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1.
Environ Health Perspect ; 132(4): 47005, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38598326

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Global plastic use has consistently increased over the past century with several different types of plastics now being produced. Much of these plastics end up in oceans or landfills leading to a substantial accumulation of plastics in the environment. Plastic debris slowly degrades into microplastics (MPs) that can ultimately be inhaled or ingested by both animals and humans. A growing body of evidence indicates that MPs can cross the gut barrier and enter into the lymphatic and systemic circulation leading to accumulation in tissues such as the lungs, liver, kidney, and brain. The impacts of mixed MPs exposure on tissue function through metabolism remains largely unexplored. OBJECTIVES: This study aims to investigate the impacts of polymer microspheres on tissue metabolism in mice by assessing the microspheres ability to translocate across the gut barrier and enter into systemic circulation. Specifically, we wanted to examine microsphere accumulation in different organ systems, identify concentration-dependent metabolic changes, and evaluate the effects of mixed microsphere exposures on health outcomes. METHODS: To investigate the impact of ingested microspheres on target metabolic pathways, mice were exposed to either polystyrene (5µm) microspheres or a mixture of polymer microspheres consisting of polystyrene (5µm), polyethylene (1-4µm), and the biodegradability and biocompatible plastic, poly-(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (5µm). Exposures were performed twice a week for 4 weeks at a concentration of either 0, 2, or 4mg/week via oral gastric gavage. Tissues were collected to examine microsphere ingress and changes in metabolites. RESULTS: In mice that ingested microspheres, we detected polystyrene microspheres in distant tissues including the brain, liver, and kidney. Additionally, we report on the metabolic differences that occurred in the colon, liver, and brain, which showed differential responses that were dependent on concentration and type of microsphere exposure. DISCUSSION: This study uses a mouse model to provide critical insight into the potential health implications of the pervasive issue of plastic pollution. These findings demonstrate that orally consumed polystyrene or mixed polymer microspheres can accumulate in tissues such as the brain, liver, and kidney. Furthermore, this study highlights concentration-dependent and polymer type-specific metabolic changes in the colon, liver, and brain after plastic microsphere exposure. These results underline the mobility within and between biological tissues of MPs after exposure and emphasize the importance of understanding their metabolic impact. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP13435.


Asunto(s)
Poliestirenos , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua , Humanos , Animales , Ratones , Microesferas , Plásticos , Distribución Tisular , Microplásticos , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/análisis
2.
Sci Total Environ ; 926: 171834, 2024 May 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38521258

RESUMEN

The co-occurrence of microplastics (MPs) with potentially toxic metals in the environment stresses the need to address their physicochemical interactions and the potential ecological and human health implications. Here, we investigated the reaction of aqueous U with agricultural soil and high-density polyethylene (HDPE) through the integration of batch experiments, microscopy, and spectroscopy. The aqueous initial concentration of U (100 µM) decreased between 98.6 and 99.2 % at pH 5 and between 86.2 and 98.9 % at pH 7.5 following the first half hour of reaction with 10 g of soil. In similar experimental conditions but with added HDPE, aqueous U decreased between 98.6 and 99.7 % at pH 5 and between 76.1 and 95.2 % at pH 7.5, suggesting that HDPE modified the accumulation of U in soil as a function of pH. Uranium-bearing precipitates on the cracked surface of HDPE were identified by SEM/EDS after two weeks of agitation in water at both pH 5 and 7.5. Accumulation of U on the near-surface region of reacted HDPE was confirmed by XPS. Our findings suggest that the precipitation of U was facilitated by the weathering of the surface of HDPE. These results provide insights about surface-mediated reactions of aqueous metals with MPs, contributing relevant information about the mobility of metals and MPs at co-contaminated agricultural sites.

3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jun 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37398080

RESUMEN

Global plastic use has consistently increased over the past century with several different types of plastics now being produced. Much of these plastics end up in oceans or landfills leading to a substantial accumulation of plastics in the environment. Plastic debris slowly degrades into microplastics (MPs) that can ultimately be inhaled or ingested by both animals and humans. A growing body of evidence indicates that MPs can cross the gut barrier and enter into the lymphatic and systemic circulation leading to accumulation in tissues such as the lungs, liver, kidney, and brain. The impacts of mixed MPs exposure on tissue function through metabolism remains largely unexplored. To investigate the impact of ingested MPs on target metabolomic pathways, mice were subjected to either polystyrene microspheres or a mixed plastics (5 µm) exposure consisting of polystyrene, polyethylene and the biodegradability and biocompatible plastic, poly-(lactic-co-glycolic acid). Exposures were performed twice a week for four weeks at a dose of either 0, 2, or 4 mg/week via oral gastric gavage. Our findings demonstrate that, in mice, ingested MPs can pass through the gut barrier, be translocated through the systemic circulation, and accumulate in distant tissues including the brain, liver, and kidney. Additionally, we report on the metabolomic changes that occur in the colon, liver and brain which show differential responses that are dependent on dose and type of MPs exposure. Lastly, our study provides proof of concept for identifying metabolomic alterations associated with MPs exposure and adds insight into the potential health risks that mixed MPs contamination may pose to humans.

