136,528 research outputs found
Fabrication and characterization of nanostructured fluorine doped tin oxide thin film for dssc by hydrothermal method
Nanostructured Fluorine Doped Tin Oxide (FTO) thin film has been
successfully synthesized on top of bare FTO layer substrates using hydrothermal
method. The performance of FTO thin film including conductivity and transparency
depend on the surface morphology and the properties of the material. Hydrothermal
method has proven to be a very good method for the fabrication of novel metal
oxides. Thus, a new nanostructured FTO thin film like nanorice has been fabricated
using one step hydrothermal method. FTO nanorice thin films were obtained from
the reaction of tin (iv) chloride (SnCl4), ammonium fluoride (NH4F), acetone,
deionized water and hydrochloric acid (HCl). The compound was prepared in an
autoclave at 150°C hydrothermal temperature for different reaction times of 5 hours,
10 hours, 15 hours, and 20 hours. FESEM studies on the surface morphologies of all
the samples showed that nanorice structure had formed to fully cover the bare FTO
substrate. Then, to further the optimization of FTO nanorice thin film, this research
focused on studying the effect of hydrothermal temperature on FTO nanorice thin
films. The experiments were conducted at 130°C, 140°C, 150°C, 160°C, and 170°C
of hydrothermal temperature in constant reaction time of 10 hours. Basically, there
were six properties studied; surface morphology, structural, element composition,
thickness measurement, electrical and optical properties. At the end of this research,
homogeneous FTO thin film has been successfully prepared. By controlling the
reaction time and hydrothermal temperature, a transparent FTO film with beyond
85% percentage of transmittance was developed. The FTO thin film produced at 10
hour reaction time and 150°C of hydrothermal temperature time gave the low sheet
resistance of 0.012 Ohm/sq with high transparency. The DSSC fabricated using the
optimized FTO film gave higher efficiency of 2.77% compared to commercial FTO
of 1.93%
Mechanism of reduced sintering temperature of Al2O3–ZrO2 nanocomposites obtained by microwave hydrothermal synthesis
A novel method to obtain Al2O3–ZrO2 nanocomposites is presented. It consists of the co-precipitation step of boehmite (AlO(OH)) and ZrO2, followed by microwave hydrothermal treatment at 270 °C and 60 MPa, and by calcination at 600 °C. Using this method, we obtained two nanocomposites: Al2O3–20 wt % ZrO2 and Al2O3–40 wt % ZrO2. Nanocomposites were characterized by Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and transmission electron microscopy. Sintering behavior and thermal expansion coefficients were investigated during dilatometric tests. The sintering temperatures of the nanocomposites were 1209 °C and 1231 °C, respectively—approximately 100 °C lower than reported for such composites. We attribute the decrease of the sintering temperature to the specific nanostructure obtained using microwave hydrothermal treatment instead of conventional calcination. Microwave hydrothermal treatment resulted in a fine distribution of intermixed highly crystalline nanoparticles of boehmite and zirconia. Such intermixing prevented particle growth, which is a factor reducing sintering temperature. Further, due to reduced grain growth, stability of the θ-Al2O3 phase was extended up to 1200 °C, which enhances the sintering process as well. For the Al2O3–20 wt % ZrO2 composition, we observed stability of the zirconia tetragonal phase up to 1400 °C. We associate this stability with the mutual separation of zirconia nanoparticles in the alumina matrix
Isolation and characterization of a thermophilic, obligately anaerobic and heterotrophic marine Chloroflexi bacterium from a Chloroflexi dominated microbial community associated with a Japanese shallow hydrothermal system, and proposal for Thermomarinilinea lacunofontalis gen. nov., sp. nov.
A novel marine thermophilic and heterotrophic Anaerolineae bacterium in the phylum Chloroflexi, strain SW7T, was isolated from an in situ colonization system deployed in the main hydrothermal vent of the Taketomi submarine hot spring field located on the southern part of Yaeyama Archipelago, Japan. The microbial community associated with the hydrothermal vent was predominated by thermophilic heterotrophs such as Thermococcaceae and Anaerolineae, and the next dominant population was thermophilic sulfur oxidizers. Both aerobic and anaerobic hydrogenotrophs including methanogens were detected as minor populations. During the culture-dependent viable count analysis in this study, an Anaerolineae strain SW7T was isolated from an enrichment culture at a high dilution rate. Strain SW7T was an obligately anaerobic heterotroph grew with fermentation, and non-motile thin rods 3.5-16.5 μm in length and 0.2 μm in width constituting multicellular filament. Growth was observed between 37-65 ℃ (optimum 60℃), pH 5.5-7.3 (optimum pH 6.0), 0.5-3.5% (w/v) NaCl concentration (optimum 1.0%). Based on physiological and phylogenetic features of a new isolate, we propose a new species representing a novel genus Thermomarinilinea: the type strain of Thermomarinilinea lacunofontalis sp. nov., is SW7T (= JCM15506T = KCTC5908T)
Thermophilic Sulfate Reduction in Hydrothermal Sediment of Lake Tanganyika, East Africa
