193 research outputs found
Solvent response to fluorine-atom reaction dynamics in liquid acetonitrile
Solvent restructuring and vibrational cooling follow exothermic fluorine-atom reactions in acetonitrile.</p
Recombination, Solvation and Reaction of CN Radicals Following Ultraviolet Photolysis of ICN in Organic Solvents
The fates of CN radicals produced
by ultraviolet (UV) photolysis
of ICN in various organic solvents have been examined by transient
electronic and vibrational absorption spectroscopy (TEAS and TVAS).
Near-UV and visible bands in the TEAS measurement enable direct observation
of the CN radicals and their complexes with the solvent molecules.
Complementary TVAS measurements probe the products of CN–radical
reactions. Geminate recombination to form ICN and INC is a minor pathway
on the 150 fs −1300 ps time scales of our experiments in the
chosen organic solvents; nonetheless, large infrared transition dipole
moments permit direct observation of INC that is vibrationally excited
in the CN stretching mode. The time constants for INC vibrational
cooling range from 30 ps in tetrahydrofuran (THF) to 1400 ps in more
weakly interacting solvents such as chloroform. The major channel
for CN removal in the organic solvents is reaction with solvent molecules,
as revealed by depletion of solvent absorption bands and growth of
product bands in the TVA spectra. HCN is a reaction product of hydrogen
atom abstraction in most of the photoexcited solutions, and forms
with vibrational excitation in both the C–H and CN
stretching modes. The vibrational cooling rate of the CN stretch
in HCN depends on the solvent, and follows the same trend as the cooling
rate of the CN stretch in INC. However, in acetonitrile solution
an additional reaction pathway produces C<sub>3</sub>H<sub>3</sub>N<sub>2</sub><sup>•</sup> radicals, which release HCN on a
much longer time scale
Reaction Dynamics of CN Radicals in Acetonitrile Solutions
The bimolecular reactions that follow
267 nm ultraviolet photolysis
of ICN in acetonitrile solution have been studied using transient
absorption spectroscopy on the picosecond time scale. Time-resolved
electronic absorption spectroscopy (TEAS) in the ultraviolet and visible
spectral regions observes rapid production and loss (with a decay
time constant of 0.6 ± 0.1 ps) of the photolytically generated
free CN radicals. Some of these radicals convert to a solvated form
which decays with a lifetime of 8.5 ± 2.1 ps. Time-resolved vibrational
absorption spectroscopy (TVAS) reveals that the free and solvated
CN-radicals undergo geminate recombination with I atoms to make ICN
and INC, H atom abstraction reactions, and addition reactions to solvent
molecules to make C<sub>3</sub>H<sub>3</sub>N<sub>2</sub> radical
species. These radical products have a characteristic absorption band
at 2036 cm<sup>–1</sup> that shifts to 2010 cm<sup>–1</sup> when ICN is photolyzed in CD<sub>3</sub>CN. The HCN yield is low,
suggesting the addition pathway competes effectively with H atom abstraction
from CH<sub>3</sub>CN, but the delayed growth of the C<sub>3</sub>H<sub>3</sub>N<sub>2</sub> radical band is best described by reaction
of solvated CN radicals through an unobserved intermediate species.
Addition of methanol or tetrahydrofuran as a cosolute promotes H atom
abstraction reactions that produce vibrationally hot HCN. The combination
of TEAS and TVAS measurements shows that the rate-limiting process
for production of ground-state HCN is vibrational cooling, the rate
of which is accelerated by the presence of methanol or tetrahydrofuran
Free vibrations of thermally stressed orthotropic plates with various boundary conditions
An analytical investigation of the vibrations of thermally stressed orthotropic plates in the prebuckled region is presented. The investigation covers the broad class of trapezoidal plates with two opposite sides parallel. Each edge of the plate may be subjected to different uniform boundary conditions. variable thickness and arbitrary temperature distributions (analytical or experimental) for any desired combination of boundary conditions may be prescribed. Results obtained using this analysis are compared to experimental results obtained for isotropic plates with thermal stress, and to results contained in the literature for orthotropic plates without thermal stress. Good agreement exists for both sets of comparisons
Selection of yeast strains for bioethanol production from UK seaweeds
Macroalgae (seaweeds) are a promising feedstock for the production of third generation bioethanol, since they have high carbohydrate contents, contain little or no lignin and are available in abundance. However, seaweeds typically contain a more diverse array of monomeric sugars than are commonly present in feedstocks derived from lignocellulosic material which are currently used for bioethanol production. Hence, identification of a suitable fermentative microorganism that can utilise the principal sugars released from the hydrolysis of macroalgae remains a major objective. The present study used a phenotypic microarray technique to screen 24 different yeast strains for their ability to metabolise individual monosaccharides commonly found in seaweeds, as well as hydrolysates following an acid pre-treatment of five native UK seaweed species (Laminaria digitata, Fucus serratus, Chondrus crispus, Palmaria palmata and Ulva lactuca). Five strains of yeast (three Saccharomyces spp, one Pichia sp and one Candida sp) were selected and subsequently evaluated for bioethanol production during fermentation of the hydrolysates. Four out of the five selected strains converted these monomeric sugars into bioethanol, with the highest ethanol yield (13 g L−1) resulting from a fermentation using C. crispus hydrolysate with Saccharomyces cerevisiae YPS128. This study demonstrated the novel application of a phenotypic microarray technique to screen for yeast capable of metabolising sugars present in seaweed hydrolysates; however, metabolic activity did not always imply fermentative production of ethanol
Suppression of properties associated with malignancy in murine melanoma-melanocyte hybrid cells.
