36 research outputs found

    Photothermal Desorption of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes and Coconut Shell-Activated Carbons Using a Continuous Light Source for Application in Air Sampling

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    Many techniques exist to measure airborne volatile organic compounds (VOCs), each with differing advantages; sorbent sampling is compact, versatile, has good sample stability, and is the preferred technique for collecting VOCs for hygienists. Development of a desorption technique that allows multiple analyses per sample (similar to chemical desorption) with enhanced sensitivity (similar to thermal desorption) would be helpful to field hygienists. In this study, activated carbon (AC) and single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNT) were preloaded with toluene vapor and partially desorbed with light using a common 12-V DC, 50-W incandescent/halogen lamp. A series of experimental chamber configurations were explored starting with a 500-ml chamber under static conditions, then with low ventilation and high ventilation, finally a 75-ml high ventilation chamber was evaluated. When preloaded with toluene and irradiated at the highest lamp setting for 4min, AC desorbed 13.9, 18.5, 23.8, and 45.9% of the loaded VOC mass, in each chamber configuration, respectively; SWNT desorbed 25.2, 24.3, 37.4, and 70.5% of the loaded VOC mass, respectively. SWNT desorption was significantly greater than AC in all test conditions (P = 0.02?<0.0001) demonstrating a substantial difference in sorbent performance. When loaded with 0.435mg toluene and desorbed at the highest lamp setting for 4min in the final chamber design, the mean desorption for AC was 45.8% (39.7, 52.0) and SWNT was 72.6% (68.8, 76.4) (mean represented in terms of 95% confidence interval). All desorption measurements were obtained using a field grade photoionization detector; this demonstrates the potential of using this technique to perform infield prescreening of VOC samples for immediate exposure feedback and in the analytical lab to introduce sample to a gas chromatograph for detailed analysis of the sampleFil: Floyd, Evan L.. Oklahoma State University; Estados UnidosFil: Sapag, Manuel Karim. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico San Luis. Instituto de Física Aplicada; ArgentinaFil: Oh, Jonghwa. University Of Alabama At Birmingahm; Estados UnidosFil: Lungu, Claudiu T.. University Of Alabama At Birmingahm; Estados Unido

    Preparation and characterization of flax, hemp and sisal fiber-derived mesoporous activated carbon adsorbents

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    The first aim of this study was to investigate mesoporous activated carbon adsorbents from sisal, hemp, and flax fibers by cost-effective methods. Fibers were impregnated with low concentration (20 wt.%) phosphoric acid. Carbonization temperatures were defined by thermal analysis. Bast fibers (hemp, flax) decompose at lower temperatures (419.36℃, 434.96℃) than leaf fibers (sisal, 512.92℃). The second aim was to compare bast and leaf fibers-derived activated carbon adsorbents by determining physical adsorption properties, chemical compositions, scanning electron microscope, and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Results showed that natural fibers have good candidates to prepare mesoporous activated carbon adsorbents with high surface area (1186–1359 m2/g), high mesopore percentage (60–72%), and high C content (80–86%). Even though leaf-derived activated carbon developed more mesoporous structure (72%), bast-derived activated carbons provided higher surface areas (Shemp = 1359 m2/g; Sflax = 1257 m2/g) and C content. Fourier transform infrared spectra for bast fibers-derived activated carbon adsorbents were quite similar while leaf fiber-derived activated carbon adsorbent had a different spectrum

    A Cross Sectional Study Evaluating Psychosocial Job Stress and Health Risk in Emergency Department Nurses