In environments with temperatures above 60 degrees C, thermophilic prokaryotes are the only metabolically active life-forms. By using the (SO42-)-S-35 tracer technique, we studied the activity of sulfate-reducing microorganisms (SRM) in hot sediment from a hydrothermal vent site in the northern part of freshwater Lake Tanganyika (East Africa). Incubation of slurry samples at 8 to 90 degrees C demonstrated meso- and thermophilic sulfate reduction with optimum temperatures of 34 to 45 degrees C and 56 to 65 degrees C, respectively, and with an upper temperature limit of 80 degrees C. Sulfate reduction was stimulated at all temperatures by the addition of short-chain fatty acids and benzoate or complex substrates (yeast extract and peptone). A time course experiment showed that linear thermophilic sulfate consumption occurred after a lag phase (12 h) and indicated the presence of a large population of SRM in the hydrothermal sediment. Thermophilic sulfate reduction had a pH optimum of about 7 and was completely inhibited at pH 8.8 to 9.2. SRM could be enriched from hydrothermal chimney and sediment samples at 60 and 75 degrees C. In lactate-grown enrichments, sulfide production occurred at up to 70 and 75 degrees C, with optima at 63 and 71 degrees C, respectively. Several sporulating thermophilic enrichments were morphologically similar to Desulfotomaculum spp. Dissimilatory sulfate reduction in the studied hydrothermal area of Lake Tanganyika apparently has an upper temperature limit of 80 degrees C
Employing surfactant-assisted hydrothermal synthesis to control CuGaO2 nanoparticle formation and improved carrier selectivity of perovskite solar cells
Delafossites like CuGaO2 have appeared as promising p-type semiconductor
materials for opto-electronic applications mainly due to their high optical
transparency and electrical conductivity. However, existing synthetic efforts
usually result in particles with large diameter limiting their performance
relevant to functional electronic applications. In this article, we report a
novel surfactant-assisted hydrothermal synthesis method, which allows the
development of ultrafine (~5 nm) monodispersed p-type CuGaO2 nanoparticles
(NPs). We show that DMSO can be used as a ligand and dispersing solvent for
stabilizing the CuGaO2 NPs. The resulting dispersion is used for the
fabrication of dense, compact functional CuGaO2 electronic layer with
properties relevant to advanced optoelectronic applications. As a proof of
concept, the surfactant-assisted hydrothermal synthesized CuGaO2 is
incorporated as a hole transporting layer (HTL) in the inverted p-i-n
perovskite solar cell device architecture providing improved hole carrier
selectivity and power conversion efficiency compared to conventional PEDOT:PSS
HTL based perovskite solar cells
Hydrothermal activity lowers trophic diversity in Antarctic sedimented hydrothermal vents
Sedimented hydrothermal vents are those in which hydrothermal fluid vents through sediment and are among the least studied deep-sea ecosystems. We present a combination of microbial and biochemical data to assess trophodynamics between and within hydrothermally active and off-vent areas of the Bransfield Strait (1050–1647 m depth). Microbial composition, biomass and fatty acid signatures varied widely between and within vent and non-vent sites and provided evidence of diverse metabolic activity. Several species showed diverse feeding strategies and occupied different trophic positions in vent and non-vent areas and stable isotope values of consumers were generally not consistent with feeding structure morphology. Niche area and the diversity of microbial fatty acids reflected trends in species diversity and was lowest at the most hydrothermally active site. Faunal utilisation of chemosynthetic activity was relatively limited but was detected at both vent and non-vent sites as evidenced by carbon and sulphur isotopic signatures, suggesting that the hydrothermal activity can affect trophodynamics over a much wider area than previously thought
Conversión hidrotermal de biomasa en bioproductos valiosos
Los procesos hidrotérmicos son una excelente alternativa para convertir desechos de biomasa en productos de alto valor energético. El alcance de este proyecto ofrece el estudio de 5 tipos de biomasa distintos: café, madera blanca, arroz, lignina y madera negra (Zilkha).
La reacción se llevó a cabo en un reactor continúo cambiando las condiciones de presión y temperatura. El café demostró ser la materia primar de mayor rendimiento, alcanzando valores de hasta el 70% y, por el contrario, la lignina alcanzó muy bajos rendimientos, no sobrepasando el 13%.
Para analizar el bioproducto solido obtenido se realizó un análisis termogravimétrico. A partir de estos datos, se propuso un nuevo método denominado ‘desplazamiento’ que refleja las diferencias entre los perfiles del producto sólido logrado y la biomasa no tratada.
También se utilizaron técnicas de HPLC y MALDI-TOF-MS que demostraron mayores concentraciones en los bioproductos líquidos obtenidos según aumentaba la temperatura de reacción.University of NottinghamGrado en Ingeniería Químic
Synthesis of titanate nanostructures using amorphous precursor material and their adsorption/photocatalytic properties
This paper reports on a new and swift hydrothermal chemical route to prepare
titanate nanostructures (TNS) avoiding the use of crystalline TiO2 as starting
material. The synthesis approach uses a commercial solution of TiCl3 as
titanium source to prepare an amorphous precursor, circumventing the use of
hazardous chemical compounds. The influence of the reaction temperature and
dwell autoclave time on the structure and morphology of the synthesised
materials was studied. Homogeneous titanate nanotubes with a high
length/diameter aspect ratio were synthesised at 160^{\circ}C and 24 h. A band
gap of 3.06\pm0.03 eV was determined for the TNS samples prepared in these
experimental conditions. This value is red shifted by 0.14 eV compared to the
band gap value usually reported for the TiO2 anatase. Moreover, such samples
show better adsorption capacity and photocatalytic performance on the dye
rhodamine 6G (R6G) photodegradation process than TiO2 nanoparticles. A 98%
reduction of the R6G concentration was achieved after 45 minutes of irradiation
of a 10 ppm dye aqueous solution and 1 g/L of TNS catalyst.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Journal of
Materials Scienc
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