Publications by authors named "Shutthanandan V"

Article Synopsis
  • - Nonstoichiometric lead oxides are crucial for the performance and lifespan of lead-acid batteries, as they enhance the positive electrode's effectiveness and adhesion properties.
  • - Research identified at least two intermediate phases of lead oxide through various analysis techniques, confirming their structural changes and oxidation states during battery cycling.
  • - Using advanced computational methods, the stability of these lead oxide phases was examined, offering insights into their formation and variations seen in past studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study presents a novel synthesis of self-standing MoP and MoN heterostructured electrocatalysts with enhanced stability and catalytic performance. Facilitated by the controlled phase and interfacial microstructure, the seamless structures of these catalysts minimize internal resistivity and prevent local corrosion, contributing to increased stability. The chemical synthesis proceeds with an etching step to activate the surface, followed by phosphor-nitriding in a chemical vapor deposition chamber to produce MoP-MoN@Mo heterostructured electrocatalysts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The projection of developing sustainable and cost-efficient electrocatalysts for hydrogen production is booming. However, the full potential of electrocatalysts fabricated from earth-abundant metals has yet to be exploited to replace Pt-group metals due to inadequate efficiency and insufficient design strategies to meet the ever-increasing demands for renewable energies. To improve the electrocatalytic performance, the primary challenge is to optimize the structure and electronic properties by enhancing the intrinsic catalytic activity and expanding the active catalytic surface area.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Charge transfer at the electrode-electrolyte interface involves complex interactions of solvated species, but a clear understanding of their behavior is crucial for improving energy-efficient solid-electrolyte interphase layers.
  • Researchers used a controlled technique called ion soft landing to create defined interfaces with specific ions, allowing for detailed study of how these species react on a magnesium surface relevant to multivalent magnesium batteries.
  • The study found that undercoordinated solvated species showed higher reactivity compared to fully coordinated ones, which contributes to a better understanding of electrolyte decomposition processes and can drive the design of better sustainable electrochemical technologies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The enhanced safety, superior energy, and power density of rechargeable metal-air batteries make them ideal energy storage systems for application in energy grids and electric vehicles. However, the absence of a cost-effective and stable bifunctional catalyst that can replace expensive platinum (Pt)-based catalyst to promote oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) at the air cathode hinders their broader adaptation. Here, it is demonstrated that Tin (Sn) doped β-gallium oxide (β-Ga O ) in the bulk form can efficiently catalyze ORR and OER and, hence, be applied as the cathode in Zn-air batteries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A new method for modifying graphene oxide (GO) membranes using imidazolium-based ionic liquids (ILs) is introduced, enhancing their properties without losing existing functional groups (carboxyl groups).
  • The ILs improve the dispersion of GO in water and serve as spacers that reduce cation mobility, boost ion desolvation, and enhance the water flux across the membrane.
  • The modifications alter the surface charge and hydrophobicity of GO, leading to better cation selectivity and reduced swelling during separations, suggesting this technique can efficiently facilitate ion separation and material recovery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This work describes the first exploration of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as "next-generation" ion emitters for thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS). MOFs were identified as promising candidates for this application given the synthetic control over their desired structural properties. This tunability results in well-ordered, high-surface-area, high-porosity frameworks with targeted sorption affinities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although traditional commercially available porous carbon-fluorocarbon working pairs have shown promising applicability for adsorption cooling, advancements in engineered carbons may further improve the performance. Moreover, insights into structure-property relationships that target higher sorption capacities within these synthesized carbons may guide such materials' future design. We utilized hierarchically porous carbons (HPCs), synthesized with colossal microporous and mesoporous content characterized by high surface areas (up to 2689 m/g) and pore volume values (up to 10.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Delineating intricate interactions between highly reactive Li-metal electrodes and the diverse constituents of battery electrolytes has been a long-standing scientific challenge in materials design for advanced energy storage devices. Here, we isolated lithium polysulfide anions (LiS) from an electrolyte solution based on their mass-to-charge ratio and deposited them on Li-metal electrodes under clean vacuum conditions using ion soft landing (ISL), a highly controlled interface preparation technique. The molecular level precision in the construction of these model interfaces with ISL, coupled with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and theoretical calculations, allowed us to obtain unprecedented insight into the parasitic reactions of well-defined polysulfides on Li-metal electrodes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A key problem associated with the design of graphene oxide (GO) materials and their tuning for nanoscale separations is how specific functional groups influence the competitive adsorption of solvated ions and water at liquid/graphene interfaces. Computation accompanied by experiment shows that OH and COOH exert an influence on water adsorption properties stronger than that of O and H functional groups. The COO anions, following COOH deprotonation, stabilize Pb(II) through strong electrostatic interactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Anaerobic gut fungi, specifically Neocallimastigomycetes, coexist with bacteria in the digestive systems of large herbivores and may impact bacterial growth due to their rich genetic makeup.
