RESUMEN
Electrosynthesis of H2O2 from oxygen reduction reaction via a two-electron pathway is vital as an alternative for the energy-intensive anthraquinone process. However, this process is largely hindered in neutral and alkaline conditions due to sluggish kinetics associated with the transformation of intermediate O2* into OOH* via proton-coupled electron transfer sourced from slow water dissociation. Herein, we developed Pd sub-nanoclusters on the nickel ditelluride nanosheets (Pd SNCs/NiTe2) to enhance the performance of H2O2 electrosynthesis. The newly-developed Pd SNCs/NiTe2 exhibited a H2O2 selectivity of as high as 99 % and a positive shift of onset potential up to 0.81â V. Combined theoretical calculations and experimental studies (e.g., X-ray absorption and attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared spectra measurements) revealed that the Pd sub-nanoclusters supported by NiTe2 nanosheets efficiently reduced the energy barrier of water dissociation to generate more protons, facilitating the proton feeding kinetics. When used in a flow cell, Pd SNCs/NiTe2 cathode efficiently produced H2O2 with a maximum yield rate of 1.75â mmol h-1 cm-2 and a current efficiency of 95 % at 100â mA cm-2. Further, an accumulated H2O2 concentration of 1.43â mol L-1 was reached after 10â hours of continuous electrolysis, showing the potential for practical H2O2 electrosynthesis.
RESUMEN
The electrocatalytic reduction of COx (including CO2 and CO) into value-added fuels and chemicals, particularly multi-carbon (C2+) alcohols, presents a significant opportunity to close the manmade carbon cycle and support sustainable energy systems. The catalytic performance of electrochemical reduction reactions of CO2 and CO (COxRR) is strongly correlated with the local microenvironments, the flow electrolyzer, and the catalysis approaches with flow electrolyzers, which contribute to the kinetic and thermodynamic landscape of the reaction, ultimately determining the efficiency and selectivity of the COxRR toward desired reduction products. However, controllable microenvironment construction, rationally designed flow electrolyzers, and matchable flow electrolyzers derived catalysis approaches chosen for improving COxRR-to-alcohol performance still face challenges. Building upon the foundation laid by previous research, this review article will provide an in-depth summary of the regulation of the catalytic reaction interface microenvironment, the design of flow electrolyzers, and the development of derived stepwise catalysis approaches with the flow electrolyzers, which provide a comprehensive and strategic approach to enhancing the COxRR process for alcohol production, offering valuable insights and innovative solutions that can significantly impact the field of COxRR conversion to alcohol and contribute to the development of more sustainable chemical production methods.
RESUMEN
Aniline is one of the most toxic and widespread organic pollutants. Although biological treatment is cost-effective and generates minimal secondary pollution, microbial communities are significantly affected by high aniline concentrations, which result in low degradation efficiency. However, a comprehensive understanding of the microbial community response to aniline stress is lacking. Here, we performed a cyclic experiment with aniline concentrations (200, 600, 1200, 600, and 200 mg/L) to investigate the ability of microbial communities to recover their performance after exposure to high aniline concentrations. At aniline concentrations up to 600 mg/L, the bioreactor exhibited high aniline removal efficiency (almost 100 %). Comamonas, Zoogloea, and Delftia played crucial roles in removing aniline and microbial beta diversity changed. Additionally, alpha diversity and network complexity decreased with increasing aniline concentration, but these metrics recovered to their original levels when the aniline concentration was returned to 200 mg/L. Homogeneous and heterogeneous selection dominated microbial community assembly. Therefore, according to the observed variations in community structure and the recovery of keystones after aniline stress, microbial community redundancy and resilience are pivotal for ensuring system stability. Overall, this study provides valuable insights into the redundancy and resilience of microbial communities under aniline stress and establishes a scientific basis for managing and evaluating wastewater treatment plants.
