171 research outputs found

    Fouling in direct contact membrane distillation during treatment of produced water from unconventional (shale) gas production

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    Hydraulic fracturing used for natural gas extraction from unconventional onshore resources (i.e., shale plays) generates large quantities of produced water. This water needs to be managed efficiently and economically to ensure further development of this industry. The most common solution for produced water management is disposal by deep well injection. This approach is being scrutinized by public and regulatory agencies due to increasing number of seismic events associated with this practice. The industry is now striving to reuse the produced water for hydraulic fracturing, which is feasible only as long as there are sufficient number of new gas wells being developed. The total dissolved solids (TDS) content of produced water can be in excess of 300,000 mg/l with sodium and chloride being the primary ions, followed by calcium, barium, strontium and magnesium. This water also contains some organics and heavy metals at low concentrations. Most membrane-based technologies employed today for seawater desalination are not feasible in this industry due to extremely high TDS of produced water. Membrane distillation (MD) can achieve complete rejection of ions and non-volatile organics as long as the membrane pores are not wetted. MD may be a cost effective method to treat produced water due to its reasonably high permeate flux and ability to operate using low-quality heat (i.e., it operates at temperatures well below the boiling point of water). This study focuses on the potential for membrane wetting and/or fouling by inorganic salts present in produced water in the case of direct contact membrane distillation (DCMD) treatment of actual produced water from unconventional gas wells in Pennsylvania. The produced water was concentrated to near halite saturation limit to evaluate potential scaling and its impact on DCMD performance. Initial experiments showed that no membrane wetting occurred as evidenced by extremely low conductivity of the permeate stream. Iron-based scale accumulated on the membrane surface along with embedded islands of barium chloride and sodium chloride. The inorganic scale that formed on PTFE membranes during several hours of operation had negligible effect on MD performance in terms of permeate flux and thermal efficiency. Inspection of these inorganic scales suggests that they are typically very thin (i.e., several microns) and highly porous, which may explain the lack of observable impact on the transport of water vapor in DCMD module. Initial results suggest that DCMD has great potential for desalination of highly concentrated wastewaters generated by the unconventional gas industry. However, inorganic scale that may form on the feed side could potentially impact the performance of this technology. Further insights into the composition and morphology of inorganic scales that may form under realistic operating conditions will be presented at the conference together with pretreatment options and scale mitigation approaches to minimize the effect of scaling on DCMD performance when treating produced water from the most productive shale plays in the U.S

    Changes in carbon electrode morphology affect microbial fuel cell performance with Shewanella oneidensis MR-1

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    The formation of biofilm-electrodes is crucial for microbial fuel cell current production because optimal performance is often associated with thick biofilms. However, the influence of the electrode structure and morphology on biofilm formation is only beginning to be investigated. This study provides insight on how changing the electrode morphology affects current production of a pure culture of anode-respiring bacteria. Specifically, an analysis of the effects of carbon fiber electrodes with drastically different morphologies on biofilm formation and anode respiration by a pure culture (Shewanella oneidensis MR-1) were examined. Results showed that carbon nanofiber mats had -10 fold higher current than plain carbon microfiber paper and that the increase was not due to an increase in electrode surface area, conductivity, or the size of the constituent material. Cyclic voltammograms reveal that electron transfer from the carbon nanofiber mats was biofilm-based suggesting that decreasing the diameter of the constituent carbon material from a few microns to a few hundred nanometers is beneficial for electricity production solely because the electrode surface creates a more relevant mesh for biofilm formation by Shewanella oneidensis MR-1

    Sustainable Sourcing of Global Agricultural Raw Materials: Assessing Gaps in Key Impact and Vulnerability Issues and Indicators.

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    Understanding how to source agricultural raw materials sustainably is challenging in today's globalized food system given the variety of issues to be considered and the multitude of suggested indicators for representing these issues. Furthermore, stakeholders in the global food system both impact these issues and are themselves vulnerable to these issues, an important duality that is often implied but not explicitly described. The attention given to these issues and conceptual frameworks varies greatly--depending largely on the stakeholder perspective--as does the set of indicators developed to measure them. To better structure these complex relationships and assess any gaps, we collate a comprehensive list of sustainability issues and a database of sustainability indicators to represent them. To assure a breadth of inclusion, the issues are pulled from the following three perspectives: major global sustainability assessments, sustainability communications from global food companies, and conceptual frameworks of sustainable livelihoods from academic publications. These terms are integrated across perspectives using a common vocabulary, classified by their relevance to impacts and vulnerabilities, and categorized into groups by economic, environmental, physical, human, social, and political characteristics. These issues are then associated with over 2,000 sustainability indicators gathered from existing sources. A gap analysis is then performed to determine if particular issues and issue groups are over or underrepresented. This process results in 44 "integrated" issues--24 impact issues and 36 vulnerability issues--that are composed of 318 "component" issues. The gap analysis shows that although every integrated issue is mentioned at least 40% of the time across perspectives, no issue is mentioned more than 70% of the time. A few issues infrequently mentioned across perspectives also have relatively few indicators available to fully represent them. Issues in the impact framework generally have fewer gaps than those in the vulnerability framework

