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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(20): 26142-26152, 2024 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38718256

ABSTRACT

Water is readily available nearly anywhere as vapor. Thus, atmospheric water harvesting (AWH) technologies are seen as a promising solution to support sustainable water production. This work reports a novel semi-interpenetrating network, which integrates poly(pyrrole) doped with a hygroscopic salt and 2D graphene-based nanosheets optimally assembled within an alginate matrix, capable of harvesting water from the atmosphere with a record intake of up to 7.15 gw/gs. Owing to the incorporated graphene nanosheets, natural sunlight was solely used to enable desorption, achieving an increase of the temperature of the developed network of up to 71 °C within 20 min, resulting in a water yield of 3.36 L/kgS in each cycle with quality well within the World Health Organization standard ranges. Notably, after 30 cycles of sorption and desorption, the composite hydrogel displayed unchanged water uptake and stability. This study demonstrates that atmospheric water vapor as a complementary source of water can be harvested sustainably and effectively at a minimal cost and without external energy input.

2.
Small ; : e2400420, 2024 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38751057

ABSTRACT

Global water scarcity is leading to increasingly tense competition across populations. In order to complement the largely fast-depleting fresh water sources and mitigate the challenges generated by brine discharge from desalination, atmospheric water harvesting (AWH) has emerged to support long-term water supply. This work presents a novel alginate-based hybrid material comprised of porous silico-aluminophosphate-34 (SAPO-34) as fast-transport channel medium as well as hydrophilicity and stability enhancer, and graphene-based sheets as light absorber for solar-enabled evaporation, both optimally incorporated in an alginate matrix, resulting in a composite sorbent capable of harvesting water from the atmosphere with a record intake of up to 6.85 gw gs -1. Natural sunlight is solely used to enable desorption achieving increase of the temperature of the developed network up to 60 °C and resulting in release of the sorbed water, with impurities content well below the World Health Organization (WHO) upper limits. After 30 cycles of sorption and desorption, the composite hydrogel displayed unchanged water uptake and stability. This work provides an impactful perspective toward sustainable generation of water from humidity without external energy consumption supporting the emergence of alternative water production solutions.

3.
ACS Omega ; 9(14): 15768-15780, 2024 Apr 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38617643

ABSTRACT

Hybrid protein-copper nanoflowers have emerged as promising materials with diverse applications in biocatalysis, biosensing, and bioremediation. Sericin, a waste biopolymer from the textile industry, has shown potential for fabricating such nanoflowers. However, the influence of the molecular weight of sericin on nanoflower morphology and peroxidase-like activity remains unexplored. This work focused on the self-assembly of nanoflowers using high- and low-molecular-weight (HMW and LMW) silk sericin combined with copper(II) as an inorganic moiety. The peroxidase-like activity of the resulting nanoflowers was evaluated using 2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). The findings revealed that high-molecular-weight sericin hybrid nanoflowers (HMW-ShNFs) exhibited significantly higher peroxidase-like activity than low-molecular-weight sericin hybrid nanoflowers (LMW-ShNFs). Furthermore, HMW-ShNFs demonstrated superior reusability and storage stability, thereby enhancing their potential for practical use. This study also explored the application of HMW-ShNF for ciprofloxacin degradation to address the environmental and health hazards posed by this antibiotic in water. The results indicated that HMW-ShNFs facilitated the degradation of ciprofloxacin, achieving a maximum degradation of 33.2 ± 1% at pH 8 and 35 °C after 72 h. Overall, the enhanced peroxidase-like activity and successful application in ciprofloxacin degradation underscore the potential of HMW-ShNFs for a sustainable and ecofriendly remediation process. These findings open avenues for the further exploration and utilization of hybrid nanoflowers in various environmental applications.

