Publications by authors named "P M Pietrzyk"

The mode of coordination of copper(II) ions with dopamine (DA, L) in the binary, as well as ternary systems with Ado, AMP, ADP, and ATP (L') as second ligands, was studied with the use of experimental-potentiometric and spectroscopic (VIS, EPR, NMR, IR)-methods and computational-molecular modeling and DFT-studies. In the Cu(II)/DA system, depending on the pH value, the active centers of the ligand involved in the coordination with copper(II) ions changed from nitrogen and oxygen atoms (CuH(DA), Cu(DA)), via nitrogen atoms (CuH(DA)), to oxygen atoms at strongly alkaline pH (Cu(DA)). The introduction of L' into this system changed the mode of interaction of dopamine from oxygen atoms to the nitrogen atom in the hydroxocomplexes formed at high pH values.

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As with phenotyping of any microscopic appendages, such as cilia or antennae, phenotyping of root hairs has been a challenge due to their complex intersecting arrangements in two-dimensional images and the technical limitations of automated measurements. Digital Imaging of Root Traits at Microscale (DIRT/μ) is a newly developed algorithm that addresses this issue by computationally resolving intersections and extracting individual root hairs from two-dimensional microscopy images. This solution enables automatic and precise trait measurements of individual root hairs.

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Premise: Low-cost, repairable lab equipment is rare within the biological sciences. By lowering the costs of entry using 3D printing and open-source hardware, our goal is to empower both amateur and professional scientists to conduct research.

Methods: We developed a modular system of 3D-printable designs called COBLE (Collection of Bespoke Laboratory Equipment), including novel and remixed 3D-printable lab equipment that can be inexpensively printed, assembled, and repaired for a fraction of the cost of retail equivalents.

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The main aim of this work was to use the iron-iron oxide nanochains (Fe NCs) as adsorbents of the carcinogenic cationic crystal violet (CV) and anionic Congo red (CR) dyes from water. The investigated adsorbent was prepared by a magnetic-field-induced reduction reaction, and it revealed a typical core-shell structure. It was composed of an iron core covered by a thin FeO shell (<4 nm).

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In this paper, green nanocomposites based on biomass and superparamagnetic nanoparticles were synthesized and used as adsorbents to remove methylene blue (MB) from water with magnetic separation. The adsorbents were synthesized through the wet co-precipitation technique, in which iron-oxide nanoparticles coated the cores based on coffee, cellulose, and red volcanic algae waste. The procedure resulted in materials that could be easily separated from aqueous solutions with magnets.

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