4 research outputs found
Synthetic Antioxidants as Contaminants of Emerging Concern in Indoor Environments: Knowns and Unknowns
Synthetic antioxidants, including synthetic phenolic
antioxidants
(SPAs), amine antioxidants (AAs), and organophosphite antioxidants
(OPAs), are essential additives for preventing oxidative aging in
various industrial and consumer products. Increasing attention has
been paid to the environmental contamination caused by these chemicals,
but our understanding of synthetic antioxidants is generally limited
compared to other emerging contaminants such as plasticizers and flame
retardants. Many people spend a significant portion (normally greater
than 80%) of their time indoors, meaning that they experience widespread
and persistent exposure to indoor contaminants. Thus, this Perspective
focuses on the problem of synthetic antioxidants as indoor environmental
contaminants. The wide application of antioxidants in commercial products
and their demonstrated toxicity make them an important family of indoor
contaminants of emerging concern. However, significant knowledge gaps
still need to be bridged: novel synthetic antioxidants and their related
transformation products need to be identified in indoor environments,
different dust sampling strategies should be employed to evaluate
human exposure to these contaminants, geographic scope and sampling
scope of research on indoor contamination should be broadened, and
the partition coefficients of synthetic antioxidants among different
media need to be investigated
Design and Fabrication of an All-Solid-State Polymer Supercapacitor with Highly Mechanical Flexibility Based on Polypyrrole Hydrogel
A conducting
polymer-based hydrogel (PPy/CPH) with a polypyrrole–polyÂ(vinyl
alcohol) interpenetrating network was prepared by utilization of a
chemical cross-linked polyÂ(vinyl alcohol)–H<sub>2</sub>SO<sub>4</sub> hydrogel (CPH) film as flexible substrate followed by vapor-phase
polymerization of pyrrole. Then an all-solid-state polymer supercapacitor
(ASSPS) was fabricated by sandwiching the CPH film between two pieces
of the PPy/CPH film. The ASSPS is mechanically robust and flexible
with a tensile strength of 20.83 MPa and a break elongation of 377%
which is superior to other flexible conducting polymer hydrogel-based
supercapacitors owing to the strong hydrogen bonding interactions
among the layers and the high mechanical properties of the PPy/CPH.
It exhibits maximum volumetric specific capacitance of 13.06 F/cm<sup>3</sup> and energy density of 1160.9 μWh/cm<sup>3</sup>. The
specific capacitance maintains 97.9% and 86.3% of its initial value
after 10 000 folding cycles and 10 000 charge–discharge
cycles, respectively. The remarkable electrochemical and mechanical
performance indicates this novel ASSPS device is promising for flexible
electronics
Enhanced Light Scattering of Secondary Organic Aerosols by Multiphase Reactions
Secondary
organic aerosol (SOA) plays a pivotal role in visibility
and radiative forcing, both of which are intrinsically linked to the
refractive index (RI). While previous studies have focused on the
RI of SOA from traditional formation processes, the effect of multiphase
reactions on the RI has not been considered. Here, we investigate
the effects of multiphase processes on the RI and light-extinction
of <i>m</i>-xylene-derived SOA, a common type of anthropogenic
SOA. We find that multiphase reactions in the presence of liquid water
lead to the formation of oligomers from intermediate products such
as glyoxal and methylglyoxal, resulting in a large enhancement in
the RI and light-scattering of this SOA. These reactions will result
in increases in light-scattering efficiency and direct radiative forcing
of approximately 20%–90%. These findings improve our understanding
of SOA optical properties and have significant implications for evaluating
the impacts of SOA on the rapid formation of regional haze, global
radiative balance, and climate change