4.
Lab Chip ; 24(3): 505-516, 2024 01 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38165774

ABSTRACT

Biological models with genetic similarities to humans are used for exploratory research to develop behavioral screening tools and understand sensory-motor interactions. Their small, often mm-sized appearance raises challenges in the straightforward quantification of their subtle behavioral responses and calls for new, customisable research tools. 3D printing provides an attractive approach for the manufacture of custom designs at low cost; however, challenges remain in the integration of functional materials like porous membranes. Nanoporous membranes have been integrated with resin exchange using purpose-designed resins by digital light projection 3D printing to yield functionally integrated devices using a simple, economical and semi-automated process. Here, the impact of the layer thickness and layer number on the porous properties - parameters unique for 3D printing - are investigated, showing decreases in mean pore diameter and porosity with increasing layer height and layer number. From the same resin formulation, materials with average pore size between 200 and 600 nm and porosity between 45% and 61% were printed. Membrane-integrated devices were used to study the chemoattractant induced behavioural response of zebrafish embryos and planarians, both demonstrating a predominant behavioral response towards the chemoattractant, spending >85% of experiment time in the attractant side of the observation chamber. The presented 3D printing method can be used for printing custom designed membrane-integrated devices using affordable 3D printers and enable fine-tuning of porous properties through adjustment of layer height and number. This accessible approach is expected to be adopted for applications including behavioural studies, early-stage pre-clinical drug discovery and (environmental) toxicology.


Subject(s)
Aquatic Organisms , Zebrafish , Humans , Animals , Porosity , Tissue Scaffolds , Printing, Three-Dimensional
5.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 13(20)2023 Oct 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37887921

ABSTRACT

The distinctive cage-like structure of polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (POSS) materials makes them highly effective fillers in composite membranes for separation applications. However, realizing their full potential in the application often requires specific surface functionalization with various groups. However, this requirement remains challenging owing to the limitations of wet-chemistry approaches, which frequently result in the generation of hazardous chemical by-products. In this paper, a "green" stirring plasma strategy is presented for the functionalization of octa-methyl POSS sub-micron particles into designable oxygen-containing functional groups using a low-pressure oxygen plasma from combined continuous wave and pulsed (CW+P) modes. Plasma from oxygen gas with CW mode offers highly oxygen-reactive species to continuously etch and activate the surface of the POSS. The resulting pulsed plasma assists in grafting more reactive oxygen species onto the active methyl groups of the POSS to form specific oxygen-containing functional groups including hydroxyl and carboxyl. A precise control of nearly one hydroxyl or one carboxyl group at the corner of the cage structure of the POSS is demonstrated, without damaging the core. Therefore, the plasma process discussed in this work is suggested by the authors as controllable fundamental research for the surface functionalization of sub-micron particles, promoting a more environmentally friendly pathway for the preparation of designable fillers.

6.
Nanoscale ; 15(24): 10371-10382, 2023 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37292027

ABSTRACT

3D printing is established as an alternative microfabrication approach, and while printer resolution limits the direct 3D printing of pore features in the micron/submicron range, the use of nanoporous materials allows for the integration of porous membranes in 3D printed devices. Here, nanoporous membranes were formed by digital light projection (DLP) 3D printing using a polymerization-induced phase separation (PIPS) resin formulation. A functionally integrated device was fabricated using resin exchange following a simple, semi-automated manufacturing process. Printing of porous materials from a PIPS resin formulations based on polyethylene glycol diacrylate 250 as monomer was investigated by varying exposure time, photoinitiator concentration, and porogen content to yield materials with average pore size varying from 30-800 nm. Aiming for printing a size-mobility trap for electrophoretic extraction of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), conditions for printing materials with a mean pore size of 346 nm and 30 nm were selected for integration in a fluidic device using a resin exchange approach. Under optimized conditions (12.5 V for 20 min), cell concentrations as low as 103 cells per mL were detected following amplification of the extract by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) at a Cq of 29. The efficacy of the size/mobility trap formed by the two membranes is demonstrated by detecting DNA concentrations equivalent to the input detected in the extract while removing 73% of the protein in the lysate. The DNA extraction yield was not statistically different from that obtained using a spin column, but manual handling and equipment needs were significantly reduced. This study demonstrates that nanoporous membranes with tailored properties can be integrated into fluidic devices using a simple manufacturing process based on resin exchange DLP. The process was used to manufacture a size-mobility trap and applied for the electroextraction and purification of DNA from E. coli lysate with reduced processing time, manual handling, and equipment needs compared with a commercially sourced DNA extraction kit. Combining manufacturability and portability with ease of use, the approach has demonstrated potential for manufacturing and using devices used in point-of-need testing for diagnostic nucleic acid amplification testing.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli , Nanopores , Printing, Three-Dimensional , Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques , DNA
7.
J Environ Chem Eng ; 11(3): 110176, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37234558

