RESUMO
Zeolites are known to be effective catalysts in biomass converting processes. Understanding the mesoporous structure and dynamics within it during such reactions is important in effectively utilizing them. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) T2 relaxation and diffusion measurements, using a high-power radio frequency probe, are shown to characterize the dynamics of water in mesoporous commercially made 5A zeolite beads before and after the introduction of xylose. Xylose is the starting point in the dehydration into furfural. The results indicate xylose slightly enhances rotational mobility while it decreases translational motion through altering the permeability, K, throughout the porous structure. The measurements show xylose inhibits pure water from relocating into larger pores within the zeolite beads where it eventually is expelled from the bead itself.
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19 F nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) oximetry and 1 H NMR velocimetry were used to noninvasively map oxygen concentrations and hydrodynamics in space and time in a model packed bed biofilm system in the presence and absence of flow. The development of a local oxygen sink associated with a single gel bead inoculated with respiring Escherichia coli was analyzed with a phenomenological model to determine the specific growth rate of the bacteria in situ, returning a value (0.66 hr-1 ) that was close to that measured independently in planktonic culture (0.62 hr-1 ). The decay of oxygen concentration in and around the microbiologically active bead was delayed and slower in experiments conducted under continuous flow in comparison to no-flow experiments. Concentration boundary layer thicknesses were determined and Sherwood numbers calculated to quantify external mass transfer resistance. Boundary layers were thicker in no-flow experiments compared to experiments with flow. Whereas the oxygen concentration profile across a reactive biofilm particle was symmetric in no-flow experiments, it was asymmetric with respect to flow direction in flow experiments with Sherwood numbers on the leading edge (Sh = 7) being larger than the trailing edge (Sh = 3.5). The magnitude of the experimental Sh was comparable to values predicted by a variety of correlations. These spatially resolved measurements of oxygen distribution in a geometrically complex model reveal in innovative detail the local coupling between microbial growth, oxygen consumption, and external mass transfer.
Assuntos
Biofilmes , Biotecnologia/métodos , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Oxigênio , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Flúor/análise , Flúor/metabolismo , Oxigênio/análise , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Porosidade , ReologiaRESUMO
Aerobic granular sludge (AGS) technology allows simultaneous nitrogen, phosphorus, and carbon removal in compact wastewater treatment processes. To operate, design, and model AGS reactors, it is essential to properly understand the diffusive transport within the granules. In this study, diffusive mass transfer within full-scale and lab-scale AGS was characterized with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) methods. Self-diffusion coefficients of water inside the granules were determined with pulsed-field gradient NMR, while the granule structure was visualized with NMR imaging. A reaction-diffusion granule-scale model was set up to evaluate the impact of heterogeneous diffusion on granule performance. The self-diffusion coefficient of water in AGS was â¼70% of the self-diffusion coefficient of free water. There was no significant difference between self-diffusion in AGS from full-scale treatment plants and from lab-scale reactors. The results of the model showed that diffusional heterogeneity did not lead to a major change of flux into the granule (<1%). This study shows that differences between granular sludges and heterogeneity within granules have little impact on the kinetic properties of AGS. Thus, a relatively simple approach is sufficient to describe mass transport by diffusion into the granules.
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Esgotos/microbiologia , Eliminação de Resíduos Líquidos , Purificação da Água , AerobioseRESUMO
Despite aerobic granular sludge wastewater treatment plants operating around the world, our understanding of internal granule structure and its relation to treatment efficiency remains limited. This can be attributed in part to the drawbacks of time-consuming, labor-intensive, and invasive microscopy protocols which effectively restrict samples sizes and may introduce artefacts. Time-domain nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) allows non-invasive measurements which describe internal structural features of opaque, complex materials like biofilms. NMR was used to image aerobic granules collected from five full-scale wastewater treatment plants in the Netherlands and United States, as well as laboratory granules and control beads. T1 and T2 relaxation-weighted images reveal heterogeneous structures that include high- and low-density biofilm regions, water-like voids, and solid-like inclusions. Channels larger than approximately 50 µm and connected to the bulk fluid were not visible. Both cluster and ring-like structures were observed with each granule source having a characteristic structural type. These structures, and their NMR relaxation behavior, were stable over several months of storage. These observations reveal the complex structures within aerobic granules from a range of sources and highlight the need for non-invasive characterization methods like NMR to be applied in the ongoing effort to correlate structure and function.
