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1.
ACS Nanosci Au ; 4(3): 176-193, 2024 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38912288

ABSTRACT

Nanotechnology is vital to many current industries, including electronics, energy, textiles, agriculture, and theranostics. Understanding the chemical mechanisms of nanomaterial synthesis has contributed to the tunability of their unique properties, although studies frequently overlook the potential impact of impurities. Impurities can show adverse effects, clouding the interpretation of results or limiting the practical utility of the nanomaterial. On the other hand, as successful doping has demonstrated, the intentional introduction of impurities can be a powerful tool for enhancing the properties of a nanomaterial. This Review examines the complex role of impurities, unintentionally or intentionally added, during nanoscale synthesis and their effects on the performance and usefulness of the most common classes of nanomaterials: nanocarbons, noble metal and metal oxide nanoparticles, semiconductor quantum dots, thermoelectrics, and perovskites.

2.
ACS Omega ; 9(7): 8503-8509, 2024 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38405521

ABSTRACT

Natural fiber-welded (NFW) biopolymer composites are rapidly garnering industrial and commercial attention in the textile sector, and a recent disclosure demonstrating the production of mesoporous NFW materials suggests a bright future as sorbents, filters, and nanoparticle scaffolds. A significant roadblock in the mass production of mesoporous NFW composites for research and development is their lengthy preparation time: 24 h of water rinses to remove the ionic liquid (IL) serving as a welding medium and then 72 h of solvent exchanges (polar to nonpolar), followed by oven drying to attain a mesoporous composite. In this work, the rinsing procedure is systematically truncated using the solution conductivity as a yardstick to monitor IL removal. The traditional water immersion rinses are replaced by a flow-through system (i.e., infinite dilution) using a peristaltic pump, reducing the required water rinse time for the maximum removal of IL to 30 min. This procedure also allows for easy in-line monitoring of solution conductivity and reclamation of an expensive welding solvent. Further, the organic solvent exchange is minimized to 10 min per solvent (from 24 h), resulting in a total combined rinse time of 1 h. This process acceleration reduces the overall solvent exposure time from 96 to 1 h, an almost 99% temporal improvement.

3.
ACS Macro Lett ; 12(12): 1654-1658, 2023 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38104265

ABSTRACT

Seemingly nonporous biopolymer composites prepared by natural fiber welding (NFW) possess latent pores that can be exfoliated by conscientious solvation. We present a seminal demonstration of this concept for cellulose and explore the impact of latent pores on the manufacture and commercialization of NFW products.

4.
ACS Omega ; 8(44): 41633-41640, 2023 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37969977

ABSTRACT

Three new cationic surfactants-N-cetyl-bis(2-dimethylaminoethyl)ether bromide (CBDEB), N-dodecyl-bis(2-dimethylaminoethyl)ether bromide (DBDEB), and N-hexyl-bis(2-dimethylaminoethyl)ether bromide (HBDEB)-have been designed herein using a simple and tailorable synthesis route. CBDEB and DBDEB, the 16- and 12-carbon chain surfactants, demonstrate facile, rapid, and controllable aqueous syntheses of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) as dual-action reducing and capping agents. The synthesis strategy, using only surfactant and HAuCl4 salt, and 4 min of heating at 80 °C, results in spherical AuNPs (average diameters of 13.4 ± 3.8 nm for CBDEB and 12.0 ± 3.8 nm for DBDEB). Microwave irradiation was also investigated as a heating method and produces AuNPs in as little as 30 s. Control over the size and shape of AuNPs was proven to be feasible (toward populations of Euclidean shapes) by appropriately tuning reaction parameters, such as the molar ratio of surfactant to Au3+, temperature, incorporation of a time delay before heating, or shape control agents, such as Cu2+. Frustratingly, the cytotoxicity of CBDEB is similar to that of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB), a popular 16-carbon chain cationic surfactant. Notably, while the shorter HBDEB (6-carbon chain) does not produce AuNPs under the applied conditions, it does appear to improve cell viability upon cytotoxicity evaluation and may be favorable as a new biological surfactant.