ABSTRACT

Although waterborne virus removal may be achieved using separation membrane technologies, such technologies remain largely inefficient at generating virus-free effluents due to the lack of anti-viral reactivity of conventional membrane materials required to deactivating viruses. Here, a stepwise approach towards simultaneous filtration and disinfection of Human Coronavirus 229E (HCoV-229E) in water effluents, is proposed by engineering dry-spun ultrafiltration carbon nanotube (CNT) membranes, coated with anti-viral SnO2 thin films via atomic layer deposition. The thickness and pore size of the engineered CNT membranes were fine-tuned by varying spinnable CNT sheets and their relative orientations on carbon nanofibre (CNF) porous supports to reach thicknesses less than 1 µm and pore size around 28 nm. The nanoscale SnO2 coatings were found to further reduce the pore size down to ∼21 nm and provide more functional groups on the membrane surface to capture the viruses via size exclusion and electrostatic attractions. The synthesized CNT and SnO2 coated CNT membranes were shown to attain a viral removal efficiency above 6.7 log10 against HCoV-229E virus with fast water permeance up to ∼4 × 103 and 3.5 × 103 L.m-2.h-1.bar-1, respectively. Such high performance was achieved by increasing the dry-spun CNT sheets up to 60 layers, orienting successive 30 CNT layers at 45°, and coating 40 nm SnO2 on the synthesized membranes. The current study provides an efficient scalable fabrication scheme to engineer flexible ultrafiltration CNT-based membranes for cost-effective filtration and inactivation of waterborne viruses to outperform the state-of-the-art ultrafiltration membranes.

8.
Chemosphere ; 321: 138070, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36775036

ABSTRACT

Given that surface water is the primary supply of drinking water worldwide, the presence of natural organic matter (NOM) in surface water presents difficulties for water treatment facilities. During the disinfection phase of the drinking water treatment process, NOM aids in the creation of toxic disinfection by-products (DBPs). This problem can be effectively solved using the nanofiltration (NF) membrane method, however NOM can significantly foul NF membranes, degrading separation performance and membrane integrity, necessitating the development of fouling-resistant membranes. This review offers a thorough analysis of the removal of NOM by NF along with insights into the operation, mechanisms, fouling, and its controlling variables. In light of engineering materials with distinctive features, the potential of surface-engineered NF membranes is here critically assessed for the impact on the membrane surface, separation, and antifouling qualities. Case studies on surface-engineered NF membranes are critically evaluated, and properties-to-performance connections are established, as well as challenges, trends, and predictions for the field's future. The effect of alteration on surface properties, interactions with solutes and foulants, and applications in water treatment are all examined in detail. Engineered NF membranes containing zwitterionic polymers have the greatest potential to improve membrane permeance, selectivity, stability, and antifouling performance. To support commercial applications, however, difficulties related to material production, modification techniques, and long-term stability must be solved promptly. Fouling resistant NF membrane development would be critical not only for the water treatment industry, but also for a wide range of developing applications in gas and liquid separations.


Subject(s)
Drinking Water , Water Purification , Membranes, Artificial , Ultrafiltration/methods , Water Purification/methods , Disinfection
9.
Front Bioeng Biotechnol ; 11: 1091554, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36815880

ABSTRACT

Slaughterhouses produce large quantities of biological waste, and most of these materials are underutilized. In many published reports, the possibility of repurposing this form of waste to create biomaterials, fertilizers, biogas, and feeds has been discussed. However, the employment of particular offal wastes in xenotransplantation has yet to be extensively uncovered. Overall, viable transplantable tissues and organs are scarce, and developing bioartificial components using such discarded materials may help increase their supply. This perspective manuscript explores the viability and sustainability of readily available and easily sourced slaughterhouse waste, such as blood vessels, eyes, kidneys, and tracheas, as starting materials in xenotransplantation derived from decellularization technologies. The manuscript also examines the innovative use of animal stem cells derived from the excreta to create a bioartificial tissue/organ platform that can be translated to humans. Institutional and governmental regulatory approaches will also be outlined to support this endeavor.