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Esgotos , Eliminação de Resíduos Líquidos , Aerobiose , Reatores Biológicos , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Países BaixosRESUMO
PURPOSE: Oxygen availability is a critical determinant of microbial biofilm activity and antibiotic susceptibility. However, measuring oxygen gradients in these systems remains difficult, with the standard microelectrode approach being both invasive and limited to single-point measurement. The goal of the study was to develop a 19 F MRI approach for 2D oxygen mapping in biofilm systems and to visualize oxygen consumption behavior in real time during antibiotic therapy. METHODS: Oxygen-sensing beads were created by encapsulating an emulsion of oxygen-sensing fluorocarbon into alginate gel. Escherichia coli biofilms were grown in and on the alginate matrix, which was contained inside a packed bed column subjected to nutrient flow, mimicking the complex porous structure of human wound tissue, and subjected to antibiotic challenge. RESULTS: The linear relationship between 19 F spin-lattice relaxation rate R1 and local oxygen concentration permitted noninvasive spatial mapping of oxygen distribution in real time over the course of biofilm growth and subsequent antibiotic challenge. This technique was used to visualize persistence of microbial oxygen respiration during continuous gentamicin administration, providing a time series of complete spatial maps detailing the continued bacterial utilization of oxygen during prolonged chemotherapy in an in vitro biofilm model with complex spatial structure. CONCLUSIONS: Antibiotic exposure temporarily causes oxygen consumption to enter a pseudosteady state wherein oxygen distribution becomes fixed; oxygen sink expansion resumes quickly after antibiotic clearance. This technique may provide valuable information for future investigations of biofilms by permitting the study of complex geometries (typical of in vivo biofilms) and facilitating noninvasive oxygen measurement.
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Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Biofilmes , Imagem por Ressonância Magnética de Flúor-19 , Oxigênio/química , Processamento de Sinais Assistido por Computador , Infecção dos Ferimentos/microbiologia , Alginatos/química , Calibragem , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Humanos , CicatrizaçãoRESUMO
Nuclear magnetic resonance measurements of rotational and translational molecular dynamics are applied to characterize the nanoscale dynamic heterogeneity of a physically cross-linked solvent-polymer system above and below the glass transition temperature. Measured rotational dynamics identify domains associated with regions of solidlike and liquidlike dynamics. Translational dynamics provide quantitative length and timescales of nanoscale heterogeneity due to polymer network cross-link density. Mean squared displacement measurements of the solvent provide microrheological characterization of the system and indicate glasslike caging dynamics both above and below the glass transition temperature.
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Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) frequency spectra and T2 relaxation time measurements, using a high-power radio frequency probe, are shown to characterize the presence of an amorphous drug in a porous silica construct. The results indicate the ability of non-solid-state NMR methods to characterize crystalline and amorphous solid structural phases in drugs. Two-dimensional T1- T2 magnetic relaxation time correlation experiments are shown to monitor the impact of relative humidity on the drug in a porous silica tablet.
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Química Farmacêutica/métodos , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Umidade , Porosidade , Dióxido de Silício/química , Comprimidos , Difração de Raios XRESUMO
Mass transfer in biofilms is determined by diffusion. Different mostly invasive approaches have been used to measure diffusion coefficients in biofilms, however, data on heterogeneous biomass under realistic conditions is still missing. To non-invasively elucidate fluid-structure interactions in complex multispecies biofilms pulsed field gradient-nuclear magnetic resonance (PFG-NMR) was applied to measure the water diffusion in five different types of biomass aggregates: one type of sludge flocs, two types of biofilm, and two types of granules. Data analysis is an important issue when measuring heterogeneous systems and is shown to significantly influence the interpretation and understanding of water diffusion. With respect to numerical reproducibility and physico-chemical interpretation, different data processing methods were explored: (bi)-exponential data analysis and the Γ distribution model. Furthermore, the diffusion coefficient distribution in relation to relaxation was studied by D-T2 maps obtained by 2D inverse Laplace transform (2D ILT). The results show that the effective diffusion coefficients for all biofilm samples ranged from 0.36 to 0.96 relative to that of water. NMR diffusion was linked to biofilm structure (e.g., biomass density, organic and inorganic matter) as observed by magnetic resonance imaging and to traditional biofilm parameters: diffusion was most restricted in granules with compact structures, and fast diffusion was found in heterotrophic biofilms with fluffy structures. The effective diffusion coefficients in the biomass were found to be broadly distributed because of internal biomass heterogeneities, such as gas bubbles, precipitates, and locally changing biofilm densities. Thus, estimations based on biofilm bulk properties in multispecies systems can be overestimated and mean diffusion coefficients might not be sufficiently informative to describe mass transport in biofilms and the near bulk.
