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1.
ACS Omega ; 3(1): 455-463, 2018 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31457904

ABSTRACT

The excess of mango peels is considered manufacturing waste in the sugar and juice industry. There is an increasing interest in looking for alternative ways to employ this waste to address this overload. Here, we show the efficient use of mango peels as a noncost carbon source for the synthesis of graphene. We demonstrate for the first time the synthesis of graphene on Cu substrates from mango peels, a biomass rich in pectin. It is observed that plasma presence is essential for the growth of graphene from mango peels. At 15 and 30 min of plasma exposure, we observed the presence of multilayered graphene, at longer plasma exposure, i.e., 60 min, there is the formation of monolayer graphene, attributed to the etching of multiple layers formed at short times due to long plasma exposure time. When employing this technique, precautions must be taken due to the etching effect of plasma, such as reducing either the plasma exposure time or the plasma power. Finally, we present a graphene growth pathway under plasma environment on the basis of our experimental observations.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 123(40): 9743-8, 2001 Oct 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11583535

ABSTRACT

A new dendron with peripheral long alkyl chains and containing five C(60) units in the branching shell has been prepared and attached to a Fréchet-type dendron functionalized with ethylene glycol chains. The peripheral substitution of the resulting globular dendrimer with hydrophobic chains on one hemisphere and hydrophilic groups on the other provides the perfect hydrophobic/hydrophilic balance allowing the formation of stable Langmuir films. Furthermore, a perfect reversibility has been observed in successive compression/decompression cycles. The diblock structure of the dendrimer has been also crucial for the efficient transfer of the Langmuir films in order to obtain well-ordered multilayered Langmuir-Blodgett films. This approach appears particularly interesting since functional groups not well adapted for the preparation of Langmuir and Langmuir-Blodgett films such as fullerenes can be attached into the branching shell of the dendritic structure and, thus, efficiently incorporated in thin ordered films.

3.
Mar Pollut Bull ; 42(3): 241-5, 2001 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11381879

ABSTRACT

Many studies have quantified debris collected on beaches around the world. Only a few of those studies have been conducted in the United States, and they are largely limited to semi-quantitative efforts performed as part of volunteer clean-up activities. This study quantifies the distribution and composition of beach debris by sampling 43 stratified random sites on the Orange County, California coast, from August to September 1998. We estimated that approximately 106 million items, weighing 12 metric tons, occur on Orange County beaches. The most abundant items were pre-production plastic pellets, foamed plastics, and hard plastics. Debris density on the remote rocky shoreline was greater than that on high-use sandy beaches for most debris items. This finding partially reflects the periodic clean-up of high-use beaches by local municipalities, and also indicates that a high percentage of the observed debris was transported to the site from waterborne sources.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Plastics , Seawater , Waste Products , Water Pollution/prevention & control , California , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Humans
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