Asunto(s)
Compuestos de Anilina , Reactores Biológicos , Microbiota , Eliminación de Residuos Líquidos , Aguas Residuales , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua , Aguas Residuales/microbiología , Microbiota/efectos de los fármacos , Eliminación de Residuos Líquidos/métodos , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/análisis , Reactores Biológicos/microbiología , Biodegradación AmbientalRESUMEN
The removal of Cr(III)-organic complexes, encompassing both decomplexation and ligand degradation, presents significant challenges in industrial wastewater treatment. As one of the most common anions in wastewater, Cl- significantly improves the efficiency of electrochemically removing Cr(III)-organic complexes through generated reactive chlorine species (RCS). In the electrochemical chlorine (EC/Cl2) process, extensive experimentation revealed that ClO⢠plays a dominant role in the degradation of Cr(III)-EDTA, surpassing the effects of free chlorine, direct electrooxidation, HOâ¢, and other RCS. Density functional theory calculations indicated that RCS, primarily Cl⢠and ClOâ¢, preferentially oxidize the ligand in Cr(III)-EDTA via H-abstraction, whereas HO⢠trends to attack the Cr atom through electron transfer. The influential factors on the degradation efficiency of Cr(III)-EDTA, Cr(VI) yield, and total organic carbon removal in EC/Cl2 were also assessed, including Cl- concentration, current density, and pH. Real industrial wastewater was employed as a reaction matrix to evaluate the application of the EC/Cl2 process for treating Cr(III)-EDTA, accompanied by energy efficiency calculations. Additionally, a two-chamber reactor was established to simultaneously oxidize Cr(III)-EDTA at the anode and reduce Cr(VI) at the cathode. This study provided insight into developing RCS-dominated AOPs to effectively decomplex and decompose organic Cr(III)-complexes in Cl--containing industrial wastewater.
RESUMEN
In carbon dioxide electrochemical reduction (CO2ER), since isolated catalysts encounter challenges in meeting the demands of intricate processes for producing multi-carbon (C2+) products, tandem catalysis is emerging as a promising approach. Nevertheless, there remains an insufficient theoretical understanding of designing tandem catalysts. Herein, we utilized density functional theory (DFT) to screen 80 tandem catalysts for efficient CO2ER to C2 products systematically, which combines the advantages of nitrogen-doped carbon-supported transition metal single-atom catalysts (M-N-C) and copper clusters. Three crucial criteria were designed to select structures for generation and transfer of *CO and facilitate C-C coupling. The optimal Cu/RuN4-pl catalyst exhibited an excellent ethanol production capacity. Additionally, the relationship between CO adsorption strength and transfer energy barrier was established, and the influence of the electronic structure on its adsorption strength was studied. This provided a novel and well-considered solution and theoretical guidance for the design of rational composition and structurally superior tandem catalysts.
RESUMEN
Single Fe sites have been explored as promising catalysts for the CO2 reduction reaction to value-added CO. Herein, we introduce a novel molten salt synthesis strategy for developing axial nitrogen-coordinated Fe-N5 sites on ultrathin defect-rich carbon nanosheets, aiming to modulate the reaction pathway precisely. This distinctive architecture weakens the spin polarization at the Fe sites, promoting a dynamic equilibrium of activated intermediates and facilitating the balance between *COOH formation and *CO desorption at the active Fe site. Notably, the synthesized FeN5, supported on defect-rich in nitrogen-doped carbon (FeN5@DNC), exhibits superior performance in CO2RR, achieving a Faraday efficiency of 99 % for CO production (-0.4â V vs. RHE) in an H-cell, and maintaining a Faraday efficiency of 98 % at a current density of 270â mA cm-2 (-1.0â V vs. RHE) in the flow cell. Furthermore, the FeN5@DNC catalyst is assembled as a reversible Zn-CO2 battery with a cycle durability of 24â hours. In situ IR spectroscopy and density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal that the axial N coordination traction induces a transformation in the crystal field and local symmetry, therefore weakening the spin polarization of the central Fe atom and lowering the energy barrier for *CO desorption.