10.
Chemosphere ; 310: 136891, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36257385

ABSTRACT

Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are key components for the capture of microplastics (MPs) before they are released into natural waterways. Removal efficiencies as high as 99% may be achieved but sub-micron MPs as well as nanoplastics have been overlooked because of analytical limitations. Furthermore, short MP fibres are of concern because of their low capture rate as well as the lack of understanding of their influence on purification system efficiency. This study has investigated the impact of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) short nanofibres on the performance of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) ultrafiltration membranes during cross-flow operation. Model MP fibres with an average length of 10 ± 7 µm and a diameter of 142 ± 40 nm were prepared via a combination of electrospinning and fine cutting using a cryomicrotome. The manufactured MPs were added to both pure and synthetic domestic wastewater at a concentration of 1 mg.L-1 to determine their impact on the performance of PVDF ultrafiltration membranes. The results show that PET fibres attach to the membrane in a disorganised manner with low pore coverage. The water flux was decreased by 8% for MPs in pure water and no noticeable effect in wastewater after 3 days of filtration. Additionally, the nutrient removal efficiency of the membrane was not altered by the presence of PET MPs. These findings show that MP fibres do not significantly influence the early stages of filtration for a standard concentration of MPs in wastewater treatment plant studies.


Subject(s)
Water Pollutants, Chemical , Water Purification , Microplastics , Plastics , Wastewater , Ultrafiltration , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Water
11.
Membranes (Basel) ; 12(8)2022 Aug 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36005714

ABSTRACT

The management of brines generated from reverse osmosis operation remains a critical challenge requiring new approaches and processes to limit the impact of brine discharge onto ecosystems and to enhance both water and valuable resource recovery. The treatment of real seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) brines (45,000 ppm TDS) obtained from a local Singaporean desalination plant with a crystallizer integrated pilot-scale membrane distillation unit (MDC) was studied. Commercial STOMATE® hollow fiber membranes were used in vacuum membrane distillation (VMD) configuration, leading to an average flux of around 3.7 L/m2-h at a permeate vacuum of 80 kPa and an average feed temperature of 65 °C. Consistent separation operations were achieved for the treatment of real SWRO brine over a period of 280 h; this led to a water recovery of >95% and to the collection of salt slurries, containing up to ~10−20 wt% of moisture, from the crystallizer. This approach demonstrates the potential of MDC systems to achieve zero brine discharge efficiently from seawater desalination systems, providing an environmentally friendly alternative to manage brines by increasing water recovery and generating salt slurries of economic value.

12.
Sci Total Environ ; 841: 156593, 2022 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35690218

ABSTRACT

The high prevalence and persistence of microplastics (MPs) in pristine habitats along with their accumulation across environmental compartments globally, has become a matter of grave concern. The resilience conferred to MPs using the material engineering approaches for outperforming other materials has become key to the challenge that they now represent. The characteristics that make MPs hazardous are their micro to nano scale dimensions, surface varied wettability and often hydrophobicity, leading to non-biodegradability. In addition, MPs exhibit a strong tendency to bind to other contaminants along with the ability to sustain extreme chemical conditions thus increasing their residence time in the environment. Adsorption of these co-contaminants leads to modification in toxicity varying from additive, synergistic, and sometimes antagonistic, having consequences on flora, fauna, and ultimately the end of the food chain, human health. The resulting environmental fate and associated risks of MPs, therefore greatly depend upon their complex interactions with the co-contaminants and the nature of the environment in which they reside. Net outcomes of such complex interactions vary with core characteristics of MPs, the properties of co-contaminants and the abiotic factors, and are required to be better understood to minimize the inherent risks. Toxicity assays addressing these concerns should be ecologically relevant, assessing the impacts at different levels of biological organization to develop an environmental perspective. This review analyzed and evaluated 171 studies to present research status on MP toxicity. This analysis supported the identification and development of research gaps and recommended priority areas of research, accounting for disproportionate risks faced by different countries. An ecological perspective is also developed on the environmental toxicity of contaminated MPs in the light of multi-variant stressors and directions are provided to conduct an ecologically relevant risk assessment. The presented analyses will also serve as a foundation for developing environmentally appropriate remediation methods and evaluation frameworks.