    Silicon resonant microcantilevers for absolute pressure measurement

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    This work is focused on the developing of silicon resonant microcantilevers for the measurement of the absolute pressure. The microcantilevers have been fabricated with a two-mask bulk micromachining process. The variation in resonance response of microcantilevers was investigated as a function of pressure 10−1-105 Pa, both in terms of resonance frequency and quality factor. A theoretical description of the resonating microstructure is given according to different molecular and viscous regimes. Also a brief discussion on the different quality factors contributions is presented. Theoretical and experimental data show a very satisfying agreement. The microstructure behavior demonstrates a certain sensitivity over a six decade range and the potential evolution of an absolute pressure sensor working in the same rang

    Caffeine suppresses homologous recombination through interference with RAD51-mediated joint molecule formation

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    Caffeine is a widely used inhibitor of the protein kinases that play a central role in the DNA damage response. We used chemical inhibitors and genetically deficient mouse embryonic stem cell lines to study the role of DNA damage response in stable integration of the transfected DNA and found that caffeine rapidly, efficiently and reversibly inhibited homologous integration of the transfected DNA as measured by several homologous recombination-mediated gene-targeting assays. Biochemical and structural biology experiments revealed that caffeine interfered with a pivotal step in homologous recombination, homologous joint molecule formation, through increasing interactions of the RAD51 nucleoprotein filament with non-homologous DNA. Our results suggest that recombination pathways dependent on extensive homology search are caffeine-sensitive and stress the importance of considering direct checkpoint-independent mechanisms in the interpretation of the effects of caffeine on DNA repair

    Transcriptomic Analysis of Host Immune and Cell Death Responses Associated with the Influenza A Virus PB1-F2 Protein

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    Airway inflammation plays a major role in the pathogenesis of influenza viruses and can lead to a fatal outcome. One of the challenging objectives in the field of influenza research is the identification of the molecular bases associated to the immunopathological disorders developed during infection. While its precise function in the virus cycle is still unclear, the viral protein PB1-F2 is proposed to exert a deleterious activity within the infected host. Using an engineered recombinant virus unable to express PB1-F2 and its wild-type homolog, we analyzed and compared the pathogenicity and host response developed by the two viruses in a mouse model. We confirmed that the deletion of PB1-F2 renders the virus less virulent. The global transcriptomic analyses of the infected lungs revealed a potent impact of PB1-F2 on the response developed by the host. Thus, after two days post-infection, PB1-F2 invalidation severely decreased the number of genes activated by the host. PB1-F2 expression induced an increase in the number and level of expression of activated genes linked to cell death, inflammatory response and neutrophil chemotaxis. When generating interactive gene networks specific to PB1-F2, we identified IFN-γ as a central regulator of PB1-F2-regulated genes. The enhanced cell death of airway-recruited leukocytes was evidenced using an apoptosis assay, confirming the pro-apoptotic properties of PB1-F2. Using a NF-kB luciferase adenoviral vector, we were able to quantify in vivo the implication of NF-kB in the inflammation mediated by the influenza virus infection; we found that PB1-F2 expression intensifies the NF-kB activity. Finally, we quantified the neutrophil recruitment within the airways, and showed that this type of leukocyte is more abundant during the infection of the wild-type virus. Collectively, these data demonstrate that PB1-F2 strongly influences the early host response during IAV infection and provides new insights into the mechanisms by which PB1-F2 mediates virulence

    Carbon-nitrogen interactions in European forests and semi-natural vegetation - Part 1: Fluxes and budgets of carbon, nitrogen and greenhouse gases from ecosystem monitoring and modelling