RESUMEN
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have been developed as an ideal platform for exploration of the relationship between intrinsic structure and catalytic activity, but the limited catalytic activity and stability has hampered their practical use in water splitting. Herein, we develop a bond length adjustment strategy for optimizing naphthalene-based MOFs that synthesized by acid etching Co-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid-based MOFs (donated as AE-CoNDA) to serve as efficient catalyst for water splitting. AE-CoNDA exhibits a low overpotential of 260 mV to reach 10 mA cm-2 and a small Tafel slope of 62 mV dec-1 with excellent stability over 100 h. After integrated AE-CoNDA onto BiVO4, photocurrent density of 4.3 mA cm-2 is achieved at 1.23 V. Experimental investigations demonstrate that the stretched Co-O bond length was found to optimize the orbitals hybridization of Co 3d and O 2p, which accounts for the fast kinetics and high activity. Theoretical calculations reveal that the stretched Co-O bond length strengthens the adsorption of oxygen-contained intermediates at the Co active sites for highly efficient water splitting.
RESUMEN
Seawater electrolysis is a promising but challenging strategy to generate carbon-neutral hydrogen. A grand challenge for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) from alkaline seawater electrolysis is the development of efficient and stable electrocatalysts to overcome the limitation of sluggish kinetics. Here, a 3D nanorod hybrid catalyst is reported, which comprises heterostructure MoO2@NiMoO4 supported Ru nanoparticles (Ru/ MoO2@NiMoO4) with a size of ≈5 nm. Benefitting from the effect of strongly coupled interaction, Ru/MoO2@NiMoO4 catalyst exhibits a remarkable alkaline seawater hydrogen evolution performance, featured by a low overpotential of 184 mV at a current density of 1.0 A cm-2, superior to commercial Pt/C (338 mV). Experimental observations demonstrate that the heterostructure MoO2@NiMoO4 as an electron-accepting support makes the electron transfer from the Ru nanoparticles to MoO2, and thereby implements the electron redistribution of Ru site. Mechanistic analysis elucidates that the electron redistribution of active Ru site enhances the ability of hydrogen desorption, thereby promoting alkaline seawater HER kinetics and finally leading to a satisfactory catalysis performance at ampere-level current density of alkaline seawater electrolysis.
RESUMEN
Cupriavidus necator H16 is a "Knallgas" bacterium with the ability to utilize various carbon sources and has been employed as a versatile microbial cell factory to produce a wide range of value-added compounds. However, limited genome engineering, especially gene regulation methods, has constrained its full potential as a microbial production platform. The advent of CRISPR/Cas9 technology has shown promise in addressing this limitation. Here, we developed an optimized CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) system for gene repression in C. necator by expressing a codon-optimized deactivated Cas9 (dCas9) and appropriate single guide RNAs (sgRNAs). CRISPRi was proven to be a programmable and controllable tool and could successfully repress both exogenous and endogenous genes. As a case study, we decreased the accumulation of polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHB) via CRISPRi and rewired the carbon fluxes to the synthesis of lycopene. Additionally, by disturbing the expression of DNA mismatch repair gene mutS with CRISPRi, we established CRISPRi-Mutator for genome evolution, rapidly generating mutant strains with enhanced hydrogen peroxide tolerance and robustness in microbial electrosynthesis (MES) system. Our work provides an efficient CRISPRi toolkit for advanced genetic manipulation and optimization of C. necator cell factories for diverse biotechnology applications.
Asunto(s)
Cupriavidus necator , ARN Guía de Sistemas CRISPR-Cas , Cupriavidus necator/genética , Cupriavidus necator/metabolismo , Expresión Génica , Carbono/metabolismo , Evolución MolecularRESUMEN
This study investigated the mechanisms of forming reactive species to degrade micropollutants through the activation of peroxymonosulfate (PMS) by phosphate, a prevalent ion in wastewater. Considering the density functional theory results, the formation of hydrogen bonds between phosphate and PMS molecules might be the crucial step in the overall reactions, which prefers producing â OH and reactive phosphate species (RPS, namely H2PO4â , HPO4â -, and PO4â 2-) to yielding SO4â -. Besides, in the phosphate (5 mM)/PMS system at pH = 8, HPO4â - was modeled to be the dominant radical with a steady-state concentration of 3.6 × 10-12 M, which was 666 and 773 times higher than those of â OH and SO4â -. The contributions of 1O2, â OH, SO4â -, and RPS to the micropollutant decomposition in phosphate/PMS were studied, and RPS were found to be selective for micropollutants with electron-donating moieties (such as phenolic and aniline groups). Additionally, the degradation pathways of bisphenol A, diclofenac, ibuprofen, and atrazine in phosphate/PMS were proposed according to the detected transformation products. Cytotoxicity analysis was carried out to evaluate the potential environmental impacts resulting from the degradation of micropollutants by phosphate/PMS. This study confirmed the significance of RPS for micropollutant degradation during PMS-based treatment in phosphate-rich scenarios.