Subject(s)
Microplastics , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Adsorption , Ecosystem , Environmental Monitoring , Humans , Microplastics/toxicity , Plastics/toxicity , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
13.
Water Res ; 218: 118519, 2022 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35512533

ABSTRACT

The remediation of persistent organic pollutants in surface and ground water represents a major environmental challenge worldwide. Conventional physico-chemical techniques do not efficiently remove such persistent organic pollutants and new remediation techniques are therefore required. Photo-electro catalytic membranes represent an emerging solution that can combine photocatalytic and electrocatalytic degradation of contaminants along with molecular sieving. Herein, macro-porous photo-electro catalytic membranes were prepared using conductive and porous stainless steel metal membranes decorated with nano coatings of semiconductor photocatalytic metal oxides (TiO2 and ZnO) via atomic layer deposition, producing highly conformal and stable coatings. The metal - semiconductor junction between the stainless steel membranes and photocatalysts provides Schottky - like characteristics to the coated membranes. The PEC membranes showed induced hydrophilicity from the nano-coatings and enhanced electro-chemical properties due to the Schottky junction. A high electron transfer rate was also induced in the coated membranes as the photocurrent efficiency increased by 4 times. The photo-electrocatalytic efficiency of the TiO2 and ZnO coated membranes were demonstrated in batch and cross flow filtration reactors for the degradation of persistent organic pollutant solution, offering increased degradation kinetic factors by 2.9 and 2.3 compared to photocatalysis and electrocatalysis, respectively. The recombination of photo-induced electron and hole pairs is mitigated during the photo-electrocatalytic process, resulting in an enhanced catalytic performance. The strategy offers outstanding perspectives to design stimuli-responsive membrane materials able to sieve and degrade simultaneously toxic contaminants towards greater process integration and self-cleaning operations.


Subject(s)
Persistent Organic Pollutants , Zinc Oxide , Catalysis , Stainless Steel , Titanium/chemistry
14.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 29(40): 60212-60231, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35416578

ABSTRACT

A sectorial approach for assessing heavy metal pollution in rivers neglects the inter-relationship between its environmental compartments and thus fails to report realistic pollution status and associated ecological and human health risks. Therefore, a systems approach was adopted to assess heavy metal pollution and associated risks in the Yamuna River (Delhi, India), one of the world's most polluted and populated river-city pairs. Sampling sites selected along the river with distinct land use were uncultivated natural floodplain vegetation, marshy area, invasive community, arable land, and human settlements. The multivariate analysis identified sources of pollutions (Pb, Cd, Cr, and Ni [anthropogenic]; Fe and Zn [geogenic]). Across the land use, a high log Kp value of Zn and Pb in water-soil phase than in water-sediment phase indicates their long-range transfer, whereas low log Kp (water-soil) of Cd suggests river sediments as its reservoirs. Comparison of pollution indices of Cd, Cr, and Pb in water, sediment, and soil across the land use suggested the role of vegetation in reducing pollution in the environment. Ecological risk also gets reduced progressively from water to sediment to the soil in naturally vegetated sites. Similarly, in river water, Cr, Cd, Ni, and Pb pose carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic risks to adults and children, which are also reduced in sediments and soil of different vegetation regimes. This study showed the eco-remediation services rendered by natural vegetation in reducing pollution and associated ecological and human health risks. To conclude, using a systems approach has significance in assessing pollution at the ecosystem level, and focusing on riverbank land use remains significant in developing methods to reduce pollution and ecological and human health risks for sustainable riverbank management.