5.
Inorg Chem ; 62(44): 18280-18289, 2023 Nov 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37870915

ABSTRACT

In this work, a series of novel boronium-bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide [TFSI-] ionic liquids (IL) are introduced and investigated. The boronium cations were designed with specific structural motifs that delivered improved electrochemical and physical properties, as evaluated through cyclic voltammetry, broadband dielectric spectroscopy, densitometry, thermogravimetric analysis, and differential scanning calorimetry. Boronium cations, which were appended with N-alkylpyrrolidinium substituents, exhibited superior physicochemical properties, including high conductivity, low viscosity, and electrochemical windows surpassing 6 V. Remarkably, the boronium ionic liquid functionalized with both an ethyl-substituted pyrrolidinium and trimethylamine, [(1-e-pyrr)N111BH2][TFSI], exhibited a 6.3 V window, surpassing previously published boronium-, pyrrolidinium-, and imidazolium-based IL electrolytes. Favorable physical properties and straightforward tunability make boronium ionic liquids promising candidates to replace conventional organic electrolytes for electrochemical applications requiring high voltages.

6.
Talanta ; 240: 123034, 2022 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35026640

ABSTRACT

We recently reported on fixed-path length laser-induced sound pinging (FPL-LISP) as a rapid photoacoustic technique employing an inexpensive benchtop tattoo-removal laser for reliably determining the speed of sound in low-volume fluids. In this contribution, we demonstrate the capacity of FPL-LISP to analyze representative commercial beverages for their natural or artificial sweetener contents. As a benchmark, the speed of sound was determined for solutions of sugars (glucose, fructose, sucrose), mock high fructose corn syrup (HFCS-55), and 12 household sweeteners (culinary sugars, syrups, honey, molasses) across the concentration range of 1-20% w/v in water, simulating the typical sweetener range found in commercial soft drinks. The setup was then employed to estimate sweetener contents of 26 popular commercial beverages using the HFCS-55 standard curve as a training data set. Our results are remarkably consistent with the label values for these representative commercial beverages, in spite of the fact that some beverages clearly employ a sweetener other than HFCS-55 or a proprietary blend, suggesting the excellent potential of the FPL-LISP setup as a quick screening tool well-suited to quality control and real-time assessment in the beverage and fermentation industrial sectors. The proposed approach represents a significant improvement over many existing methods on the basis of measurement time (down to 1 s, which can be considered real time for many applications), lenient sample requirements (tens of microliters to 1 mL), robust and user-friendly analysis, practical considerations (e.g., economical, minimal service and maintenance concerns), and prospects for advancing both online monitoring and fully portable versions of this instrumentation.


Subject(s)
Beverages , Sweetening Agents , Beverages/analysis , Dietary Carbohydrates , Fructose , Lasers , Sweetening Agents/analysis
7.
Sensors (Basel) ; 20(23)2020 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33297345

ABSTRACT

Quality checks, assessments, and the assurance of food products, raw materials, and food ingredients is critically important to ensure the safeguard of foods of high quality for safety and public health. Nevertheless, quality checks, assessments, and the assurance of food products along distribution and supply chains is impacted by various challenges. For instance, the development of portable, sensitive, low-cost, and robust instrumentation that is capable of real-time, accurate, and sensitive analysis, quality checks, assessments, and the assurance of food products in the field and/or in the production line in a food manufacturing industry is a major technological and analytical challenge. Other significant challenges include analytical method development, method validation strategies, and the non-availability of reference materials and/or standards for emerging food contaminants. The simplicity, portability, non-invasive, non-destructive properties, and low-cost of NIR spectrometers, make them appealing and desirable instruments of choice for rapid quality checks, assessments and assurances of food products, raw materials, and ingredients. This review article surveys literature and examines current challenges and breakthroughs in quality checks and the assessment of a variety of food products, raw materials, and ingredients. Specifically, recent technological innovations and notable advances in quartz crystal microbalances (QCM), electroanalytical techniques, and near infrared (NIR) spectroscopic instrument development in the quality assessment of selected food products, and the analysis of food raw materials and ingredients for foodborne pathogen detection between January 2019 and July 2020 are highlighted. In addition, chemometric approaches and multivariate analyses of spectral data for NIR instrumental calibration and sample analyses for quality assessments and assurances of selected food products and electrochemical methods for foodborne pathogen detection are discussed. Moreover, this review provides insight into the future trajectory of innovative technological developments in QCM, electroanalytical techniques, NIR spectroscopy, and multivariate analyses relating to general applications for the quality assessment of food products.


Subject(s)
Quartz Crystal Microbalance Techniques , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared , Calibration , Food-Processing Industry , Multivariate Analysis
8.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(55): 7990-7993, 2019 Jul 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31225549

ABSTRACT

Small (<5 nm) gold and silver nanoparticles and their bimetallic counterparts were prepared using the fundamental boron cluster [closo-B10H10]2- as the reducing and stabilizing agent. The resulting carbon-free nanoparticles possess striking activity toward the reduction of 4-nitrophenol, laying the groundwork for a new class of boron polyhedron-stabilized metal nanocatalysts.

