1,058 research outputs found
From Advanced Materials to Sustainable MetalFree Catalysts via Tailored Chemical Decorations of Carbon Nanostructures
Exploiting Tannery Sludge as Renewable Resource for Biogas and Short-chain Fatty (SCFAs) Acids Production
The tannery industry is a very lucrative and widespread sector in Italy, and it is yet one of the most polluting, mainly due to the tannery sludge’s disposal in landfills, as it is considered a special residue by Italian legislation. An evaluation of the performance of the anaerobic fermentation process to obtain biogas and short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) has been performed in this paper in different conditions concerning temperature, total solids content, and oxidizing and/or thermal pretreatments. The batch test trials revealed that the hydrogen peroxide pretreatment proved to be effective in increasing the biogas production, already at low doses but reaching the highest amount of 204 mL with the dose of 0.6 g H2O2/gTS. Regarding the SCFAs production, the combined microwave and hydrogen peroxide (MW-H2O2) pretreatment followed by thermophilic conditions gave the best results, with maximal SCFA concentration above 24 g CODSCFA/L.
In the tests conducted without pretreatment, the mesophilic temperature seem preferable since the acidification performances were comparable to or even better than their thermophilic counterparts while being less energy intensive. The obtained results proved that tannery sludge can be employed in different ways and provide a viable alternative to landfilling, to handle this waste in a greener way, in a circular economy approach
Palladium nanoparticles supported on Smopex®metal scavengers ascatalyst for carbonylative Sonogashira reactions: Synthesis of α,β-alkynyl ketones
Palladium nanoparticles supported on two Smopex®commercial metal scavengers (1% w/w) have beentested in the carbonylative Sonogashira reactions of aryl iodides with phenylacetylene. Their catalyticactivity has been compared with those of more common catalysts (Pd/C, Pd/-Al2O3). Pd/Smopex®-234resulted especially effective in the synthesis of alkynyl ketones even working with a low amount ofpalladium (0.2–0.5 mol%). Preliminary heterogeneity tests (i.e. hot filtration test, Pd leaching and recycleof the catalyst) have been performed in order to evaluate the catalytic behaviour of this system. Theobtained results seem to indicate that Pd/Smopex®-234 could act as a truly heterogeneous catalyst
Optimizing SCFAs Production from Tannery Sludge: Insights from Zeolite-Assisted Fermentation with Mild Thermal Pretreatment
This study explores the potential of utilizing tannery sludge for short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) production through fermentation, incorporating zeolites in the process. The study involved a mild thermal pretreatment of the sludge as well, aimed at enhancing the subsequent fermentation process by increasing the solubilization of the organic matter. Six thermophilic continuously stirred tank reactor runs with varying hydraulic retention times (HRT) and zeolite addition are conducted. Zeolites, known for their low cost and absorption properties, significantly impacted chromium concentrations. SCFA production levels remain relatively consistent across tests. However, the acidification efficiency, as reflected in the SCFAs/sCOD ratios, shows improvement in the presence of Chabazite. Specifically, the acidification efficiency is highest in test RB8 (0.92 COD/COD). This suggests that the addition of Chabazite enhances acidification efficiency in tannery sludge applications. The findings highlight zeolites' potential to absorb heavy metals and improve acidification efficiency, indicating promising practical applications for tannery sludge treatment
graphene oxide and simple molecules at high pressure new perspectives for 2d nanoconfined chemistry of carbon based materials
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A new iron free treatment with oral fi sh cartilage polysaccharide for iron defi ciency chronic anemia in infl ammatory bowel diseases: A pilot study
Abstract AIM: To investigate the effect of a new oral preparation, highly concentrated in fish cartilage, in a group of infl ammatory bowel diseases (IBD) patients with chronic iron defi cient anemia. METHODS: In an open label pilot study, we supplemented a group of 25 patients (11 with Crohn's disease and 14 with ulcerative colitis) in stable clinical conditions and chronic anemia with a food supplement which does not contain iron but contains a standardized fraction of fish cartilage glycosaminoglycans and a mixture of antioxidants (Captafer Medestea, Turin, Italy). Patients received 500 mg, twice a day during meals, for at least 4 mo. Patients were suggested to maintain their alimentary habit. At time 0 and after 2 and 4 mo, emocrome, sideremia and ferritin were examined. Paired data were analyzed with Student's t test. RESULTS: Three patients relapsed during the study (2 in the 3 rd mo, 1 in the 4 th mo), two patients were lost to follow up and two patients dropped out (1 for orticaria, 1 for gastric burning). Of the remaining 18 patients, levels of serum iron started to rapidly increase within the 2 nd mo of treatment, P < 0.05), whereas serum ferritin and hemoglobin needed a longer period to signifi cantly improve their serum levels (mo 4) P < 0.05). The product was safe, easy to administer and well tolerated by patients. CONCLUSION: These data suggest a potential new treatment for IBD patients with iron defi ciency chronic anemia and warrant further larger controlled studies
Demonstration of track reconstruction with FPGAs on live data at LHCb
The LHCb experiment is currently taking data with a completely renewed DAQ system, capable for the first time of performing a full real-time reconstruction of all collision events occurring at LHC point 8. The Collaboration is now pursuing a further upgrade (“LHCb Upgrade-II”), to enable the experiment to retain the same capability at luminosities an order of magnitude larger than the maximum planned for the current Run3. To this purpose, a vigorous R&D program is ongoing to boost the real-time processing capability of LHCb, needed to cope both with the luminosity increase and the adoption of correspondingly more granular and complex detectors. New heterogeneous computing solutions are being explored, with the aim of moving reconstruction and data reduction to the earliest possible stages of processing. In this talk, we describe the results obtained from a realistic demonstrator for a high-throughput reconstruction of tracking detectors, operating parasitically on real LHCb data from Run3 in a purposely-built testbed facility. This demonstrator is based on a extremely parallel, “Artificial Retina” architecture, implemented in commercial, PCIe-hosted FPGA cards interconnected by fast optical links, and encompasses a sizeable fraction of the LHCb VELO pixel detector. The implications of the results in view of potential applications in HEP are discussed
Study of the decay
The decay is studied
in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of TeV
using data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 5
collected by the LHCb experiment. In the system, the
state observed at the BaBar and Belle experiments is
resolved into two narrower states, and ,
whose masses and widths are measured to be where the first uncertainties are statistical and the second
systematic. The results are consistent with a previous LHCb measurement using a
prompt sample. Evidence of a new
state is found with a local significance of , whose mass and width
are measured to be and , respectively. In addition, evidence of a new decay mode
is found with a significance of
. The relative branching fraction of with respect to the
decay is measured to be , where the first
uncertainty is statistical, the second systematic and the third originates from
the branching fractions of charm hadron decays.Comment: All figures and tables, along with any supplementary material and
additional information, are available at
https://cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/p/LHCb-PAPER-2022-028.html (LHCb
public pages
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