Subject(s)
Metals, Heavy , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Adult , Cadmium/analysis , Child , China , Ecosystem , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Geologic Sediments/analysis , Humans , Lead/analysis , Metals, Heavy/analysis , Risk Assessment , Rivers , Soil , Systems Analysis , Water/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
15.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 6057, 2022 04 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35411022

ABSTRACT

Motility is an indicator of sperm cell viability due to higher probability in swimming through the female reproductive tract and undergo fertilization with the egg cell. Centrifugation method is a technique to process high volume semen and isolate motile sperm cells but decreases the biochemical integrity of spermatozoa due to the contact with reactive oxygen species (ROS) from dead cells released during centrifugation. This study uses solution electrospun poly(ε-caprolactone) membranes as an alternative in isolating motile spermatozoa by utilizing a rationally designed 3D printed module set up, providing the same benefits as commercially available techniques with minimal processing time, and bypassing the centrifugation step to provide higher quality sperm cells. The membranes, with nominal pore size distributions ranging from 5 to 6 µm are highly porous structures suitable for establishing baseline data for sperm cell sorting by motility. The proposed method allows for isolation of motile sperm cells with 74% purity, while decreasing the processing time by 98% when compared to centrifugation techniques. This novel approach provides a facile method for isolating motile spermatozoa directly from frozen semen samples without any pretreatments and is easily scalable for small and medium scale farms as well as larger industries.


Subject(s)
Semen Preservation , Sperm Motility , Cell Separation/methods , Humans , Male , Semen Analysis , Spermatozoa/metabolism
16.
Membranes (Basel) ; 12(3)2022 Mar 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35323818

ABSTRACT

The mass production of lithium-ion batteries and lithium-rich e-products that are required for electric vehicles, energy storage devices, and cloud-connected electronics is driving an unprecedented demand for lithium resources. Current lithium production technologies, in which extraction and purification are typically achieved by hydrometallurgical routes, possess strong environmental impact but are also energy-intensive and require extensive operational capabilities. The emergence of selective membrane materials and associated electro-processes offers an avenue to reduce these energy and cost penalties and create more sustainable lithium production approaches. In this review, lithium recovery technologies are discussed considering the origin of the lithium, which can be primary sources such as minerals and brines or e-waste sources generated from recycling of batteries and other e-products. The relevance of electro-membrane processes for selective lithium recovery is discussed as well as the potential and shortfalls of current electro-membrane methods.

17.
J Environ Manage ; 308: 114655, 2022 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35131704

ABSTRACT

Per-/poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are an emerging class of environmental contaminants used as an additive across various commodity and fire-retardant products, for their unique thermo-chemical stability, and to alter their surface properties towards selective liquid repellence. These properties also make PFAS highly persistent and mobile across various environmental compartments, leading to bioaccumulation, and causing acute ecotoxicity at all trophic levels particularly to human populations, thus increasing the need for monitoring at their repositories or usage sites. In this review, current nano-enabled methods towards PFAS sensing and its monitoring in wastewater are critically discussed and benchmarked against conventional detection methods. The discussion correlates the materials' properties to the sensitivity, responsiveness, and reproducibility of the sensing performance for nano-enabled sensors in currently explored electrochemical, spectrophotometric, colorimetric, optical, fluorometric, and biochemical with limits of detection of 1.02 × 10-6 µg/L, 2.8 µg/L, 1 µg/L, 0.13 µg/L, 6.0 × 10-5 µg/L, and 4.141 × 10-7 µg/L respectively. The cost-effectiveness of sensing platforms plays an important role in the on-site analysis success and upscalability of nano-enabled sensors. Environmental monitoring of PFAS is a step closer to PFAS remediation. Electrochemical and biosensing methods have proven to be the most reliable tools for future PFAS sensing endeavors with very promising detection limits in an aqueous matrix, short detection times, and ease of fabrication.


