105 research outputs found
Deposition and transport of graphene oxide in saturated and unsaturated porous media
In this work, sand and bubble column experiments were conducted to explore the deposition mechanisms of graphene oxide (GO) particles in porous media with various combinations of moisture content and ionic strength. Sand column experimental results indicated that retention and transport of GO in porous media were strongly dependent on solution ionic strength. Particularly, GO showed high mobility under low ionic strength conditions in both saturated and unsaturated porous media. Increasing ionic strength dramatically increased the retention of GO particles in porous media, mainly through secondary-minimum deposition as indicated in the XDLVO interaction energy profiles. Recovery rates of GO in unsaturated sand columns were lower than that in saturated columns under the same ionic strength conditions, suggesting moisture content also played an important role in the retention of GO in porous media. Findings from the bubble column experiments showed that the GO did not attach to the air–water interface, which is consistent with the XDLVO predictions. Additional retention mechanisms, such as film straining, thus could be responsible to the reduced mobility of GO in unsaturated porous media. The experimental data of GO transport through saturated and unsaturated porous media could be accurately simulated by an advection–dispersion-reaction model
Deposition and transport of functionalized carbon nanotubes in water-saturated sand columns
Knowledge of the fate and transport of functionalized carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in porous media is crucial to understand their environmental impacts. In this study, laboratory column and modeling experiments were conducted to mechanistically compare the retention and transport of two types of functionalized CNTs (i.e., single-walled nanotubes and multi-walled nanotubes) in acid-cleaned, baked, and natural sand under unfavorable conditions. The CNTs were highly mobile in the acid-cleaned sand columns but showed little transport in the both natural and baked sand columns. In addition, the retention of the CNTs in the both baked and natural sand was strong and almost irreversible even after reverse, high-velocity, or surfactant flow flushing. Both experimental and modeling results showed that pH is one of the factors dominating CNT retention and transport in natural and baked sand. Retention of the functionalized CNTs in the natural and baked sand columns reduced dramatically when the system pH increased. Our results suggest that the retention and transport of the functionalized CNTs in natural sand porous media were mainly controlled by strong surface deposition through the electrostatic and/or hydrogen-bonding attractions between surface function groups of the CNTs and metal oxyhydroxide impurities on the sand surfaces
Transport of titanium dioxide nanoparticles in saturated porous media under various solution chemistry conditions
Because of its wide applications, nanosized titanium dioxide may become a potential environmental risk to soil and groundwater system. It is therefore important to improve current understanding of the environmental fate and transport of titanium oxides nanoparticles (TONPs). In this work, the effect of solution chemistry (i.e., pH, ionic strength, and natural organic matter (NOM) concentration) on the deposition and transport of TONPs in saturated porous media was examined in detail. Laboratory columns packed with acid-cleaned quartz sand were used in the experiment as porous media. Transport experiments were conducted with various chemistry combinations, including four ionic strengths, three pH levels, and two NOM concentrations. The results showed that TONP mobility increased with increasing solution pH, but decreased with increasing solution ionic strength. It is also found that the presence of NOM in the system enhanced the mobility of TONPs in the saturated porous media. The Derjaguin–Landau–Verwey–Overbeek (DLVO) theory was used to justify the mobility trends observed in the experimental data. Predictions from the theory agreed excellently with the experimental data
Methods of using carbon nanotubes as filter media to remove aqueous heavy metals
Although carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are well known to have a strong affinity to various heavy metals in aqueous solution, little research has been dedicated to exploit their use in fixed-bed water treatment systems (e.g., trickling filters). In this work, batch sorption and fixed-bed experiments were conducted to examine the ability of functionalized multi-walled CNTs as filter media to remove two heavy metal ions (Pb2+ and Cu2+) from infiltrating water. Batch sorption experiments confirmed the strong sorption affinity of the CNTs for Pb2+ and Cu2+ in both single and dual metal solution systems. In addition, sonication-promoted dispersion of the CNT particles enhanced their heavy metal sorption capacity by 23.9–32.2%. For column experiments, laboratory-scale fixed-bed columns were packed with CNTs and natural quartz sand by three different packing: layered, mixed, and deposited. While all the three packing methods enhanced the fixed-bed filtering efficiency of Pb2+ and Cu2+ from single and dual metal systems, the CNT-deposited packing method was superior. Although the amount of the CNTs added into the fixed-bed columns was only 0.006% (w/w) of the sand, they significantly improved the fixed-bed’s filtering efficiency of Pb2+ and Cu2+ by 55–75% and 31–57%, respectively. Findings from this study demonstrate that functionalized multi-walled CNTs, together with natural sand, can be used to effectively and safely remove heavy metals from water