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Bactérias/química , Biofilmes , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Modelos Biológicos , Modelos Químicos , Água/química , Absorção Fisiológica , Simulação por Computador , DifusãoRESUMO
Precipitation reactions influence transport properties in porous media and can be coupled to advective and dispersive transport. For example, in subsurface environments, mixing of groundwater and injected solutions can induce mineral supersaturation of constituents and drive precipitation reactions. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and microcomputed tomography (µ-CT) were employed as complementary techniques to evaluate advection, dispersion, and formation of precipitate in a 3D porous media flow cell. Two parallel fluids were flowed concentrically through packed glass beads under two relative flow rates with Na2CO3 and CaCl2 in the inner and outer fluids, respectively. CaCO3 became supersaturated and formed a precipitate at the mixing interface between the two solutions. Spatial maps of changing local velocity fields and dispersion in the flow cell were generated from MRI, while high resolution µ-CT imaging visualized the precipitate formed in the porous media. Formation of a precipitate minimized dispersive and advective transport between the two fluids and the shape of the precipitation front was influenced by the relative flow rates. This work demonstrates that the combined use of MRI and µ-CT can be highly complementary in the study of reactive transport processes in porous media.
Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Microtomografia por Raio-X , Carbonato de Cálcio , Água Subterrânea , PorosidadeAssuntos
Cartilagem/diagnóstico por imagem , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Osteoartrite/diagnóstico por imagem , Idoso , Biopolímeros/química , Água Corporal/diagnóstico por imagem , Osso e Ossos/diagnóstico por imagem , Colagenases/química , Difusão , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Peso Molecular , Polímeros/química , Sais/química , Propriedades de SuperfícieRESUMO
Biofilm growth in porous media is difficult to study non-invasively due to the opaqueness and heterogeneity of the systems. Magnetic resonance is utilized to non-invasively study water dynamics within porous media. Displacement-relaxation correlation experiments were performed on fluid flow during biofilm growth in a model porous media of mono-dispersed polystyrene beads. The spin-spin T2 magnetic relaxation distinguishes between the biofilm phase and bulk fluid phase due to water-biopolymer interactions present in the biofilm, and the flow dynamics are measured using PGSE NMR experiments. By correlating these two measurements, the effects of biofilm growth on the fluid dynamics can be separated into a detailed analysis of both the biofilm phase and the fluid phase simultaneously within the same experiment. Within the displacement resolution of these experiments, no convective flow was measured through the biomass. An increased amount of longitudinal hydrodynamic dispersion indicates increased hydrodynamic mixing due to fluid channeling caused by biofilm growth. The effect of different biofilm growth conditions was measured by varying the strength of the bacterial growth medium.
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Biofilmes/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Modelos Teóricos , Ressonância Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular/métodos , Biomassa , Meios de Cultura , Permeabilidade , PorosidadeRESUMO
The unjamming of elastic concentrated nanoemulsions into viscous dilute nanoemulsions, through dilution with the continuous phase, offers interesting opportunities for a pulsed-field gradient (PFG) NMR, particularly if the nanoemulsion is designed to take advantage of the nuclear specificity offered by NMR. Here, we make and study size-fractionated oil-in-water nanoemulsions using a perfluorinated copolymer silicone oil that is highly insoluble in the aqueous continuous phase. By studying these nanoemulsions using ^{19}F stimulated-echo PFG-NMR, we avoid any contribution from the aqueous continuous phase, which contains a nonfluorinated ionic surfactant. We find a dramatic change in the ^{19}F PFG-NMR decays at high field-gradient strengths as the droplet volume fraction, Ï, is lowered through dilution. At high Ï, observed decays as a function of field-gradient strength exhibit decay-to-plateau behavior indicating the jamming of nanodroplets, which contain ^{19}F probe molecules, in an elastic material reminiscent of a nanoporous solid. In contrast, at lower Ï, only a simple decay is observed, indicating that the nanodroplets have unjammed and can diffuse over much larger distances. Through a comparison with bulk mechanical rheometry, we show that this dramatic change coincides with the loss of low-frequency shear elasticity of the nanoemulsion.
