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1.
Adv Mater ; 35(17): e2209288, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36787111

ABSTRACT

Poor thermodynamic stability and sluggish electrochemical kinetics of metallic Zn anode in aqueous solution greatly hamper its practical application. To solve such problems, to date, various zincophilic surface modification strategies are developed, which can facilitate reversible Zn plating/stripping behavior. However, there is still a lack of systematic and fundamental understanding regarding the metrics of thermodynamics inertia and kinetics zincophilia in selecting zincophilic sites. Herein, hetero-metallic interfaces are prioritized for the first time via optimizing different hetero metals (Fe, Co, Ni, Sn, Bi, Cu, Zn, etc.) and synthetic solvents (ethanol, ethylene glycol, n-propanol, etc.). Specifically, both theoretical simulations and experimental results suggest that this Bi@Zn interface can exhibit high efficiency owing to the thermodynamics inertia and kinetics zincophilia. A best practice for prioritizing zincophilic sites in a more practical metric is also proposed. As a proof of concept, the Bi@Zn anode delivers ultralow overpotential of ≈55 mV at a high rate of 10 mA cm-2 and stable cycle life over 4700 cycles. The elaborated "thermodynamics inertia and kinetics metalphilia" metrics for hetero-metallic interfaces can benchmark the success of other metal-based batteries.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36913649

ABSTRACT

To achieve global carbon neutrality, the realization of highly active and stable catalysts is critical for water splitting to produce green hydrogen (H2). MoS2 is considered to be the most promising non-precious metal catalyst for H2 evolution because of its excellent properties. Herein, we report a metal-phase MoS2 (1T-MoS2) synthesized using a simple hydrothermal method. Using a similar procedure, we synthesize a monolithic catalyst (MC) in which 1T-MoS2 is vertically bonded to a metal molybdenum plate via strong covalent bonds. These properties endow the MC with an extremely low-resistance interface and mechanical robustness, equipping it with outstanding durability and fast charge transfer. Results show that the MC can achieve stable water splitting at 350 mA cm-2 current density with a low 400 mV overpotential. The MC exhibits negligible performance decay after 60 h of operation at a large current density of 350 mA cm-2. This study provides a novel possible MC with robust and metallic interfaces to achieve technically high current water splitting to produce green H2.

3.
Bioengineering (Basel) ; 9(11)2022 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36354540

ABSTRACT

The cyclic loading, in the corrosive medium of the human body, results in tribocorrosion at the interface of the head-neck taper junction of hip implants. The resulting metal ions and wear debris adversely affect the local tissues. The force applied by surgeons to assemble the junction has proven to play a major role in the mechanics of the taper junction which, in turn, can influence the tribocorrosion damage. Recently, finite element method has been used to predict the material loss at the head-neck interface. However, in most finite element studies, the contribution of electrochemical corrosion has been ignored. Therefore, a detailed study to investigate the influence of the assembly force on the tribocorrosive behaviour of the head-neck junction, which considers both the mechanical and chemical material removal, is of paramount interest. In this study, a finite-element-based algorithm was used to investigate the effect of assembly force on the tribocorrosion damage at the junction interface, for over four million cycles of simulated level gait. The patterns of the material removal in the modelling results were compared with the damage patterns observed in a group of retrieved modular hip implants. The results of this study showed that for different cases, chemical wear was in the range of 25-50% of the total material loss, after four million cycles. A minimum assembly force (4 kN for the studied cases) was needed to maintain the interlock in the junction. The computational model was able to predict the damage pattern at the retrieved head-neck interface.

4.
Biosens Bioelectron ; 94: 443-455, 2017 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28340464

ABSTRACT

Heavy metal ions are non-biodegradable and contaminate most of the natural resources occurring in the environment including water. Some of the heavy metals including Lead (Pb), Mercury (Hg), Arsenic (As), Chromium (Cr) and Cadmium (Cd) are considered to be highly toxic and hazardous to human health even at trace levels. This leads to the requirement of fast, accurate and reliable techniques for the detection of heavy metal ions. This review presents various electrochemical detection techniques for heavy metal ions those are user friendly, low cost, provides on-site and real time monitoring as compared to other spectroscopic and optical techniques. The categorization of different electrochemical techniques is done on the basis of different types of detection signals generated due to presence of heavy metal ions in the solution matrix like current, potential, conductivity, electrochemical impedance, and electrochemiluminescence. Also, the recent trends in electrochemical detection of heavy metal ions with various types of sensing platforms including metals, metal films, metal oxides, nanomaterials, carbon nano tubes, polymers, microspheres and biomaterials have been evoked.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques/methods , Ions/isolation & purification , Metals, Heavy/isolation & purification , Water/chemistry , Cadmium/chemistry , Cadmium/isolation & purification , Electrochemical Techniques , Humans , Ions/chemistry , Mercury/chemistry , Mercury/isolation & purification , Metals, Heavy/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry
5.
J Med Phys ; 39(1): 40-3, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24600171

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to investigate the dose enhancement to soft tissue due to backscatter radiation near metal interfaces during head and neck radiotherapy. The influence of titanium-mandibular plate with the screws on radiation dose was tested on four real bones from mandible with the metal and screws fixed. Radiochromic films were used for dosimetry. The bone and metal were inserted through the film at the center symmetrically. This was then placed in a small jig (7 cm × 7 cm × 10 cm) to hold the film vertically straight. The polymer granules (tissue-equivalent) were placed around the film for homogeneous scatter medium. The film was irradiated with 6 MV X-rays for 200 monitor units in Trilogy linear accelerator for 10 cm × 10 cm field size with source to axis distance of 100 cm at 5 cm. A single film was also irradiated without any bone and metal interface for reference data. The absolute dose and the vertical dose profile were measured from the film. There was 10% dose enhancement due to the backscatter radiation just adjacent to the metal-bone interface for all the materials. The extent of the backscatter effect was up to 4 mm. There is significant higher dose enhancement in the soft tissue/skin due to the backscatter radiation from the metallic components in the treatment region.

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