18 research outputs found

    Flexible Polydimethylsilane Nanocomposites Enhanced with a Three-Dimensional Graphene/Carbon Nanotube Bicontinuous Framework for High-Performance Electromagnetic Interference Shielding

    No full text
    High-performance electromagnetic interference (EMI)-shielding materials featuring lightweight, flexibility, excellent conductivity, and shielding properties, as well as superior mechanical robustness, are highly required, yet their development still remains a daunting challenge. Here, a flexible and exceptional EMI-shielding polydimethylsilane/reduced graphene oxide/single-wall carbon nanotube (PDMS/rGO/SWCNT) nanocomposite was developed by a facile backfilling approach utilizing a preformed rGO/SWCNT aerogel as the three-dimensional (3D) conducting and reinforcement skeleton. Pristine SWCNTs acting as secondary conductive fillers showed intriguing advantages, whose intrinsically high conductivity could be well preserved in the composites because of no surface acidification treatment. The robust and interconnected 3D network can not only serve as fast channels for electron transport but also effectively transfer external load. Accordingly, a prominent electrical conductivity of 1.2 S cm<sup>–1</sup> and an outstanding EMI-shielding effectiveness of around 31 dB over the X-band frequency range were achieved for the resultant composite with an ultralow loading of 0.28 wt %, which is among the best results for currently reported conductive polymer nanocomposites. Moreover, the composite displayed excellent mechanical properties and bending stability; for example, a 233% increment in the compression strength was obtained compared with that of neat PDMS. These observations indicate the unrivalled effectiveness of 3D rGO/SWCNT aerogel as a reinforcement to endow the polymer composites with outstanding conductive and mechanical properties toward high-performance EMI-shielding application

    Flexible Polydimethylsilane Nanocomposites Enhanced with a Three-Dimensional Graphene/Carbon Nanotube Bicontinuous Framework for High-Performance Electromagnetic Interference Shielding

    No full text
    High-performance electromagnetic interference (EMI)-shielding materials featuring lightweight, flexibility, excellent conductivity, and shielding properties, as well as superior mechanical robustness, are highly required, yet their development still remains a daunting challenge. Here, a flexible and exceptional EMI-shielding polydimethylsilane/reduced graphene oxide/single-wall carbon nanotube (PDMS/rGO/SWCNT) nanocomposite was developed by a facile backfilling approach utilizing a preformed rGO/SWCNT aerogel as the three-dimensional (3D) conducting and reinforcement skeleton. Pristine SWCNTs acting as secondary conductive fillers showed intriguing advantages, whose intrinsically high conductivity could be well preserved in the composites because of no surface acidification treatment. The robust and interconnected 3D network can not only serve as fast channels for electron transport but also effectively transfer external load. Accordingly, a prominent electrical conductivity of 1.2 S cm<sup>–1</sup> and an outstanding EMI-shielding effectiveness of around 31 dB over the X-band frequency range were achieved for the resultant composite with an ultralow loading of 0.28 wt %, which is among the best results for currently reported conductive polymer nanocomposites. Moreover, the composite displayed excellent mechanical properties and bending stability; for example, a 233% increment in the compression strength was obtained compared with that of neat PDMS. These observations indicate the unrivalled effectiveness of 3D rGO/SWCNT aerogel as a reinforcement to endow the polymer composites with outstanding conductive and mechanical properties toward high-performance EMI-shielding application

    Flexible Polydimethylsilane Nanocomposites Enhanced with a Three-Dimensional Graphene/Carbon Nanotube Bicontinuous Framework for High-Performance Electromagnetic Interference Shielding

    No full text
    High-performance electromagnetic interference (EMI)-shielding materials featuring lightweight, flexibility, excellent conductivity, and shielding properties, as well as superior mechanical robustness, are highly required, yet their development still remains a daunting challenge. Here, a flexible and exceptional EMI-shielding polydimethylsilane/reduced graphene oxide/single-wall carbon nanotube (PDMS/rGO/SWCNT) nanocomposite was developed by a facile backfilling approach utilizing a preformed rGO/SWCNT aerogel as the three-dimensional (3D) conducting and reinforcement skeleton. Pristine SWCNTs acting as secondary conductive fillers showed intriguing advantages, whose intrinsically high conductivity could be well preserved in the composites because of no surface acidification treatment. The robust and interconnected 3D network can not only serve as fast channels for electron transport but also effectively transfer external load. Accordingly, a prominent electrical conductivity of 1.2 S cm<sup>–1</sup> and an outstanding EMI-shielding effectiveness of around 31 dB over the X-band frequency range were achieved for the resultant composite with an ultralow loading of 0.28 wt %, which is among the best results for currently reported conductive polymer nanocomposites. Moreover, the composite displayed excellent mechanical properties and bending stability; for example, a 233% increment in the compression strength was obtained compared with that of neat PDMS. These observations indicate the unrivalled effectiveness of 3D rGO/SWCNT aerogel as a reinforcement to endow the polymer composites with outstanding conductive and mechanical properties toward high-performance EMI-shielding application