Asunto(s)
Atrazina , Fosfatos , Aguas Residuales , DiclofenacoRESUMEN
Electrochemical oxygen evolution reaction (OER) kinetics are heavily correlated with hybridization of the transition metal d-orbital and oxygen intermediate p-orbital, which dictates the barriers of intermediate adsorption/desorption on the active sites of catalysts. Herein, a strategy is developed involving strain engineering and coordination regulation to enhance the hybridization of Ni 3d and O 2p orbitals, and the as-synthesized Ni-2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid metal-organic framework (DD-Ni-NDA) nanosheets deliver a low OER overpotential of 260 mV to reach 10 mA cm-2 . By integrating an alkaline anion exchange membrane electrolyzer and Pt/C electrode, 200 and 500 mA cm-2 current densities are reached with cell voltages of 1.6 and 2.1 V, respectively. When loaded on a BiVO4 photoanode, the nanosheet enables highly active solar-driven water oxygen. Structural characterizations together with theoretical calculations reveal that the spin state of the centre Ni atoms is regulated by the tensile strain and unsaturated coordination defects in DD-Ni-NDA, and such spin regulation facilitates spin-dependent charge transfer of the OER. Molecular orbital hybridization analysis reveals the mechanism of OH* and OOH* adsorption energy regulation by changes in the DD-Ni-NDA spin state, which provides a deeper understanding of the electronic structure design of catalysts for the OER.
RESUMEN
Upgrading CO2 into multi-carbon (C2+) compounds through the CO2 reduction reaction (CO2 RR) offers a practical approach to mitigate atmospheric CO2 while simultaneously producing high value chemicals. The reaction pathways for C2+ production involve multi-step proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) and C-C coupling processes. By increasing the surface coverage of adsorbed protons (*Had ) and *CO intermediates, the reaction kinetics of PCET and C-C coupling can be accelerated, thereby promoting C2+ production. However, *Had and *CO are competitively adsorbed intermediates on monocomponent catalysts, making it difficult to break the linear scaling relationship between the adsorption energies of the *Had /*CO intermediate. Recently, tandem catalysts consisting of multicomponents have been developed to improve the surface coverage of *Had or *CO by enhancing water dissociation or CO2 -to-CO production on auxiliary sites. In this context, we provide a comprehensive overview of the design principles of tandem catalysts based on reaction pathways for C2+ products. Moreover, the development of cascade CO2 RR catalytic systems that integrate CO2 RR with downstream catalysis has expanded the range of potential CO2 upgrading products. Therefore, we also discuss recent advancements in cascade CO2 RR catalytic systems, highlighting the challenges and perspectives in these systems.
RESUMEN
Electrosynthesis of H2 O2 has great potential for directly converting O2 into disinfectant, yet it is still a big challenge to develop effective electrocatalysts for medical-level H2 O2 production. Herein, we report the design and fabrication of electrocatalysts with biomimetic active centers, consisting of single atomic iron asymmetrically coordinated with both nitrogen and sulfur, dispersed on hierarchically porous carbon (FeSA -NS/C). The newly-developed FeSA -NS/C catalyst exhibited a high catalytic activity and selectivity for oxygen reduction to produce H2 O2 at a high current of 100â mA cm-2 with a record high H2 O2 selectivity of 90 %. An accumulated H2 O2 concentration of 5.8â wt.% is obtained for the electrocatalysis process, which is sufficient for medical disinfection. Combined theoretical calculations and experimental characterizations verified the rationally-designed catalytic active center with the atomic Fe site stabilized by three-coordinated nitrogen atoms and one-sulfur atom (Fe-N3 S-C). It was further found that the replacement of one N atom with S atom in the classical Fe-N4 -C active center could induce an asymmetric charge distribution over N atoms surrounding the Fe reactive center to accelerate proton spillover for a rapid formation of the OOH* intermediate, thus speeding up the whole reaction kinetics of oxygen reduction for H2 O2 electrosynthesis.