Subject(s)
Alkanesulfonic Acids , Fluorocarbons , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Fluorocarbons/analysis , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Wastewater/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
18.
Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr ; 62(9): 2432-2459, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33280405

ABSTRACT

Edible films and coatings are eco-friendly promising materials for preserving the quality and extending the shelf life of fresh and minimally-processed fruits. They can form protective layers around fruits, regulate their respiration rates, and protect them from loss of water, tissue softening, browning, and microbial contamination. Edible films and coatings have many advantages over other post-harvest treatments. They can add commercial value to fruits by enhancing their appearance, and act as carriers of functional ingredients, such as antioxidants, antimicrobial agents and nutraceuticals. Mango, a highly perishable tropical fruit, has a short post-harvest life, which limits transport to distant markets. Application of edible films and coatings on mango fruits is an effective method to preserve their quality and safety. This paper provides an overview of desirable properties for films and coatings, and recent development in different edible coatings for both fresh and minimally-processed mango. The most popular edible coating materials, such as chitosan, waxes, starch, gums, and cellulose used for mango are reviewed. The commercialization of coating formulations and equipment used for application of coatings are discussed. The environmental impacts, safety aspects, and the challenges encountered are outlined. The opportunities to use other coating materials, such as aloe-vera gel, microbial polysaccharides, and photosynthetic microorganisms are also examined.


Subject(s)
Edible Films , Mangifera , Food Packaging , Food Preservation , Fruit , Life Expectancy , Vegetables
19.
Circ Econ Sustain ; 2(1): 9-23, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34888565

ABSTRACT

The selection and engineering of materials is a critical component towards the development of a circular economy model. The redesign of both consumer commodity goods and advanced products may not only require engineering feats in terms of advanced structures but also the implementation of safer and more facile to recycle materials. Although such endeavours include the engineering of goods generated from clever components assemblies, easier to dismantle and separate, new avenues to move beyond planned obsolescence towards triggered obsolescence, whereby materials may degrade on command, is required. Circular Materials must be designed to enable complete recycling of materials and novel synthesis strategies free from toxic precursors or by-products to regenerate raw materials. Circular materials shall therefore be processed first at the local level for local needs. Key supply-chain challenges arising from the COVID-19 lockdowns have further stressed the relevance of this issue and the need to have develop well dispatched geographically manufacturing hubs. Changes towards Circular Materials considerations will depend on the development of repurposing and recycling platforms as well as from the rebirth of delocalized manufacturing capabilities. This chapter will present current solutions to develop sustainable materials engineering strategies and focus on greener fabrication and recycling routes. Focus on smarter designs and life-cycle analysis will reflect on how Circular Design of materials may contribute to the Circular Economy.

20.
Anal Chim Acta ; 1185: 338796, 2021 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34711329

ABSTRACT

Porous materials facilitate the efficient separation of chemicals and particulate matter by providing selectivity through structural and surface properties and are attractive as sorbent owing to their large surface area. This broad applicability of porous materials makes the integration of porous materials and microfluidic devices important in the development of more efficient, advanced separation platforms. Additive manufacturing approaches are fundamentally different to traditional manufacturing methods, providing unique opportunities in the fabrication of fluidic devices. The complementary 3D printing (3DP) methods are each accompanied by unique opportunities and limitations in terms of minimum channel size, scalability, functional integration and automation. This review focuses on the developments in the fabrication of 3DP miniaturised fluidic devices with integrated porous materials, focusing polymer-based methods including fused filament fabrication (FFF), inkjet 3D printing and digital light projection (DLP). The 3DP methods are compared based on resolution, scope for multimaterial printing and scalability for manufacturing. As opportunities for printing pores are limited by resolution, the focus is on approaches to incorporate materials with sub-micron pores to be used as membrane, sorbent or stationary phase in separation science using Post-Print, Print-Pause-Print and In-Print processes. Technical aspects analysing the efficiency of the fabrication process towards scalable manufacturing are combined with application aspects evaluating the separation and/or extraction performance. The review is concluded with an overview on achievements and opportunities for manufacturable 3D printed membrane/sorbent integrated fluidic devices.


Subject(s)
Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , Printing, Three-Dimensional , Membranes , Polymers , Porosity
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