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The conversion of soluble uranyl ions (UO2²âº) by bacterial reduction to sparingly soluble uraninite (UO2(s)) is being studied as a way of immobilizing subsurface uranium contamination. Under anaerobic conditions, several known types of bacteria including iron and sulfate reducing bacteria have been shown to reduce U (VI) to U (IV). Experiments using a suspension of uraninite (UO2(s)) particles produced by Shewanella putrefaciens CN32 bacteria show a dependence of both longitudinal (T1) and transverse (T2) magnetic resonance (MR) relaxation times on the oxidation state and solubility of the uranium. Gradient echo and spin echo MR images were compared to quantify the effect caused by the magnetic field fluctuations (T*2) of the uraninite particles and soluble uranyl ions. Since the precipitate studied was suspended in liquid water, the effects of concentration and particle aggregation were explored. A suspension of uraninite particles was injected into a polysaccharide gel, which simulates the precipitation environment of uraninite in the extracellular biofilm matrix. A reduction in the T2 of the gel surrounding the particles was observed. Tests done in situ using three bioreactors under different mixing conditions, continuously stirred, intermittently stirred, and not stirred, showed a quantifiable T2 magnetic relaxation effect over the extent of the reaction.
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Biodegradação Ambiental , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Shewanella putrefaciens/metabolismo , Poluentes Radioativos do Solo/metabolismo , Compostos de Urânio/análise , Urânio/metabolismo , Anaerobiose , Biofilmes , Reatores Biológicos , Cátions , Precipitação Química , Coloides , Hidrogéis , Nanopartículas Metálicas , Concentração Osmolar , Oxirredução , Solubilidade , SuspensõesRESUMO
The formation of heterogeneous structures in biopolymer gels is of current interest for biomedical applications and is of fundamental interest to understanding the molecular level origins of structures generated from disordered solutions by reactions. The cation-mediated physical gelation of alginate by calcium and copper is analyzed using magnetic resonance measurements of spatially resolved molecular dynamics during gel front propagation. Relaxation time and pulse-field gradient methods are applied to determine the impact of ion front motion on molecular translational dynamics. The formation of capillaries in alginate copper gels is correlated to changes in translational dynamics.
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Alginatos/química , Géis/química , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Cálcio/química , Cobre/química , Ácido Glucurônico/química , Ácidos Hexurônicos/química , Espectroscopia de Ressonância MagnéticaRESUMO
This work aims to develop complimentary analytical tools for lipid formulation selection that offer insights into the mechanisms of in-vitro drug release for solid lipid modified release excipients. Such tools are envisioned to aide and expedite the time consuming process of formulation selection and development. Two pharmaceutically relevant solid lipid excipients are investigated, stearyl alcohol and glyceryl behenate, which are generally known to exhibit faster and slower relative release rates, respectively. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and diffusometry are used, along with water uptake and dissolution experiments to help distinguish between two proposed in-vitro release mechanisms for crystalline caffeine from these matrices: 1) rate limiting movement of the wetting front through the particle, and 2) rate limiting diffusive release of the active from the wetted particle. Findings based on water permeation rates, API diffusion coefficients and kinetic modeling suggest that the rate limiting steps for caffeine release from these matrices are different, with stearyl alcohol being co-rate limited by movement of the wetting front and diffusive release of API, whereas glyceryl behenate is more strictly limited by diffusive release of API from the wetted matrix. A Peclet-like number is proposed to describe the different regimes of rate limitation for drug release. NMR spectroscopy and diffusometry are demonstrated to be useful tools for elucidating mechanisms of API release from crystalline drug/lipid mixtures and have significant potential value as screening tools in MR formulation development.