RESUMEN
Single-piece flexible supercapacitors (FSCs) have light and ultrathin superiorities, thereby having great potential in portable/wearable electronics. However, all the available single-piece FSCs are fabricated by in situ growth routes, which are incompatible with large-scale technology. This work designs a carboxymethyl cellulose/phytic acid/polyaniline ink, incorporating electrode with electrolyte active compositions. Based on the electrode/electrolyte active ink, a double-face print technique on mixed cellulose ester and nylon membranes to fabricate single-piece membrane-FSCs, where both sides of membranes can be utilized well, is proposed. Consequently, one FSC is measured to be only ≈0.785 cm2 in area, ≈0.021 g in weight, and ≈200 µm in thickness, while it has exceptional areal and volumetric capacitances up to 757 mF cm-2 and 37.8 F cm-3 , respectively, based on the entire device. It also exhibits high flexibility with a capacitance retention of 98% after 2000 bend cycles from 0° to 180°. The state-of-the-art FSCs are expected to have exciting prospects in portable/wearable electronics, smart reading, and flexible displays. The preparation strategy renders the massive production of large-area and mini-size arrayed FSCs, and also the "do-it-yourself" or homemade preparation, which adds more interest and designability for general users.
RESUMEN
Electrochemical C-N coupling reactions based on abundant small molecules (such as CO2 and N2) have attracted increasing attention as a new "green synthetic strategy" for the synthesis of organonitrogen compounds, which have been widely used in organic synthesis, materials chemistry, and biochemistry. The traditional technology employed for the synthesis of organonitrogen compounds containing C-N bonds often requires the addition of metal reagents or oxidants under harsh conditions with high energy consumption and environmental concerns. By contrast, electrosynthesis avoids the use of other reducing agents or oxidants by utilizing "electrons", which are the cleanest "reagent" and can reduce the generation of by-products, consistent with the atomic economy and green chemistry. In this study, we present a comprehensive review on the electrosynthesis of high value-added organonitrogens from the abundant CO2 and nitrogenous small molecules (N2, NO, NO2-, NO3-, NH3, etc.) via the C-N coupling reaction. The associated fundamental concepts, theoretical models, emerging electrocatalysts, and value-added target products, together with the current challenges and future opportunities are discussed. This critical review will greatly increase the understanding of electrochemical C-N coupling reactions, and thus attract research interest in the fixation of carbon and nitrogen.
RESUMEN
Cu-based catalysts have been widely applied in electroreduction of carbon dioxide (CO2 ER) to produce multicarbon (C2+ ) feedstocks (e.g., C2 H4 ). However, the high energy barriers for CO2 activation on the Cu surface is a challenge for a high catalytic efficiency and product selectivity. Herein, we developed an in situ *CO generation and spillover strategy by engineering single Ni atoms on a pyridinic N-enriched carbon support with a sodalite (SOD) topology (Ni-SOD/NC) that acted as a donor to feed adjacent Cu nanoparticles (NPs) with *CO intermediate. As a result, a high C2 H4 selectivity of 62.5 % and an industrial-level current density of 160â mA cm-2 at a low potential of -0.72â V were achieved. Our studies revealed that the isolated NiN3 active sites with adjacent pyridinic N species facilitated the *CO desorption and the massive *CO intermediate released from Ni-SOD/NC then overflowed to Cu NPs surface to enrich the *CO coverage for improving the selectivity of CO2 ER to C2 H4 .