4.
Toxicol Sci ; 193(1): 90-102, 2023 05 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36881996

RESUMEN

Microplastics represent an emerging environmental contaminant, with large gaps in our understanding of human health impacts. Furthermore, environmental factors may modify the plastic chemistry, further altering the toxic potency. Ultraviolet (UV) light is one such unavoidable factor for airborne microplastic particulates and a known modifier of polystyrene surface chemistry. As an experimental model, we aged commercially available polystyrene microspheres for 5 weeks with UV radiation, then compared the cellular responses in A549 lung cells with both pristine and irradiated particulates. Photoaging altered the surface morphology of irradiated microspheres and increased the intensities of polar groups on the near-surface region of the particles as indicated by scanning electron microscopy and by fitting of high-resolution X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy C 1s spectra, respectively. Even at low concentrations (1-30 µg/ml), photoaged microspheres at 1 and 5 µm in diameter exerted more pronounced biological responses in the A549 cells than was caused by pristine microspheres. High-content imaging analysis revealed S and G2 cell cycle accumulation and morphological changes, which were also more pronounced in A549 cells treated with photoaged microspheres, and further influenced by the size, dose, and time of exposures. Polystyrene microspheres reduced monolayer barrier integrity and slowed regrowth in a wound healing assay in a manner dependent on dose, photoaging, and size of the microsphere. UV-photoaging generally enhanced the toxicity of polystyrene microspheres in A549 cells. Understanding the influence of weathering and environmental aging, along with size, shape, and chemistry, on microplastics biocompatibility may be an essential consideration for incorporation of different plastics in products.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Químicos del Agua , Humanos , Pulmón , Microplásticos/toxicidad , Microesferas , Estrés Oxidativo , Plásticos/análisis , Poliestirenos/toxicidad , Poliestirenos/análisis , Poliestirenos/química , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/toxicidad
5.
ACS Appl Bio Mater ; 5(2): 504-516, 2022 02 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35090108

RESUMEN

The objective of this study was to determine how different attachment surface chemistries affected the initial and long-term performance and microbial populations of nitrifying biofilms under well-controlled hydrodynamic mixing conditions. While much previous research has focused on the effects of surface properties such as hydrophobicity on bacterial attachment in pure cultures, this study evaluated the effects of specific functional groups on mixed culture composition and functional behavior. Three surfaces with varying hydrophobicity and charge were evaluated for biofilm community development and performance: unmodified poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS), which included terminal methyl groups and was relatively hydrophobic (P-Methyl), PDMS silanized with ester groups (P-Ester), which was uncharged and relatively hydrophilic, and PDMS modified with amine groups (P-Amine), which possessed a positive charge and was the most hydrophilic. The surface chemistries of the three attachment surfaces were characterized by contact angle goniometry, Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). These surfaces were inoculated with dilute activated sludge, and biofilms were grown in rotating annular bioreactors for 80 days, with experimental triplicates. Nitrification rates increased most rapidly in P-Amine biofilm reactors, and their biofilm communities contained significantly more Nitrosomonas (p < 0.05) than those on the other surfaces in early growth stages (days 40-50). From days 50-60, the P-Amine surface biofilm had significantly higher nitrate production rates than the P-Methyl and P-Ester biofilms. The biofilms grown on the P-Amine and P-Methyl surfaces were significantly (p < 0.05) more diverse than the P-Ester biofilms, containing higher relative abundances of the order Rhizobiales, including a significantly higher abundance of the nitrifying genus Nitrobacter (p < 0.05), which coincided with higher rates of nitrate generation. Conversely, biofilms grown on the uncharged hydrophilic P-Ester surface were consistently less productive and had lower diversity than biofilms on the other surfaces. These results indicate that surface chemistry may be a useful design parameter to improve the performance of nitrifying biofilm systems for wastewater treatment and that surface chemistry affects mixed biofilm community composition.