Evidence of Noncollinear Spin Texture in Magnetic Moir\'e Superlattices
Moir\'e magnetism, parallel with moir\'e electronics that has led to novel
correlated and topological electronic states, emerges as a new venue to design
and control exotic magnetic phases in twisted magnetic two-dimensional(2D)
crystals. Here, we report direct evidence of noncollinear spin texture in 2D
twisted double bilayer (tDB) magnet chromium triiodide (CrI). Using
magneto-optical spectroscopy in tDB CrI, we revealed the presence of a net
magnetization, unexpected from the composing antiferromagnetic bilayers with
compensated magnetizations, and the emergence of noncollinear spins, originated
from the moir\'e exchange coupling-induced spin frustrations. Exploring the
twist angle dependence, we demonstrated that both features are present in tDB
CrI with twist angles from 0.5 to 5, but are most prominent in the
1.1 tDB CrI. Focusing on the temperature dependence of the 1.1 tDB
CrI, we resolved the dramatic suppression in the net magnetization onset
temperature and the significant softening of noncollinear spins, as a result of
the moir\'e induced frustration. Our results demonstrate the power of moir\'e
superlattices in introducing novel magnetic phenomena that are absent in
natural 2D magnets
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Effects of plastic debris on the biofilm bacterial communities in lake water
Increasing discharge of plastic debris into aquatic ecosystems and the worsening ecological risks have received growing attention. Once released, plastic debris could serve as a new substrate for microbes in waters. The complex relationship between plastics and biofilms has aroused great interest. To confirm the hypothesis that the presence of plastic in water affects the composition of biofilm in natural state, in situ biofilm culture experiments were conducted in a lake for 40 days. The diversity of biofilm attached on natural (cobble stones (CS) and wood) and plastic substrates (Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA)) were compared, and the community structure and composition were also analyzed. Results from high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA showed that the diversity and species richness of biofilm bacterial communities on natural substrate (observed species of 1353~1945, Simpson index of 0.977~0.989 and Shannon–Wiener diversity index of 7.42~8.60) were much higher than those on plastic substrates (observed species of 900~1146, Simpson index of 0.914~0.975 and Shannon–Wiener diversity index of 5.47~6.99). The NMDS analyses were used to confirm the taxonomic significance between different samples, and Anosim (p = 0.001, R = 0.892) and Adonis (p = 0.001, R = 808, F = 11.19) demonstrated that this classification was statistically rigorous. Different dominant bacterial communities were found on plastic and natural substrates. Alphaproteobacterial, Betaproteobacteria and Synechococcophycideae dominated on the plastic substrate, while Gammaproteobacteria, Phycisphaerae and Planctomycetia played the main role on the natural substrates. The bacterial community structure of the two substrates also showed significant difference which is consistent with previous studies using other polymer types. Our results shed light on the fact that plastic debris can serve as a new habitat for biofilm colonization, unlike natural substrates, pathogens and plastic-degrading microorganisms selectively attached to plastic substrates, which affected the bacterial community structure and composition in aquatic environment. This study provided a new insight into understanding the potential impacts of plastics serving as a new habitat for microbial communities in freshwater environments. Future research should focus on the potential impacts of plastic-attached biofilms in various aquatic environments and the whole life cycle of plastics (i.e., from plastic fragments to microplastics) and also microbial flock characteristics using microbial plastics in the natural environment should also be addressed
Magnetic Exciton-Polariton with Strongly Coupled Atomic and Photonic Anisotropies
Anisotropy plays a key role in science and engineering. However, the
interplay between the material and engineered photonic anisotropies has hardly
been explored due to the vastly different length scales. Here we demonstrate a
matter-light hybrid system, exciton-polaritons in a 2D antiferromagnet, CrSBr,
coupled with an anisotropic photonic crystal (PC) cavity, where the spin,
atomic lattice, and photonic lattices anisotropies are strongly correlated,
giving rise to unusual properties of the hybrid system and new possibilities of
tuning. We show exceptionally strong coupling between engineered anisotropic
optical modes and anisotropic excitons in CrSBr, which is stable against
excitation densities a few orders of magnitude higher than polaritons in
isotropic materials. Moreover, the polaritons feature a highly anisotropic
polarization tunable by tens of degrees by controlling the matter-light
coupling via, for instance, spatial alignment between the material and photonic
lattices, magnetic field, temperature, cavity detuning and cavity
quality-factors. The demonstrated system provides a prototype where atomic- and
photonic-scale orders strongly couple, opening opportunities of photonic
engineering of quantum materials and novel photonic devices, such as compact,
on-chip polarized light source and polariton laser
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