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1.
Polymers (Basel) ; 15(13)2023 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37447495

ABSTRACT

The reconstruction or regeneration of damaged bone tissue is one of the challenges of orthopedic surgery and tissue engineering. Among all strategies investigated, additive manufacturing by fused deposition modeling (3D-FDM printing) opens the possibility to obtain patient-specific scaffolds with controlled architectures. The present work evaluates in depth 3D direct printing, avoiding the need for a pre-fabricated filament, to obtain bone-related scaffolds from direct mixtures of polylactic acid (PLA) and hydroxyapatite (HA). For it, a systematic physicochemical characterization (SEM-EDS, FT-Raman, XRD, micro-CT and nanoindentation) was performed, using different PLA/HA ratios and percentages of infill. Results prove the versatility of this methodology with an efficient HA incorporation in the 3D-printed scaffolds up to 13 wt.% of the total mass and a uniform distribution of the HA particles in the scaffold at the macro level, both longitudinal and cross sections. Moreover, an exponential distribution of the HA particles from the surface toward the interior of the biocomposite cord (micro level), within the first 80 µm (10% of the entire cord diameter), is also confirmed, providing the scaffold with surface roughness and higher bioavailability. In relation to the pores, they can range in size from 250 to 850 µm and can represent a percentage, in relation to the total volume of the scaffold, from 24% up to 76%. The mechanical properties indicate an increase in Young's modulus with the HA content of up to ~50%, compared to the scaffolds without HA. Finally, the in vitro evaluation confirms MG63 cell proliferation on the 3D-printed PLA/HA scaffolds after up to 21 days of incubation.

2.
J Contam Hydrol ; 218: 59-69, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30361114

ABSTRACT

Tunable Resistive Pulse Sensing, TRPS, is an emerging technique used in quantification and measuring the size (particle-by-particle) of viruses, exosomes and engineered colloidal spheres in biological fluids. We study the features of TRPS to enhance size characterization and quantification of submicron-sized microplastics, also called plastic microparticles, MP, in freshwater environments. We report alterations on the detection of the resistive pulses in the TRPS caused by humic acids, HA, during the size measurement of polystyrene microspheres used as MP surrogate. We discuss the alteration of the electric field in the measuring channel of the TRPS apparatus induced by the passage of HA. TRPS is a fast and precise technique for counting and size determination of MP but needs the evaluation of the influence of the organic matter on the current blockades. We show that statistical clustering models of the magnitude distribution of the resistive pulses can help to detect and quantify changes in the pulse size distributions induced by flocculation of humic acids. Conclusions of this study indicate that TRPS can be a valuable tool to improve the knowledge of the MP fate in surface waters, in the vadose zone and groundwater.


Subject(s)
Humic Substances , Plastics , Environmental Monitoring , Microspheres
3.
J Environ Sci Health B ; 48(9): 737-46, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23688224

ABSTRACT

Modeling the pesticide wash-off by raindrops is important for predicting pesticide losses and the subsequent transport of pesticides to soil and in soil run-off. Three foliar-applied copper-based fungicide formulations, specifically the Bordeaux mixture (BM), copper oxychloride (CO), and a mixture of copper oxychloride and propylene glycol (CO-PG), were tested on potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) leaves using a laboratory raindrop simulator. The losses in the wash-off were quantified as both copper in-solution loss and copper as particles detached by the raindrops. The efficiency of the raindrop impact on the wash-off was modeled using a stochastic model based on the pesticide release by raindrops. In addition, the influence of the raindrop size, drop falling height, and fungicide dose was analyzed using a full factorial experimental design. The average losses per dose after 14 mm of dripped water for a crop with a leaf area index equal to 1 were 0.08 kg Cu ha(-1) (BM), 0.3 kg Cu ha(-1) (CO) and 0.47 kg Cu ha(-1) (CO-PG). The stochastic model was able to simulate the time course of the wash-off losses and to estimate the losses of both Cu in solution and as particles by the raindrop impacts. For the Cu-oxychloride fungicides, the majority of the Cu was lost as particles that detached from the potato leaves. The percentage of Cu lost increased with the decreasing raindrop size in the three fungicides for the same amount of dripped water. This result suggested that the impact energy is not a limiting factor in the particle detachment rate of high doses. The dosage of the fungicide was the most influential factor in the losses of Cu for the three formulations studied. The results allowed us to quantify the factors that should be considered when estimating the losses by the wash-off of copper-based fungicides and the inputs of copper to the soil by raindrop wash-off.


Subject(s)
Fungicides, Industrial/pharmacology , Plant Leaves/drug effects , Rain/chemistry , Soil Pollutants/chemistry , Solanum tuberosum/drug effects , Copper/chemistry , Fungicides, Industrial/chemistry , Kinetics , Models, Theoretical , Plant Leaves/growth & development , Solanum tuberosum/growth & development
4.
J Agric Food Chem ; 54(13): 4751-7, 2006 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16787024

ABSTRACT

The influence of methanol on the adsorption of the fungicide cyprodinil by a crop soil was studied by equilibrium measurements and by determining the retention-release dynamics in a continuous stirred flow tank reactor (CSTR). Equilibrium measurements showed the effective coefficient of partition of cyprodinil between soil and solution, K(dc), decreases linearly as the concentration of methanol in the solution increases until a percentage of 20% is reached. In CSTR experiments, the retention of cyprodinil was found to be almost reversible; up to a 95% of the fungicide was desorbed. The retention-release dynamics showed biphasic behavior and was partially controlled by diffusion. This behavior was reproduced by a model of diffusion into micropores identifying the soil particles as spheres and taking into account both intraparticle nonlinear adsorption and nonlinear adsorption at external surfaces. In all cases, the sorption kinetics was not the limiting step. The main effect of methanol in the retention-release dynamics ended up being based on the changes produced in the adsorption equilibrium. Methanol also increased the effective diffusion coefficient and decreased the mass transfer coefficient. The optimized Freundlich's isotherm coefficients for <5% methanol were lower than those obtained from the batch experiments.


Subject(s)
Fungicides, Industrial/chemistry , Methanol/pharmacology , Pyrimidines/chemistry , Soil/analysis , Adsorption , Agriculture , Diffusion , Solutions
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