Publications by authors named "Rodrigo Lazo-Portugal"

The colour additives D&C Orange No. 5 (O5) and its lakes (O5L) are subject to batch certification by the U.S.

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Centrifugal precipitation chromatography (CpC) is a powerful chromatographic technique invented in the year 2000 but so far very little applied. The method combines dialysis, counter-current and salting out processes. The separation rotor consists of two identical spiral channels separated by a dialysis membrane (6-8 K MW cut-off) in which the upper channel is eluted with an ammonium sulfate gradient and the lower channel with water, and the mixtures are separated according to their solubility in ammonium sulfate as a chromatographic technique.

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Spiral countercurrent-chromatography has great potential for improving the capacity and efficiency of purification of secondary metabolites, and here we describe applications useful for the isolation of flavonoids from the widely used South African medicinal plant, Sutherlandia frutescens (L.) R. Br.

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Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are synthetic materials that hold great promise for electronics that are smaller and more versatile than the current silica-based technologies. But as-produced SWCNTs are generally a mixture of nanotubes with different structures that have vastly different properties. Separating these SWCNTs from multiwalled and metallic carbon nanotubes is vital to explore their individual properties and commercial utility ranging from optics to semiconductors.

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Over the last decade man-made carbon nanostructures have shown great promise in electronic applications, but they are produced as very heterogeneous mixtures with different properties so the achievement of a significant commercial application has been elusive. The dimensions of single-wall carbon nanotubes are generally a nanometer wide, up to hundreds of microns long and the carbon nanotubes have anisotropic structures. They are processed to have shorter lengths but they need to be sorted by diameter and chirality.

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