Asunto(s)
Aminas , Ésteres , Amoníaco , Biopelículas , Nitratos
6.
ACS Omega ; 6(49): 33645-33651, 2021 Dec 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34926912

RESUMEN

Traditional approaches to achieving dopant functionalized Si involve grafting the dopant to the Si substrates through O-Si or C-Si bonds, resulting in indirect attachment of the dopant to the Si. Recently, ultrahigh vacuum work has demonstrated that high densities of direct B-Si bonds enable unprecedented electronic behaviors in Si that make it possible for Si to be used as a next-generation electronic material. As solvothermal approaches are inherently amenable to scale-up, there is currently a push to develop solvothermal approaches for the formation of direct dopant-Si bonds. Thus far, B-Si chemistries for next-generation electronic materials have been demonstrated with boron trichloride and bis(pinacolatodiboron). In this work, we use a combination of experimental work and computational studies to examine the reactivity of a phenyl derivatized boron trichloride, namely dichlorophenylborane, with H-Si(100). We determine that despite the stability and ease for the formation of C-Si bonds, the organic component, the phenyl group remains attached to the B and does not yield competitive formation of products via a Si-C bond. This reaction proved a new solvothermal method for the formation of direct B-Si bonds that, with further work, can be leveraged in developing next-generation electronic materials.

7.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 11(7)2021 Jul 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34361184

RESUMEN

This paper reports the successful synthesis of true two-dimensional silicon carbide using a top-down synthesis approach. Theoretical studies have predicted that 2D SiC has a stable planar structure and is a direct band gap semiconducting material. Experimentally, however, the growth of 2D SiC has challenged scientists for decades because bulk silicon carbide is not a van der Waals layered material. Adjacent atoms of SiC bond together via covalent sp3 hybridization, which is much stronger than van der Waals bonding in layered materials. Additionally, bulk SiC exists in more than 250 polytypes, further complicating the synthesis process, and making the selection of the SiC precursor polytype extremely important. This work demonstrates, for the first time, the successful isolation of 2D SiC from hexagonal SiC via a wet exfoliation method. Unlike many other 2D materials such as silicene that suffer from environmental instability, the created 2D SiC nanosheets are environmentally stable, and show no sign of degradation. 2D SiC also shows interesting Raman behavior, different from that of the bulk SiC. Our results suggest a strong correlation between the thickness of the nanosheets and the intensity of the longitudinal optical (LO) Raman mode. Furthermore, the created 2D SiC shows visible-light emission, indicating its potential applications for light-emitting devices and integrated microelectronics circuits. We anticipate that this work will cause disruptive impact across various technological fields, ranging from optoelectronics and spintronics to electronics and energy applications.

8.
Chemistry ; 27(53): 13337-13341, 2021 Sep 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34241928

RESUMEN

Ultradoping introduces unprecedented dopant levels into Si, which transforms its electronic behavior and enables its use as a next-generation electronic material. Commercialization of ultradoping is currently limited by gas-phase ultra-high vacuum requirements. Solvothermal chemistry is amenable to scale-up. However, an integral part of ultradoping is a direct chemical bond between dopants and Si, and solvothermal dopant-Si surface reactions are not well-developed. This work provides the first quantified demonstration of achieving ultradoping concentrations of boron (∼1e14 cm2 ) by using a solvothermal process. Surface characterizations indicate the catalyst cross-reacted, which led to multiple surface products and caused ambiguity in experimental confirmation of direct surface attachment. Density functional theory computations elucidate that the reaction results in direct B-Si surface bonds. This proof-of-principle work lays groundwork for emerging solvothermal ultradoping processes.

9.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(7): 8120-8128, 2021 Feb 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33565850

RESUMEN

The chemical complexity of single-phase multicationic oxides, commonly termed high entropy oxides (HEOs), enables the integration of conventionally incompatible metal cations into a single-crystalline phase. However, few studies have effectively leveraged the multicationic nature of HEOs for optimization of disparate physical and chemical properties. Here, we apply the HEO concept to design robust oxidation catalysts in which multicationic oxide composition is tailored to simultaneously achieve catalytic activity, oxygen storage capacity, and thermal stability. Unlike conventional catalysts, HEOs maintain single-phase structure, even at high temperature, and do not rely on the addition of expensive platinum group metals (PGM) to be active. The HEOs are synthesized through a facile, relatively low temperature (500 °C) sol-gel method, which avoids excessive sintering and catalyst deactivation. Nanostructured high entropy oxides with surface areas as high as 138 m2/g are produced, marking a significant structural improvement over previously reported HEOs. Each HEO contained Ce in varying concentrations, as well as four other metals among Al, Fe, La, Mn, Nd, Pr, Sm, Y, and Zr. All samples adopted a fluorite structure. First row transition metal cations were most effective at improving CO oxidation activity, but their incorporation reduced thermal stability. Rare earth cations were necessary to prevent thermal deactivation while maintaining activity. In sum, our work demonstrates the utility of entropy in complex oxide design and a low-energy synthetic route to produce nanostructured HEOs with cations selected for a cooperative effect toward robust performance in chemically and physically demanding applications.