Murine and human melanoma cells differ relatively reliably from non-tumorigenic melanocytes in certain biological properties. When cultured at low pH, melanocytes tend to be pigmented and melanoma cells unpigmented. The growth of virtually all metastatic melanoma cells is inhibited by phorbol esters such as TPA (12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate), which stimulate melanocyte growth. Melanocytes fail to grow in suspension culture or produce tumours when implanted in animals, while many melanoma lines can do both. Here we studied which of these properties were dominant in hybrid cells formed by fusion of drug-resistant murine B16-F10RR melanoma cells to melanocytes of the albino and brown lines, melan-c and melan-b. The albino melanocytes are unpigmented but well-differentiated, the brown melanocytes produce pale brown pigment and the melanoma cells are unpigmented under the conditions used. All hybrid colonies observed produced black pigment, except some melan-b/melanoma hybrids when growing sparsely with TPA. Thus pigmentation was generally dominant. 14/15 hybrid lines showed stimulation of proliferation by TPA, as do melanocytes. Most hybrid lines showed no or reduced capacity for growth in suspension, though some grew better in suspension when TPA was present. There was marked suppression of the tumorigenicity of the parental melanoma cells in 4/8 hybrids examined, and tumorigenicity was reduced in the others, despite considerable chromosome loss by the passage level tested. Thus most properties of the non-tumorigenic pigment cells were dominant, as often observed for other cell lineages, and providing further evidence for gene loss in the genesis of malignant melanoma
The characterisation of Wickerhamomyces anomalus M15, a highly tolerant yeast for bioethanol production using seaweed derived medium
Advanced generation biofuels have potential for replacing fossil fuels as society moves forward into a net-zero carbon future. Marine biomass is a promising source of fermentable sugars for fermentative bioethanol production; however the medium derived from seaweed hydrolysis contains various inhibitors, such as salts that affected ethanol fermentation efficiency. In this study the stress tolerance of a marine yeast, Wickerhamomyces anomalus M15 was characterised. Specific growth rate analysis results showed that Wickerhamomyces anomalus M15 could tolerate up to 600 g/L glucose, 150 g/L xylose and 250 g/L ethanol, respectively. Using simulated concentrated seaweed hydrolysates, W. anomalus M15’s bioethanol production potential using macroalgae derived feedstocks was assessed, in which 5.8, 45.0, and 19.9 g/L ethanol was produced from brown (Laminaria digitata), green (Ulva linza) and red seaweed (Porphyra umbilicalis) based media. The fermentation of actual Ulva spp. hydrolysate harvested from United Kingdom shores resulted in a relatively low ethanol concentration (15.5 g/L) due to challenges that arose from concentrating the seaweed hydrolysate. However, fed-batch fermentation using simulated concentrated green seaweed hydrolysate achieved a concentration of 73 g/L ethanol in fermentations using both seawater and reverse osmosis water. Further fermentations conducted with an adaptive strain W. anomalus M15-500A showed improved bioethanol production of 92.7 g/L ethanol from 200 g/L glucose and reduced lag time from 93 h to 24 h in fermentation with an initial glucose concentration of 500 g/L. The results indicated that strains W. anomalus M15 and W. anomalus M15-500A have great potential for industrial bioethanol production using marine biomass derived feedstocks. It also suggested that if a concentrated high sugar content seaweed hydrolysate could be obtained, the bioethanol concentration could achieve 90 g/L or above, exceeding the minimum industrial production threshold
Photochemical dihydrogen production using an analogue of the active site of [NiFe] hydrogenase
The photoproduction of dihydrogen (H2) by a low molecular weight analogue of the active site of [NiFe] hydrogenase has been investigated by the reduction of the [NiFe2] cluster, 1, by a photosensitier PS (PS = [ReCl(CO)3(bpy)] or [Ru(bpy)3][PF6]2). Reductive quenching of the 3MLCT excited state of the photosensitiser by NEt3 or N(CH2CH2OH)3 (TEOA) generates PS•−, and subsequent intermolecular electron transfer to 1 produces the reduced anionic form of 1. Time-resolved infrared spectroscopy (TRIR) has been used to probe the intermediates throughout the reduction of 1 and subsequent photocatalytic H2 production from [HTEOA][BF4], which was monitored by gas chromatography. Two structural isomers of the reduced form of 1 (1a•− and 1b•−) were detected by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) in both CH3CN and DMF (dimethylformamide), while only 1a•− was detected in CH2Cl2. Structures for these intermediates are proposed from the results of density functional theory calculations and FTIR spectroscopy. 1a•− is assigned to a similar structure to 1 with six terminal carbonyl ligands, while calculations suggest that in 1b•− two of the carbonyl groups bridge the Fe centres, consistent with the peak observed at 1714 cm−1 in the FTIR spectrum for 1b•− in CH3CN, assigned to a ν(CO) stretching vibration. The formation of 1a•− and 1b•− and the production of H2 was studied in CH3CN, DMF and CH2Cl2. Although the more catalytically active species (1a•− or 1b•−) could not be determined, photocatalysis was observed only in CH3CN and DMF
Photoinduced energy- and electron-transfer from a photoactive coordination cage to bound guests.
In a coordination cage which contains an array of twelve naphthyl chromophores surrounding a central cavity, photoinduced energy or electron-transfer can occur from the chromophore array to the bound guest in supramolecular host/guest complexes
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