9.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(44): 6261-6264, 2019 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31086901

ABSTRACT

We report a simple, single-pot, room temperature synthetic route to prepare colloidally-stable pyrogallol[4]arene-capped gold nanoparticles. The number of carbon atoms in the pyrogallol[4]arene pendent alkyl chain and the addition of base (e.g., NaOH) are both found to significantly impact the resulting colloid size, stability, and catalytic activity for nitroarene reduction.

10.
Nanoscale Adv ; 1(12): 4665-4668, 2019 Dec 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36133135

ABSTRACT

Bimetallic Au x Ag1-x nanoparticles, prepared using sodium borohydride as the sole reducing and capping agent for various NaBH4 : metal molar ratios, were investigated as catalysts for 4-nitrophenol reduction. This approach yielded the highest catalytic activities observed for this model reaction to date.

11.
RSC Adv ; 8(63): 36025-36033, 2018 Oct 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35558444

ABSTRACT

Enzymatic ring-opening polymerization (ROP) is a benign method for preparing polyesters, such as polylactides and other polylactones. These reactions are typically carried out at relatively high temperatures (60-130 °C), however, there is a deficiency of enzyme-compatible solvents for such thermally-demanding biocatalytic processes. In this study, we have prepared a series of short-chained glycol-grafted ionic liquids (ILs) based on a phosphonium, imidazolium, pyridinium, ammonium, or piperidinium cationic headgroup. Most of these glycol-grafted ILs exhibit relatively low dynamic viscosities (33-123 mPa s at 30 °C), coupled with excellent short-term thermal stabilities with decomposition temperatures (T dcp) in the 318-403 °C range. Significantly, the long-term thermal stability under conditions matching those for enzymatic ROP synthesis (130 °C for 7 days) is excellent for several of these task-specific ILs. Using Novozym 435-catalyzed ROP, these ILs are demonstrated to be viable solvents for the enzymatic production of reasonable yields (30-48%) of high molecular mass (M w ∼20 kDa) poly(l-lactide) and poly(ε-caprolactone) compared to solventless conditions (12-14 kDa).

12.
Dent Mater ; 33(12): 1445-1455, 2017 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29074163

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To incorporate an antibacterial agent derived deep eutectic solvent (DES) into a dental resin composite, and investigate the resulting mechanical properties and antibacterial effects. METHOD: The DES was derived from benzalkonium chloride (BC) and acrylic acid (AA) and was incorporated into the dental resin composite through rapid mixing. A three-point bending test was employed to measure the flexural strength of the composite. An agar diffusion test was used to investigate antibacterial activity. Artificial (accelerated) aging was undertaken by immersing the composites in buffer solutions at an elevated temperature for up to 4 weeks. UV-vis spectrophotometry and NMR analysis were conducted to study BC release from the composite. Finally, the biocompatibility of the composite materials was evaluated using osteoblast cell culture for 7 days. Results were compared to those of a control composite which contained no BC. RESULT: The DES-incorporated composite (DES-C) displayed higher flexural strength than a similar BC-incorporated composite BC (BC-C) for the same level of BC. The inclusion of BC conferred antibacterial activity to both BC-containing composites, although BC-C produced larger inhibition halos than DES-C at the same loading of BC. Control composites which contained no BC showed negligible antibacterial activity. After artificial aging, the DES-C composite showed better maintenance of the mechanical properties of the control compared with BC-C, although a decrease was observed during the three-point bending test, particularly upon storage at elevated temperatures. No BC release was detected in the aged solutions of DES-C, whereas the BC-C showed a linear increase in BC release with storage time. Significantly, cell viability results indicated that DES-C has better biocompatibility than BC-C. SIGNIFICANCE: The incorporation of a BC-based DES into a dental resin composite provides a new strategy to develop antibacterial dental materials with better biocompatibility and longer effective lifetimes without sacrificing the intrinsic mechanical properties of the composite structure.


Subject(s)
Acrylates/pharmacology , Acrylic Resins/pharmacology , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Benzalkonium Compounds/pharmacology , Biocompatible Materials/pharmacology , Composite Resins/pharmacology , Polyurethanes/pharmacology , Solvents/pharmacology , Acrylic Resins/chemical synthesis , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemical synthesis , Biocompatible Materials/chemical synthesis , Cell Survival , Cells, Cultured , Composite Resins/chemical synthesis , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Materials Testing , Osteoblasts/drug effects , Polyurethanes/chemical synthesis , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet , Staphylococcus aureus/drug effects , Streptococcus mutans/drug effects , Stress, Mechanical
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