10.
Commun Chem ; 4(1): 139, 2021 Sep 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36697640

RESUMEN

Efficient conversion of methane to value-added products such as olefins and aromatics has been in pursuit for the past few decades. The demand has increased further due to the recent discoveries of shale gas reserves. Oxidative and non-oxidative coupling of methane (OCM and NOCM) have been actively researched, although catalysts with commercially viable conversion rates are not yet available. Recently, [Formula: see text] (SFMO-075Fe) has been reported to activate methane in an electrochemical OCM (EC-OCM) set up with a C2 selectivity of 82.2%1. However, alkaline earth metal-based materials are known to suffer chemical instability in carbon-rich environments. Hence, here we evaluated the chemical stability of SFMO in carbon-rich conditions with varying oxygen concentrations at temperatures relevant for EC-OCM. SFMO-075Fe showed good methane activation properties especially at low overpotentials but suffered poor chemical stability as observed via thermogravimetric, powder XRD, and XPS measurements where SrCO3 was observed to be a major decomposition product along with SrMoO3 and MoC. Nevertheless, our study demonstrates that electrochemical methods could be used to selectively activate methane towards partial oxidation products such as ethylene at low overpotentials while higher applied biases result in the complete oxidation of methane to carbon dioxide and water.

11.
Minerals (Basel) ; 10(10)2020 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33425380

RESUMEN

The crystal chemistry of carnotite (prototype formula: K2(UO2)2(VO4)2·3H2O) occurring in mine wastes collected from Northeastern Arizona was investigated by integrating spectroscopy, electron microscopy, and x-ray diffraction analyses. Raman spectroscopy confirms that the uranyl vanadate phase present in the mine waste is carnotite, rather than the rarer polymorph vandermeerscheite. X-ray diffraction patterns of the carnotite occurring in these mine wastes are in agreement with those reported in the literature for a synthetic analog. Carbon detected in this carnotite was identified as organic carbon inclusions using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) analyses. After excluding C and correcting for K-drift from the electron microprobe analyses, the composition of the carnotite was determined as 8.64% K2O, 0.26% CaO, 61.43% UO3, 20.26% V2O5, 0.38% Fe2O3, and 8.23% H2O. The empirical formula, (K1.66 Ca0.043 Al(OH)2+ 0.145 Fe(OH)2+ 0.044)((U0.97)O2)2((V1.005)O4)2·4H2O of the studied carnotite, with an atomic ratio 1.9:2:2 for K:U:V, is similar to the that of carnotite (K2(UO2)2(VO4)2·3H2O) reported in the literature. Lattice spacing data determined using selected area electron diffraction (SAED)-TEM suggests: (1) complete amorphization of the carnotite within 120 s of exposure to the electron beam and (2) good agreement of the measured d-spacings for carnotite in the literature. Small Differences between the measured and literature d-spacing values are likely due to the varying degree of hydration between natural and synthetic materials. Such information about the crystal chemistry of carnotite in mine wastes is important for an improved understanding of the occurrence and reactivity of U, V, and other elements in the environment.

12.
ACS Catal ; 7(10): 6887-6891, 2017 Oct 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29034121

RESUMEN

Ceria-supported Pd is a promising heterogeneous catalyst for CO oxidation relevant to environmental cleanup reactions. Pd loaded onto a nanorod form of ceria exposing predominantly (111) facets is already active at 50 °C. Here we report a combination of CO-FTIR spectroscopy and theoretical calculations that allows assigning different forms of Pd on the CeO2(111) surface during reaction conditions. Single Pd atoms stabilized in the form of PdO and PdO2 in a CO/O2 atmosphere participate in a catalytic cycle involving very low activation barriers for CO oxidation. The presence of single Pd atoms on the Pd/CeO2-nanorod, corroborated by aberration-corrected TEM and CO-FTIR spectroscopy, is considered pivotal to its high CO oxidation activity.

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