 C 12 can be dissociated by visible light Ti7 C 12 is a fragment of Ti8 C 12 11 In 1998 Sakurai and Castleman measured ionization potentials of Ti8 x Zrx C12 via near threshold photoionization spectroscopy In particular they got 4 40 eV of for Ti8 C12 and 3 95 eV for Zr8 C12 The former value was said to be more consistent with the Td displaystyle T d nbsp structure than the Th displaystyle T h nbsp one 12 The infrared spectrum of neutral Ti8 C12 and of Ti8 C 12 cations was studied by van Heijnsbergen and others starting 1999 They measured clusters in the gas phase accumulated as cations in an ion trap They saw evidence that the loss of one electron from Ti8 C12 to Ti8 C 12 does not change the structure significantly 13 14 In 2004 Martinez and others computed from theoretical models the optical absorption spectrum of Ti8 C12 and V8 C12 They predicted a broad spectrum for both with high absorption starting at about 8 eV and centered around 12 14 eV 2 Reactions editThe chemistry of Ti8 C12 and it analogs was studied in the gas phase already by Castleman s and others After creation the ionized clusters were separated from other species by mass spectrometry and injected into a drift tube containing the gaseous reactant diluted in helium 1 With theoretical computations Huo and others predicted that the clusters Ti8 C12 and Mo8 C12 could bind 4 carbonyls at outer metal atoms 10 Potential applications editWhile the clusters have yet to be produced in bulk they have been investigated theoretically for possible use as catalysts Desulfurization of oil editSpecifically in 2004 Liu and others have simulated the decomposition of thiophene C4 H4 S by three hydrogen molecules to 2 butene C4 H8 and hydrogen disulfide H2 S catalyzed by a neutral Ti8 C12 This reaction is an important step in the removal of sulfur from oil They predicted that the first H2 molecule would spontaneously dissociate in contact with the C2 pairs and each H atom would then migrate to the adjacent outer titanium atom o Ti The thiophene would then react exothermally with each H atom in turn yielding a butadiene attached to an o Ti and the sulfur atom attached at the nearby inner titanium i Ti atom A second H2 molecule would then dissociate at the o Ti site and turn butadiene into 2 butene A third H2 would dissociate at an o Ti site and the two atoms would migrate to the i Ti atom bearing the sulfur atom and convert it into H2 S 15 See also editTitanium carbide Iron carbide Vanadium carbideReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k Rohmer Marie Madeleine Benard Marc Poblet Josep M 2000 Structure Reactivity and Growth Pathways of Metallocarbohedrenes M8 C12 and Transition Metal Carbon Clusters and Nanocrystals A Challenge to Computational Chemistry Chemical Reviews 100 2 495 542 doi 10 1021 cr9803885 PMID 11749244 a b c Martinez J I Castro A Rubio A Poblet J M Alonso J A 2004 Calculation of the optical spectrum of the Ti8 C12 and V8 C12 Met Cars Chemical Physics Letters 398 4 6 292 doi 10 1016 j cplett 2004 09 058 hdl 10261 98132 a b c d e Guo B C Kerns K P Castleman A W 1992 Ti8 C 12 Metallo Carbohedrenes A New Class of Molecular Clusters Science 255 5050 1411 3 doi 10 1126 science 255 5050 1411 PMID 17801229 S2CID 42112003 a b Guo B C Wei S Purnell J Buzza S Castleman A W 1992 Metallo Carbohedrenes M8 C 12 M V Zr Hf and Ti A Class of Stable Molecular Cluster Ions Science 256 5056 515 6 doi 10 1126 science 256 5056 515 PMID 17787948 S2CID 34038508 a b Rohmer Marie Madeleine Benard Marc Bo Carles Poblet Josep M 1995 Ab Initio SCF and CI Investigations on Titanium Carbon Clusters Metallocarbohedrenes Ti8 C12 and Cfc Crystallites Ti14C13 Journal of the American Chemical Society 117 508 517 doi 10 1021 ja00106a059 Pauling L 1992 Molecular structure of Ti8 C12 and related complexes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 89 17 8175 8176 doi 10 1073 pnas 89 17 8175 PMC 49879 PMID 11607323 Methfessel M Van Schilfgaarde M Scheffler M 1993 Electronic structure and bonding in the metallocarbohedrene Ti8 C12 PDF Physical Review Letters 70 1 29 32 doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 70 29 PMID 10053250 Li Zhi Qiang Gu Bing lin Han Ru Shan Zheng Qing qi 1993 Structure and electronic properties of Ti8 C12 cluster Zeitschrift fur Physik D 27 3 275 doi 10 1007 BF01436544 S2CID 124199334 Xia H B Tian D C Jin Z Z Wang L L 1994 First principles calculation of the electronic structure of Ti8 C12 and Zr8 C12 Journal of Physics Condensed Matter 6 23 4269 doi 10 1088 0953 8984 6 23 006 a b Hou Hua Muckerman James T Liu Ping Rodriguez Jose A 2003 Computational Study of the Geometry and Properties of the Metcars Ti8 C12 and Mo8 C12 The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 107 44 9344 doi 10 1021 jp0357976 J S Pilgrim M A Duncan 1993 Metallo carbohedrenes chromium iron and molybdenum analogs Journal of the American Chemical Society 115 15 6958 696 doi 10 1021 ja00068a065 Sakurai H Castleman A W 1998 Ionization Potentials for the Titanium Zirconium and the Mixed Metal Met Cars The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 102 51 10486 Bibcode 1998JPCA 10210486S doi 10 1021 jp983287j Van Heijnsbergen Deniz von Helden Gert Duncan Michael A Van Roij Andre J A Meijer Gerard 1999 Vibrational Spectroscopy of Gas Phase Metal Carbide Clusters and Nanocrystals PDF Physical Review Letters 83 24 4983 Bibcode 1999PhRvL 83 4983V doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 83 4983 hdl 2066 98975 Van Heijnsbergen Deniz Duncan Michael A Meijer Gerard von Helden Gert 2001 Infrared spectroscopy of Ti8 C12 met car cations Chemical Physics Letters 349 3 4 220 doi 10 1016 S0009 2614 01 01230 1 Liu Ping Rodriguez Jose A Muckerman James T 2004 The Ti8 C12 Metcar A New Model Catalyst for Hydrodesulfurization The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 108 49 18796 doi 10 1021 jp045460j Retrieved from https en 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