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    The impact of atmospheric reactive nitrogen (Nr_{r}) deposition on carbon (C) sequestration in soils and biomass of unfertilized, natural, semi-natural and forest ecosystems has been much debated. Many previous results of this dC/dN response were based on changes in carbon stocks from periodical soil and ecosystem inventories, associated with estimates of Nr_{r} deposition obtained from large-scale chemical transport models. This study and a companion paper (Flechard et al., 2020) strive to reduce uncertainties of N effects on C sequestration by linking multi-annual gross and net ecosystem productivity estimates from 40 eddy covariance flux towers across Europe to local measurement-based estimates of dry and wet Nr_{r} deposition from a dedicated collocated monitoring network. To identify possible ecological drivers and processes affecting the interplay between C and Nr_{r} inputs and losses, these data were also combined with in situ flux measurements of NO, N2_{2}O and CH4_{4} fluxes; soil NO3_{3}̅ leaching sampling; and results of soil incubation experiments for N and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, as well as surveys of available data from online databases and from the literature, together with forest ecosystem (BASFOR) modelling. Multi-year averages of net ecosystem productivity (NEP) in forests ranged from -70 to 826 gCm−2^{-2} yr−1^{-1} at total wet+dry inorganic Nr_{r} deposition rates (Ndep_{dep}) of 0.3 to 4.3 gNm−2^{-2} yr−1^{-1} and from -4 to 361 g Cm−2^{-2} yr−1^{-1} at Ndep_{dep} rates of 0.1 to 3.1 gNm−2^{-2} yr−1^{-1} in short semi-natural vegetation (moorlands, wetlands and unfertilized extensively managed grasslands). The GHG budgets of the forests were strongly dominated by CO2_{2} exchange, while CH4_{4} and N2_{2}O exchange comprised a larger proportion of the GHG balance in short semi-natural vegetation. Uncertainties in elemental budgets were much larger for nitrogen than carbon, especially at sites with elevated Ndep_{dep} where Nr_{r} leaching losses were also very large, and compounded by the lack of reliable data on organic nitrogen and N2_{2} losses by denitrification. Nitrogen losses in the form of NO, N2_{2}O and especially NO3_{3}̅ were on average 27%(range 6 %–54 %) of Ndep_{dep} at sites with Ndep_{dep} 3 gNm−2^{-2} yr−1^{-1}. Such large levels of Nr_{r} loss likely indicate that different stages of N saturation occurred at a number of sites. The joint analysis of the C and N budgets provided further hints that N saturation could be detected in altered patterns of forest growth. Net ecosystem productivity increased with Nr_{r} deposition up to 2–2.5 gNm−2^{-2} yr−1^{-1}, with large scatter associated with a wide range in carbon sequestration efficiency (CSE, defined as the NEP = GPP ratio). At elevated Ndep_{dep} levels (> 2.5 gNm−2^{-2} yr−1^{-1}), where inorganic Nr_{r} losses were also increasingly large, NEP levelled off and then decreased. The apparent increase in NEP at low to intermediate Ndep_{dep} levels was partly the result of geographical cross-correlations between Ndep_{dep} and climate, indicating that the actual mean dC/dN response at individual sites was significantly lower than would be suggested by a simple, straightforward regression of NEP vs. Ndep_{dep}

    Review of nanomaterials in dentistry: interactions with the oral microenvironment, clinical applications, hazards, and benefits.

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    Interest in the use of engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) as either nanomedicines or dental materials/devices in clinical dentistry is growing. This review aims to detail the ultrafine structure, chemical composition, and reactivity of dental tissues in the context of interactions with ENMs, including the saliva, pellicle layer, and oral biofilm; then describes the applications of ENMs in dentistry in context with beneficial clinical outcomes versus potential risks. The flow rate and quality of saliva are likely to influence the behavior of ENMs in the oral cavity, but how the protein corona formed on the ENMs will alter bioavailability, or interact with the structure and proteins of the pellicle layer, as well as microbes in the biofilm, remains unclear. The tooth enamel is a dense crystalline structure that is likely to act as a barrier to ENM penetration, but underlying dentinal tubules are not. Consequently, ENMs may be used to strengthen dentine or regenerate pulp tissue. ENMs have dental applications as antibacterials for infection control, as nanofillers to improve the mechanical and bioactive properties of restoration materials, and as novel coatings on dental implants. Dentifrices and some related personal care products are already available for oral health applications. Overall, the clinical benefits generally outweigh the hazards of using ENMs in the oral cavity, and the latter should not prevent the responsible innovation of nanotechnology in dentistry. However, the clinical safety regulations for dental materials have not been specifically updated for ENMs, and some guidance on occupational health for practitioners is also needed. Knowledge gaps for future research include the formation of protein corona in the oral cavity, ENM diffusion through clinically relevant biofilms, and mechanistic investigations on how ENMs strengthen the tooth structure

    Electrotransfer of Single-Stranded or Double-Stranded DNA Induces Complete Regression of Palpable B16.F10 Mouse Melanomas

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    Enhanced tumor delivery of plasmid DNA with electric pulses in vivo has been confirmed in many preclinical models. Intratumor electrotransfer of plasmids encoding therapeutic molecules has reached Phase II clinical trials. In multiple preclinical studies, a reduction in tumor growth, increased survival or complete tumor regression have been observed in control groups in which vector or backbone plasmid DNA electrotransfer was performed. This study explores factors that could produce this antitumor effect. The specific electrotransfer pulse protocol employed significantly potentiated the regression. Tumor regression was observed after delivery of single-stranded or double-stranded DNA with or without CpG motifs in both immunocompetent and immunodeficient mice, indicating the involvement of the innate immune system in response to DNA. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that the observed antitumor effects are not due to a single factor, but to a combination of factors
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