RESUMEN
Bladder cancer is a common malignant tumor of the genitourinary system, with the primary cause of death being metastasis. The most common metastatic sites are the lymph nodes, liver, lung, bone, peritoneum, pleura, kidney, adrenal gland, and the intestine. Brain and heart metastases are rare. In this report, we describe a patient who had pulmonary lymph node metastases more than a year after being diagnosed with bladder cancer, followed by brain and cardiac metastases more than two years later. Following the failure of standard first-line chemotherapy, the patient accepted 6 cycles of tislelizumab immunotherapy. The re-examination revealed that the bilateral frontal brain metastases had vanished, the right temporal lobe metastases had been greatly decreased, the neurological symptoms had been alleviated, and the cardiac metastases had disappeared. This is a rare clinical case with encouraging effects of tislelizumab and can serve as a model for the treatment of similar patients.
Asunto(s)
Ganglios Linfáticos , Neoplasias de la Vejiga Urinaria , Humanos , Ganglios Linfáticos/patología , Neoplasias de la Vejiga Urinaria/terapia , Neoplasias de la Vejiga Urinaria/patología , Pulmón/patología , Inmunoterapia , Encéfalo/patologíaRESUMEN
Two-dimensional metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have been explored as effective electrocatalysts for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, the sluggish water activation kinetics and structural instability under ultrahigh-current density hinder their large-scale industrial applications. Herein, we develop a universal ligand regulation strategy to build well-aligned Ni-benzenedicarboxylic acid (BDC)-based MOF nanosheet arrays with S introducing (S-NiBDC). Benefiting from the closer p-band center to the Fermi level with strong electron transferability, S-NiBDC array exhibits a low overpotential of 310 mV to attain 1.0 A cm-2 with high stability in alkaline electrolyte. We speculate the newly-constructed triangular "Ni2-S1" motif as the improved HER active region based on detailed mechanism analysis and structural characterization, and the enhanced covalency of Ni-O bonds by S introducing stabilizes S-NiBDC structure. Experimental observations and theoretical calculations elucidate that such Ni sites in "Ni2-S1" center distinctly accelerate the water activation kinetics, while the S site readily captures the H atom as the optimal HER active site, boosting the whole HER activity.
RESUMEN
Oxygen evolution reaction (OER) plays a key role in many renewable energy technologies such as water splitting and metal-air batteries. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are appealing to design efficient OER electrocatalysts, however, their intrinsic poor conductivity strongly hinders the activity. Here, we show a strategy to boost the OER activity of poor-conductive MOFs by confining them between graphene multilayers. The resultant NiFe-MOF//G gives a record-low overpotential of 106 mV to reach 10 mA cm-2 and retains the activity over 150 h, which is in significant contrast to 399 mV of the pristine NiFe-MOF. We use X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and computations to demonstrate that the nanoconfinement from graphene multilayers not only forms highly reactive NiO6-FeO5 distorted octahedral species in MOF structure but also lowers limiting potential for water oxidation reaction. We also demonstrate that the strategy is applicable to other MOFs of different structures to largely enhance their electrocatalytic activities.
RESUMEN
Sulfide-driven denitrification (SD) process has been widely studied for treating wastewater containing sulfate and ammonia in recent years. But influence of high ammonia stress on the SD process and microbial community remained unclear. In this work, a series of tests were conducted to investigate effects of different ammonia stress (200-3000 mg-total ammonia nitrogen (TAN)/L) on denitrification efficiency, byproduct accumulation and microbial community of the SD process. According to our results, the SD process was severely inhibited, and 32.67 ± 5.15 mg/L NO2--N was accumulated when ammonia stress reached 3000 mg TAN/L. But the inhibited SD process could recover in about 40 days when ammonia stress was decreased to 200 mg TAN/L. After analyzing the microbial community, Thiobacillus sp. (Thiobacillus sp. 65-29, Thiobacillus sp. SCN 64-317, Thiobacillus sp. 63-78 and Thiobacillus denitrificans) was confirmed as dominant bacteria responsible for the SD process. Further, expression of narG, napA, nirK and nirS were inhibited under high ammonia stress, thus making the SD process stuck in NO3- and NO2- reduction step. This study reveals the inhibitory effects of high ammonia stress on the SD process and its possible underlying mechanism with discussion in gene level.