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    Nurses experience psychosocial work stress that may negatively affect physical and mental health over time. In this cross-sectional study we investigated prevalence of job stress and oxidative stress in nurses, and determined if significant relationships exist between higher job stress scores and demographic factors and working conditions. Emergency department nurses (n = 42) were recruited from a University Hospital following Institutional Review Board approval. Job stress indicators, effort–reward ratio and overcommitment were evaluated from survey questionnaires using the effort–reward imbalance model, and associations with age, sex, body mass index, and working conditions were measured by logistic regression analysis. Oxidative stress biomarkers, 8-isoprostane, malondialdehyde, and antioxidant levels were measured from urine specimens. Job stress was prevalent with effort–reward ratio \u3e 1 in 93% and overcommitment \u3e 50 in 83% of the study participants. Age, body mass index, years of experience, weekend work, work hours per week, and shift work showed strong associations with effort–reward ratio and overcommitment scores. Malondialdehyde was higher in participants with high overcommitment. We report that psychosocial job stress is prevalent among nurses, as revealed by the high effort–reward and overcommitment scores. Job stress may be reduced through implementation of appropriate stress reduction interventions

    Retrospective evaluation of whole exome and genome mutation calls in 746 cancer samples

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    Funder: NCI U24CA211006Abstract: The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) curated consensus somatic mutation calls using whole exome sequencing (WES) and whole genome sequencing (WGS), respectively. Here, as part of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium, which aggregated whole genome sequencing data from 2,658 cancers across 38 tumour types, we compare WES and WGS side-by-side from 746 TCGA samples, finding that ~80% of mutations overlap in covered exonic regions. We estimate that low variant allele fraction (VAF < 15%) and clonal heterogeneity contribute up to 68% of private WGS mutations and 71% of private WES mutations. We observe that ~30% of private WGS mutations trace to mutations identified by a single variant caller in WES consensus efforts. WGS captures both ~50% more variation in exonic regions and un-observed mutations in loci with variable GC-content. Together, our analysis highlights technological divergences between two reproducible somatic variant detection efforts

    Morphologic and Surface Characterization of Different Types of Activated Carbon Fibres

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    This study provides a comparison of different types of commercially available activated carbon fibres (ACFs). Thus, ACFs in cloth (ACFC) and felt forms (ACFF) with three different surface areas were each analyzed for their pore volumes, pore sizes and pore-size distributions. The fibre morphology and organization was visualized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The microporosity of the ACF materials based on nitrogen isotherms, the percentage of micropores by area and volume, the average pore size and the pore-size distribution were also determined. An increase in the surface areas of the ACFC types led to an increase in the total pore volume, micropore volume, micropore area and pore width, but led to a decrease in the percentage of micropores by area and volume. The nitrogen isotherms demonstrated that the surface area dictated the amount of adsorption onto the ACF regardless of the form of the latter. The difference in the volume of smaller micropores between the ACFC and ACFF types may be attributed to the difference in the adsorbent density and the accessibility of the fibre surface to the activating gas during the activation process. An understanding of the pore structure of ACFs by form and surface area is crucial in determining the appropriate specific applications of such adsorbents

    Heat Treatment of Buckypaper for Use in Volatile Organic Compounds Sampling

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    Three types of buckypapers (BPs), two of them fabricated with arc discharge (AD) single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) (acetone-cleaned AD BP and methanol-cleaned AD BP) and one with high-pressure carbon monoxide (HiPco) SWNTs (HiPco BP), were heat-treated at different conditions to find the specific conditions for each type that improve the adsorption properties. Based on thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) data, three heat treatment conditions were designed for the AD BPs and another three conditions for the HiPco BPs. Also, changes in weight and physical integrity before and after the heat treatment were considered. Heating at 300°C for 90 minutes was selected for acetone-cleaned AD BP, in which the BP kept its physical integrity and yielded a relatively high Brunauer, Emmett, and Teller (BET) surface area (970 ± 18 m2/g), while methanol-cleaned AD BP was excluded because of its physical change. For HiPco BP, a condition of 300°C heating for 30 minutes was chosen as a relatively higher surface area (933 ± 54 m2/g) and less weight loss (5%) were observed

    Laboratory evaluation of a prototype portable gas chromatograph (GC) with a flame ionization detector (FID) for toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylenes (TEX) analysis

