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1.
Langmuir ; 39(22): 7566-7577, 2023 Jun 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37078889

RESUMEN

This study was to develop a low-cost N-doped porous biocarbon adsorbent that can directly adsorb CO2 in high-temperature flue gas from fossil fuel combustion. The porous biocarbon was prepared by nitrogen doping and nitrogen-oxygen codoping through K2CO3 activation. Results showed that these samples exhibited a high specific surface area of 1209-2307 m2/g with a pore volume of 0.492-0.868 cm3/g and a nitrogen content of 0.41-3.3 wt %. The optimized sample CNNK-1 exhibited a high adsorption capacity of 1.30 and 0.27 mmol/g in the simulated flue gas (14.4 vol % CO2 + 85.6 vol % N2) and a high CO2/N2 selectivity of 80 and 20 at 25 and 100 °C and 1 bar, respectively. Studies revealed that too many microporous pores could hinder CO2 diffusion and adsorption due to the decrease of CO2 partial pressure and thermodynamic driving force in the simulated flue gas. The CO2 adsorption of the samples was mainly chemical adsorption at 100 °C, which depended on the surface nitrogen functional groups. Nitrogen functional groups (pyridinic-N and primary and secondary amines) reacted chemically with CO2 to produce graphitic-N, pyrrolic-like structures, and carboxyl functional groups (-N-COOH). Nitrogen and oxygen codoping increased the amount of nitrogen doping content in the sample, but acidic oxygen functional groups (carboxyl groups, lactones, and phenols) were introduced, which weakened the acid-base interactions between the sample and CO2 molecules. It was demonstrated that SO2 and water vapor had inhibition effects on CO2 adsorption, while NO nearly has no effect on the complex flue gas. Cyclic regenerative adsorption showed that CNNK-1 possessed excellent regeneration and stabilization ability in complex flue gases, indicating that corncob-derived biocarbon had excellent CO2 adsorption in high-temperature flue gas.

2.
Environ Pollut ; 314: 120270, 2022 Dec 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36162559

RESUMEN

The presence of large amounts of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in livestock manures poses an impending, tough safety risk to ecosystems. To investigate more comprehensively the mechanisms of ARGs removal from industrial-scale composting of livestock manure based on biochar addition, we tracked the dynamics of bacterial community and ARGs at various stages of aerobic composting of livestock manures with 10% biochar. There were no significant effects of biochar on the bacterial community and the profiles of ARGs. During aerobic composting, the relative abundance of ARGs and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) showed overall trends of decreasing and then increasing. The key factor driving the dynamics of ARGs was bacterial community composition, and the potential hosts of ARGs were Caldicoprobacter, Tepidimicrobium, Ignatzschineria, Pseudogracilibacillus, Actinomadura, Flavobacterium and Planifilum. The retention of the thermophilic bacteria and the repopulation of the initial bacteria were the dominant reasons for the increase in ARGs at maturation stage. Additionally, among the MGEs, the relative abundance of transposon gene was substantially removed, while the integron genes remained at high relative abundance. Our results highlighted that the suitability of biochar addition to industrial-scale aerobic composting needs to be further explored and that effective measures are needed to prevent the increase of ARGs content on maturation stage.


Asunto(s)
Compostaje , Animales , Estiércol/microbiología , Ganado , Antibacterianos/farmacología , Ecosistema , Genes Bacterianos , Farmacorresistencia Microbiana/genética , Bacterias/genética
3.
Ultrason Sonochem ; 89: 106118, 2022 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35985257

RESUMEN

Molecular self-assembly plays a vital role in the nucleation process and sometimes determines the nucleation outcomes. In this study, ultrasound technology was applied to control polymorph nucleation. For the first time, different ultrasonic application methods based on the nucleation mechanisms have been proposed. For PZA-water and DHB-toluene systems that the molecular self-assembly in solution resembles the synthon in crystal structure, ultrasound pretreatment strategy was conducted to break the original molecular interactions to alter the nucleated form. When the solute molecular self-associates can't give sufficient information to predict the nucleated polymorph like INA-ethanol system, the method of introducing continuous ultrasonic irradiation in the nucleation stage was applied. The induction of ultrasound during nucleation process can break the original interactions firstly by shear forces and accelerate the occurrence of nucleation to avoid the reorientation and rearrangement of solute molecules. These strategies were proved to be effective in polymorph control and have a degree of applicability.


Asunto(s)
Tolueno , Agua , Cristalización , Etanol , Soluciones , Agua/química
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