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OBJECTIVE: A practical visual detection method was established to detect Porphyromonas gingivalis (P. gingivalis) by employing a combination of recombinase polymerase amplification and lateral flow strips (RPA-LF) assay, designed for conducting point-of-care testing in clinical settings. METHODS: Primers and probes targeting the P. gingivalis pepO gene were designed. The RPA-LF assay was established by optimising reaction temperature and time, determining the limit of detection (LOD). The specificity of the method was determined by assessing its cross-reactivity with deoxyribonucleic acid from 23 pathogenic bacteria. Finally, the clinical samples from healthy controls (n = 30) and individuals with periodontitis (n = 31) were analysed. The results were compared with those obtained using real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). RESULTS: The optimal reaction temperature and time were 39 °C and 12 min. The method exhibited a LOD at 6.40 × 10-4 µg/mL and demonstrated high specificity and sensitivity during cross-reactivity assessment. The RPA-LF assay achieved a P. gingivalis detection rate of 84 % in individuals with periodontitis and 3 % in healthy controls. The results were consistent with those obtained through real-time PCR. CONCLUSION: An RPA-LF assay was developed for detecting P. gingivalis, characterised by its high sensitivity, high specificity, simple operational procedure, and rapid reaction time.
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Periodontitis , Recombinasas , Humanos , Recombinasas/genética , Técnicas de Amplificación de Ácido Nucleico/métodos , Porphyromonas gingivalis/genética , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , NucleotidiltransferasasRESUMEN
The utilization of thin zinc (Zn) anodes with a high depth of discharge is an effective strategy to increase the energy density of aqueous Zn metal batteries (ZMBs), but challenged by the poor reversibility of Zn electrode due to the serious Zn-consuming side reactions at the Zn||electrolyte interface. Here, we introduce 2-bromomethyl-1,3-dioxolane (BDOL) and methanol (MeOH) as electrolyte additive into aqueous ZnSO4 electrolyte. In the as-formulated electrolyte, BDOL with a strong electron-withdrawing group (-CH2Br) tends to pair with the H2O-Zn-MeOH complex, leading to the formation of organobromine-partnered H2O-Zn-MeOH cluster ions. During the Zn electrodeposition process, the formed ZnO-dominated by-products induce the polymerization of BDOL monomers, which are previously adsorbed on the electrode. As a result, a uniform dual-layer SEI with ZnO-dominated outer layer and polyether-dominated inner layer is built on the surface of Zn electrode. With such an in-situ formed dual-layer SEI, the Zn||Mg0.9Mn3O7·2.7H2O pouch cell using a 10-um Zn anode (corresponding to a low negative to positive areal capacity ratio of 3.56) successfully operated for 300 cycles with a high capacity retention of 86%, promising a high practical energy density of > 120 Wh/kg (based on the total mass of Zn and Mg0.9Mn3O7·2.7H2O).
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The use of non-solvating, or as-called sparingly-solvating, electrolytes (NSEs), is regarded as one of the most promising solutions to the obstacles to the practical applications of Li-S batteries. However, it remains a puzzle that long-life Li-S batteries have rarely, if not never, been reported with NSEs, despite their good compatibility with Li anode. Here, we find the capacity decay of Li-S batteries in NSEs is mainly due to the accumulation of the dead Li2 S at the cathode side, rather than the degradation of the anodes or electrolytes. Based on this understanding, we propose an electrochemical strategy to reactivate the accumulated Li2 S and revive the dead Li-S batteries in NSEs. With such a facile approach, Li-S batteries with significantly improved cycling stability and accelerated dynamics are achieved with diglyme-, acetonitrile- and 1,2-dimethoxyethane-based NSEs. Our finding may rebuild the confidence in exploiting non-solvating Li-S batteries with practical competitiveness.
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Using Li2S cathodes instead of S cathodes presents an opportunity to pair them with Li-free anodes (e.g., graphite), thereby circumventing anode-related issues, such as poor reversibility and safety, encountered in Li-S batteries. However, the moisture-sensitive nature of Li2S causes the release of hazardous H2S and the formation of insulative by-products, increasing the manufacturing difficulty and adversely affecting cathode performance. Here, Li4SnS4, a Li+ conductor that is air-stable according to the hard-soft acid-base principle, is formed in situ and uniformly on Li2S particles because Li2S itself participates in Li4SnS4 formation. When exposed to air (20% relative humidity), the protective Li4SnS4 layer maintains its components and structure, thus contributing to the enhanced stability of the Li2S@Li4SnS4 composite. In addition, the Li4SnS4 layer can accelerate the sluggish conversion of Li2S because of its favorable interfacial charge transfer, and continuously confine lithium polysulfides owing to its integrity during electrochemical processes. A graphite-Li2S pouch cell containing a Li2S@Li4SnS4 cathode is constructed, which shows stable cyclability with 97% capacity retention after 100 cycles. Hence, combining a desirable air-stable Li2S cathode and a highly reversible Li-free configuration offers potential practical applications of graphite-Li2S full cells.