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    Abstract The standard method to evaluate human exposure to volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is in general performed by sampling the air on sorbents followed by liquid extraction and detection using laboratory gas chromatograph (GC). The conventional method is time and labor intensive and employs a toxic solvent which adds a risk factor as well as waste. Hence, there have been increasing demands for portable GC instruments which allow near real-time, in-situ analysis. In this study, the potential use of a prototype, dual column portable GC (protoGC) with flame ionization detector (FID) was examined by comparing its performance with a conventional GC laboratory method. Four target concentration levels (1x, 2x, 4x, and 8x; x = 1.12 ± 0.01 ppm) of toluene, ethylbenzene, and o-, m-, and p-xylene were generated in an exposure chamber (24 ± 1 °C and 50 ± 5% RH). The challenge atmosphere was directly sampled and analyzed with protoGC while for the conventional method it was sampled on a sorbent tube and analyzed with a laboratory GC/FID. The results of protoGC correlated well with the conventional method (r = 0.991–0.999), indicating that protoGC has comparable performance with the conventional method within the test conditions. Although two-way ANOVA showed significant differences in mean concentrations between the methods, the differences were small. protoGC would be useful to monitor VOCs in air with high temporal resolution or to quickly determine the safety of the environment of interest due to the substantial time savings in sampling and analysis. Further examinations at various environmental conditions and other analytes will be necessary to thoroughly evaluate its performance

    Photothermal Desorption of Toluene from Carbonaceous Substrates Using Light Flash

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    Millions of workers are occupationally exposed to volatile organic compounds (VOCs) annually. Current exposure assessment techniques primarily utilize sorbent based preconcentrators to collect VOCs, with analysis performed using chemical or thermal desorption. Chemical desorption typically analyzes 1 &micro;L out of a 1 mL (0.1%) extraction volume providing limited sensitivity. Thermal desorption typically analyzes 100% of the sample which provides maximal sensitivity, but does not allow repeat analysis of the sample and often has greater sensitivity than is needed. In this study we describe a novel photothermal desorption (PTD) technique to bridge the sensitivity gap between chemical desorption and thermal desorption. We used PTD to partially desorb toluene from three carbonaceous substrates; activated carbon powder (AC-p), single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) powder (SWNT-p) and SWNT felts (SWNT-f). Sorbents were loaded with 435 ug toluene vapour and irradiated at four light energies. Desorption ranged from &lt;0.007% to 0.86% with a single flash depending on substrate and flash energy. PTD was significantly greater and more consistent in SWNT-f substrates compared to AC-p or SWNT-p at all irradiation energies. We attribute the better performance of SWNT-f to greater utilization of its unique nanomaterials properties: high thermal conductivity along the nanotube axis, and greater interconnection within the felt matrix compared to the powdered form

    Plasma-Corona-Processed Nanostructured Coating for Thermoregulative Textiles

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    A rapid increase in the atmospheric temperature has been reported in recent years worldwide. The lack of proper aid to protect from exposure to the sun during working hours has raised the number of sunburn cases among workers. It is important to promote productive workplaces without compromising safety and health concerns. In the present work, we report the low-temperature plasma (LTP)-assisted tailoring of the surface properties of fabrics to reflect IR radiation from the sun. The LTP technique can be adapted for thermally sensitive materials such as fabrics and textiles due to its lower working temperature range of 30 °C. We have modified various substrates such as commercially available fabric, regular, and boron nitride-incorporated electrospun PET surfaces with tetraethoxy orthosilicate (TEOS) plasma. TEOS plasma treatment can deposit a reactive plasma-polymerized silane nanolayer on the surface of these substrates. The plasma-processed silane nanolayer was systematically characterized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Keyence 3D-microscopic imaging, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). From the SEM and TEM data, the size of the nanoparticles was observed in the range 100–200 nm. The thermal regulation coating thickness was examined with a Keyence 3D imaging technique. The IR reflection potential of the surface was analyzed by using an FLIR thermal imaging system. The data revealed that the plasma-modeled nanosurface shows higher reflective potential toward IR rays, and it seems to be cooler than the unprocessed surface by approximately 15 °C. The stability and efficiency of the plasma-modified electrospun nanolayer in water were satisfactorily examined with SEM and IR imaging. Taken together, these results suggest the excellent potential of plasma processing to develop IR reflective coatings
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