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Ácidos Graxos , Água , Preparações de Ação Retardada , Álcoois Graxos , SolubilidadeRESUMO
Nuclear magnetic resonance measurements of scale dependent dynamics in a random solid open-cell foam reveal a characteristic length scale for transport processes in this novel type of porous medium. These measurements and lattice Boltzmann simulations for a model foam structure indicate dynamical behavior analogous to lower porosity consolidated granular porous media, despite extremely high porosity in solid cellular foams. Scaling by the measured characteristic length collapses data for different foam structures as well as consolidated granular media. The nonequilibrium statistical mechanics theory of preasymptotic dispersion, developed for hierarchical porous media, is shown to model the hydrodynamic dispersive transport in a foam structure.
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Fenômenos Mecânicos , Movimento (Física) , Porosidade , Difusão , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Modelos QuímicosRESUMO
Using a magnetic resonance microscopy (MRM) technique, velocity perturbations due to biofouling in capillaries were detected in 3D velocity maps. The velocity images in each of the three square capillary sizes (2, 0.9, and 0.5 mm i.d.) tested indicate secondary flow in both the x- and y-directions for the biofouled capillaries. Similar flow maps generated in a clean square capillary show only an axial component. Investigation of these secondary flows and their geometric and dynamic similarity is the focus of this study. The results showed significant secondary flows present in the 0.9 mm i.d. capillary, on the scale of 20% of the bulk fluid flow. Since this is the "standard 1 mm" size capillary used in confocal microscopy laboratory bioreactors to investigate biofilm properties, it is important to understand how these enhanced flows impact bioreactor transport.
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Biofilmes/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Capilares/microbiologia , Microfluídica , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Microscopia/métodosRESUMO
High-field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxometry and diffusometry along with magnetic resonance imaging were used to monitor phase transition molecular dynamics during hydrate formation occurring in water droplets dispersed in liquid cyclopentane. 1D T2 relaxation measurements indicate the extent of hydrate formation as well as a reduction in water droplet size with progression of hydrate growth. MRI intensity maps and T2 relaxation maps indicate spatially dependent hydrate formation rates due to the heterogeneity of the system. Spectrally resolved diffusion measurements indicate a reduction in the porosity of the hydrate agglomerate as the hydrate shell increases in thickness. A novel signal rise observed in two dimensional T1-T2 relaxation correlation experiments indicates complex diffusion dynamics due to coupling between regions with varying relaxation and diffusion. These results indicate the ability to monitor hydrate growth and phase transition molecular dynamics due to evolution of the porous hydrate agglomerate by means of high-field NMR.
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A 1D two region coupled pore model with discrete pore coupling is developed to elucidate the eigenmode interactions in regions with different surface relaxivity. Numerical solution of the model and simulation of the correlation experiment for varying surface relaxivity, pore connectivity and pore size ratio indicate the role of negative eigenmodes and overlap of T1 and T2 eigenmodes in generating a time domain signal increase with inversion recovery time, t1. The eigenmodes and eigenfunctions are considered in detail providing connection between the mathematical model and the diffusion dynamics and spin physics of the system. Physical systems, i.e. a microporous glass bead pack, a cyclopentane/water hydrate former, and beeswax, showing experimentally measured T1-T2 time domain signal rise are considered within the limitations of the model.
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Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is a noninvasive and nondestructive tool able to access several observable quantities in biofilms such as chemical composition, diffusion, and macroscale structure and transport. Pulsed gradient spin echo (PGSE) NMR techniques were used to measure spectrally resolved biomacromolecular diffusion in biofilm biomass, extending previous research on spectrally resolved diffusion in biofilms. The dominant free water signal was nulled using an inversion recovery modification of the traditional PGSE technique in which the signal from free water is minimized in order to view the spectra of components such as the rotationally mobile carbohydrates, DNA, and proteins. Diffusion data for the major constituents obtained from each of these spectral peaks demonstrate that the biomass of the biofilm contains both a fast and slow diffusion component. The dependence of diffusion on antimicrobial and environmental challenges suggests the polymer molecular dynamics measured by NMR are a sensitive indicator of biofilm function.