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Lithium (Li) metal electrodes show significantly different reversibility in the electrolytes with different salts. However, the understanding on how the salts impact on the Li loss remains unclear. Herein, using the electrolytes with different salts (e.g., lithium hexafluorophosphate (LiPF6), lithium difluoro(oxalato)borate (LiDFOB), and lithium bis(fluorosulfonyl)amide (LiFSI)) as examples, we decouple the irreversible Li loss (SEI Li+ and "dead" Li) during cycling. It is found that the accumulation of both SEI Li+ and "dead" Li may be responsible to the irreversible Li loss for the Li metal in the electrolyte with LiPF6 salt. While for the electrolytes with LiDFOB and LiFSI salts, the accumulation of "dead" Li predominates the Li loss. We also demonstrate that lithium nitrate and fluoroethylene carbonate additives could, respectively, function as the "dead" Li and SEI Li+ inhibitors. Inspired by the above understandings, we propose a universal procedure for the electrolyte design of Li metal batteries (LMBs): (i) decouple and find the main reason for the irreversible Li loss; (ii) add the corresponding electrolyte additive. With such a Li-loss-targeted strategy, the Li reversibility was significantly enhanced in the electrolytes with 1,2-dimethoxyethane, triethyl phosphate, and tetrahydrofuran solvents. Our strategy may broaden the scope of electrolyte design toward practical LMBs.
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There are many restrictions on topical medications for the oral cavity. Various factors affect the topical application of drugs in the oral cavity, an open and complex environment. The complex physical and chemical environment of the oral cavity, such as saliva and food, will influence the effect of free drugs. Therefore, drug delivery systems have served as supporting structures or as carriers loading active ingredients, such as antimicrobial agents and growth factors (GFs), to promote antibacterial properties, tissue regeneration, and engineering for drug diffusion. These drug delivery systems are considered in the prevention and treatment of dental caries, periodontal disease, periapical disease, the delivery of anesthetic drugs, etc. These carrier materials are designed in different ways for clinical application, including nanoparticles, hydrogels, nanofibers, films, and scaffolds. This review aimed to summarize the advantages and disadvantages of different carrier materials. We discuss synthesis methods and their application scope to provide new perspectives for the development and preparation of more favorable and effective local oral drug delivery systems.
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Caries Dental , Enfermedades de la Boca , Nanofibras , Nanopartículas , Caries Dental/tratamiento farmacológico , Caries Dental/prevención & control , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos , Humanos , Enfermedades de la Boca/tratamiento farmacológicoRESUMEN
Due to the poor electronic conductivity of solid sulfur and sulfides, the dissolution of Sα- (α = 0, 2/8, 2/6, 2/4) into a liquid electrolyte and the vehicular diffusion of Sα- to carbon black are necessary for the electrochemical activity of a sulfur cathode in lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries. However, exactly how much dissolution and diffusion are required for high sulfur utilization and how this may control the minimum electrolyte/sulfur ratio, (E/S)min, have not been quantitatively settled. In this work, we show experimentally that a dissolved polysulfide concentration which is too high (>10-20 MS) may gel the liquid electrolyte, leading to catastrophic loss of Sα- mobility, a failure mode that is especially susceptible in a high-donor-number (DN) electrolyte under a lean condition (low E/S), similar to a traffic jam, resulting in high electrochemical polarization and low sulfur utilization. In contrast, we show that a low-DN electrolyte, even with a low polysulfide solubility of 0.1-0.5 MS, will never encounter a gelation catastrophe even at extremely low E/S, leading to unprecedentedly high energy density. Specifically, high sulfur utilizations of 96% (1600 mAh g-1) and 78% (1300 mAh g-1) are reached in an electrolyte as lean as E/S = 2 and 1 µL mg-1 Li-S coin cells when DME1.6LiFSI-HFE of low solvation capability (DN = 13.9) is adopted, even paired against a high-sulfur-loading cathode (5 mg cm-2).
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Abstract There are many restrictions on topical medications for the oral cavity. Various factors affect the topical application of drugs in the oral cavity, an open and complex environment. The complex physical and chemical environment of the oral cavity, such as saliva and food, will influence the effect of free drugs. Therefore, drug delivery systems have served as supporting structures or as carriers loading active ingredients, such as antimicrobial agents and growth factors (GFs), to promote antibacterial properties, tissue regeneration, and engineering for drug diffusion. These drug delivery systems are considered in the prevention and treatment of dental caries, periodontal disease, periapical disease, the delivery of anesthetic drugs, etc. These carrier materials are designed in different ways for clinical application, including nanoparticles, hydrogels, nanofibers, films, and scaffolds. This review aimed to summarize the advantages and disadvantages of different carrier materials. We discuss synthesis methods and their application scope to provide new perspectives for the development and preparation of more favorable and effective local oral drug delivery systems.