    Flexible Polydimethylsilane Nanocomposites Enhanced with a Three-Dimensional Graphene/Carbon Nanotube Bicontinuous Framework for High-Performance Electromagnetic Interference Shielding

    No full text
    High-performance electromagnetic interference (EMI)-shielding materials featuring lightweight, flexibility, excellent conductivity, and shielding properties, as well as superior mechanical robustness, are highly required, yet their development still remains a daunting challenge. Here, a flexible and exceptional EMI-shielding polydimethylsilane/reduced graphene oxide/single-wall carbon nanotube (PDMS/rGO/SWCNT) nanocomposite was developed by a facile backfilling approach utilizing a preformed rGO/SWCNT aerogel as the three-dimensional (3D) conducting and reinforcement skeleton. Pristine SWCNTs acting as secondary conductive fillers showed intriguing advantages, whose intrinsically high conductivity could be well preserved in the composites because of no surface acidification treatment. The robust and interconnected 3D network can not only serve as fast channels for electron transport but also effectively transfer external load. Accordingly, a prominent electrical conductivity of 1.2 S cm<sup>–1</sup> and an outstanding EMI-shielding effectiveness of around 31 dB over the X-band frequency range were achieved for the resultant composite with an ultralow loading of 0.28 wt %, which is among the best results for currently reported conductive polymer nanocomposites. Moreover, the composite displayed excellent mechanical properties and bending stability; for example, a 233% increment in the compression strength was obtained compared with that of neat PDMS. These observations indicate the unrivalled effectiveness of 3D rGO/SWCNT aerogel as a reinforcement to endow the polymer composites with outstanding conductive and mechanical properties toward high-performance EMI-shielding application

    Model-Driven Redox Pathway Manipulation for Improved Isobutanol Production in <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> Complemented with Experimental Validation and Metabolic Profiling Analysis

    No full text
    <div><p>To rationally guide the improvement of isobutanol production, metabolic network and metabolic profiling analysis were performed to provide global and profound insights into cell metabolism of isobutanol-producing <i>Bacillus subtilis</i>. The metabolic flux distribution of strains with different isobutanol production capacity (BSUL03, BSUL04 and BSUL05) drops a hint of the importance of NADPH on isobutanol biosynthesis. Therefore, the redox pathways were redesigned in this study. To increase NADPH concentration, glucose-6-phosphate isomerase was inactivated (BSUL06) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was overexpressed (BSUL07) successively. As expected, NADPH pool size in BSUL07 was 4.4-fold higher than that in parental strain BSUL05. However, cell growth, isobutanol yield and production were decreased by 46%, 22%, and 80%, respectively. Metabolic profiling analysis suggested that the severely imbalanced redox status might be the primary reason. To solve this problem, gene <i>udhA</i> of <i>Escherichia coli</i> encoding transhydrogenase was further overexpressed (BSUL08), which not only well balanced the cellular ratio of NAD(P)H/NAD(P)<sup>+</sup>, but also increased NADH and ATP concentration. In addition, a straightforward engineering approach for improving NADPH concentrations was employed in BSUL05 by overexpressing exogenous gene <i>pntAB</i> and obtained BSUL09. The performance for isobutanol production by BSUL09 was poorer than BSUL08 but better than other engineered strains. Furthermore, in fed-batch fermentation the isobutanol production and yield of BSUL08 increased by 11% and 19%, up to the value of 6.12 g/L and 0.37 C-mol isobutanol/C-mol glucose (63% of the theoretical value), respectively, compared with parental strain BSUL05. These results demonstrated that model-driven complemented with metabolic profiling analysis could serve as a useful approach in the strain improvement for higher bio-productivity in further application.</p></div

    Fold changes of the major intracellular metabolites for different isobutanol-producing strains.

    No full text
    <p>The concentrations of different intracellular metabolites of reconstructed strains (BSUL06, BSUL07 and BSUL08) were normalized to that of BSUL05. Data presented in heat map were the average fold change values of each metabolite between the reconstructed strains and BSUL05.</p

    The metabolic flux distribution in isobutanol-producing strain <i>B. subtilis</i>.

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    <p>Data represented <i>in silico</i> flux distribution of different isobutanol-producing strains (top BSUL03, middle BSUL04, down BSUL05). Bold red and green lines represented the increased and decreased flux, respectively. The blue marks represented the targets for redox pathway engineering in this work. Abbreviations were listed in previous work <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0093815#pone.0093815-Li2" target="_blank">[10]</a>. Part of the flux data in central metabolism were taken from previous work <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0093815#pone.0093815-Li2" target="_blank">[10]</a>.</p

    Strains and plasmids used in this work.

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    a<p>CGSC: Coli Gentic Stock Center.</p>b<p>BGSC: Bacillus Gentic Stock Center.</p
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