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1.
J Phys Chem B ; 128(10): 2516-2527, 2024 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38438957

ABSTRACT

Nanoporous materials are central to the energy and environmental crisis, with key applications in adsorption, separation, and catalysis. While confinement and surface effects on fluids severely confined in their porosity are well documented, the thermal behavior of nanoporous solids subjected to fluid adsorption remains puzzling in many aspects. With striking phenomena such as the so-called rattle effect, through which fluid/solid collisions decrease the overall thermal conductivity, the solid thermal conductivity and, more generally, heat transfer and dispersion in these complex systems challenge classical approaches (e.g., mixing rules including effective medium approaches fail to capture such effects as shown here). In particular, a robust molecular framework to describe the crossover between the decrease in thermal conductivity through the rattle effect in very narrow pores and the increase in thermal conductivity when replacing vacuum with a fluid phase in larger pores is still missing. Here, using a prototypical model of fluid-filled nanoporous materials (a Lennard-Jones phase confined in an all-silica zeolite), we perform a molecular simulation study to shed light on the parameters that govern the rattle effect in nanoporous solids. First, by varying the fluid/fluid, fluid/solid, and solid/solid interaction strengths as well as the fluid number density and mass density, we unravel the ingredients that lead to the essential coupling between fluid adsorption and phonon transport. Second, despite this complex interplay, inspired by pioneering molecular approaches on the rattle effect, we show that all data obey a simple statistical physics model that relies on the change in the speed of sound due to the fluid adsorbed density and the decrease in phonon lifetime due to scattering by fluid molecules. This framework, which provides a simple formalism to rationalize the thermal behavior of this class of solid/fluid composites, points to a decrease in thermal conductivity upon fluid confinement (up to 30% in some cases). Such an effect paves the way for the design of novel applications involving fluids in interaction with nanoporous materials.

2.
Appl Biochem Biotechnol ; 194(3): 1221-1234, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34652586

ABSTRACT

The ionization equilibrium implied in the calculation of the specific activity is classically described through the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. An extension for the description of anomalous ionization profiles using the Hill equation is presented in this communication. The proposed framework was applied to the description of the specific enzymatic activity curve as a function of pH of five enzymes presenting different ionization states in their active site. The developed equation improves the description of relative enzymatic curves that deviate from the bell curve predicted by the application of the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, regardless of the ionization scheme related to the active site.


Subject(s)
Static Electricity
3.
FEMS Yeast Res ; 19(6)2019 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31425576

ABSTRACT

We sought to investigate how far the growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae under full anaerobiosis is dependent on the widely used anaerobic growth factors (AGF) ergosterol and oleic acid. A continuous cultivation setup was employed and, even forcing ultrapure N2 gas through an O2 trap upstream of the bioreactor, neither cells from S. cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D (a lab strain) nor from PE-2 (an industrial strain) washed out after an aerobic-to-anaerobic switch in the absence of AGF. S. cerevisiae PE-2 seemed to cope better than the laboratory strain with this extremely low O2 availability, since it presented higher biomass yield, lower specific rates of glucose consumption and CO2 formation, and higher survival at low pH. Lipid (fatty acid and sterol) composition dramatically altered when cells were grown anaerobically without AGF: saturated fatty acid, squalene and lanosterol contents increased, when compared to either cells grown aerobically or anaerobically with AGF. We concluded that these lipid alterations negatively affect cell viability during exposure to low pH or high ethanol titers.


Subject(s)
Ergosterol/metabolism , Fatty Acids, Unsaturated/deficiency , Fatty Acids/analysis , Lipids/analysis , Oxygen/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/physiology , Anaerobiosis , Biomass , Cell Survival , Ethanol/metabolism , Fatty Acids/isolation & purification , Glucose/metabolism , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Lipid Metabolism , Lipids/isolation & purification , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/growth & development
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