  • In a study, researchers found that when they co-cultivated a particular strain of rumen bacteria (UWB7) with these fungi, both organisms showed significant changes in their gene expression, indicating a close interaction.
  • The findings suggest that while anaerobic fungi are outnumbered, they can still thrive and potentially produce unique antimicrobial compounds in response to the presence of bacteria, highlighting their role as a source for novel antibiotics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Anaerobic fungi () isolated from the guts of herbivores are powerful biomass-degrading organisms that enhance their degradative ability through the formation of cellulosomes, multienzyme complexes that synergistically colocalize enzymes to extract sugars from recalcitrant plant matter. However, a functional understanding of how fungal cellulosomes are deployed to orchestrate plant matter degradation is lacking, as is knowledge of how cellulosome production and function vary throughout the morphologically diverse life cycle of anaerobic fungi. In this work, we generated antibodies against three major fungal cellulosome protein domains, a dockerin, scaffoldin, and glycoside hydrolase (GH) 48 protein, and used them in conjunction with helium ion and immunofluorescence microscopy to characterize cellulosome localization patterns throughout the life cycle of Piromyces finnis when grown on simple sugars and complex cellulosic carbon sources.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Scandium (Sc) has great potential for use in aerospace and clean energy applications, but its supply is currently limited by a lack of commercially viable deposits and the environmental burden of its production. In this work, a biosorption-based flow-through process was developed for extraction of Sc from low-grade feedstocks. A microbe-encapsulated silica gel (MESG) biosorbent was synthesized through sol-gel encapsulation of , a bacterium that selectively adsorbs Sc.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The growing global concerns to public health from human exposure to perfluorooctanesulfonate (PFOS) require rapid, sensitive, detection where current, state-of-the-art techniques are yet to adequately meet sensitivity standards of the real world. This work presents, for the first time, a synergistic approach for the targeted affinity-based capture of PFOS using a porous sorbent probe that enhances detection sensitivity by embedding it on a microfluidic platform. This novel sorbent-containing platform functions as an electrochemical sensor to directly measure PFOS concentration through a proportional change in electrical current (increase in impedance).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This work for the first time unfurls the fundamental mechanisms and sets the stage for an approach to derive electrocatalytic activity, which is otherwise not possible, in a traditionally known wide band-gap oxide material. Specifically, we report on the tunable optical properties, in terms of wide spectral selectivity and red-shifted band gap, and electrocatalytic behavior of iron (Fe)-doped gallium oxide (β-GaO) model system. X-ray diffraction (XRD) studies of sintered Ga Fe O (GFO) (0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Real-time monitoring of combustion products and composition is critical to emission reduction and efficient energy production. The fuel efficiency in power plants and automobile engines can be dramatically improved by monitoring and controlling the combustion environment. However, the development of novel materials for survivability of oxygen sensors at extreme environments and demonstrated rapid response in chemical sensing is a major hindrance for further development in the field.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rare earth elements (REEs) are indispensable components of many green technologies and of increasing demand globally. However, refining REEs from raw materials using current technologies is energy intensive and enviromentally damaging. Here, we describe the development of a novel biosorption-based flow-through process for selective REE recovery from electronic wastes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The functionality of magnetite, FeO, for catalysis and spintronics applications is dependent on the molar ratio of Fe and Fe and their distribution at the surface. In turn, this depends on a poorly understood interplay between crystallographic orientation, dopants, and the reactive adsorption of atmospheric species such as water. Here, (100)-, (110)-, and (111)-oriented films of titano-magnetite, FeTiO, were grown by pulsed laser deposition and their composition, valence distribution, magnetism, and interaction with water were studied by ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AP-XPS) and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

One approach to reduce increasing concentrations of toxic per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) involves the capture of PFAS from aqueous media using porous materials. The use of highly porous, tunable metal organic framework (MOF) materials is appealing for targeted liquid phase sorption. In this work, we demonstrate the excellent capture of perfluorooctanesulfonate (PFOS) using both the chromium and iron analogs of the MIL-101 framework.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nanoceria is considered as a potent antioxidant (free radical scavenger) and its enzymatic activity is reported to be a function of the oxidation state of surface cerium ions. Here we demonstrate phosphine ligand-dependent enzymatic activity of nanoceria irrespective of its as-synthesized oxidation state.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The very high specific capacity of Li metal makes it an ideal anode for high-energy batteries. However, Li dendrite growth and the formation of isolated (or "dead") Li during repeated Li plating/stripping processes leads to a low coulombic efficiency (CE). In this work, we discovered, for the first time, that electrode edge effects play an important role in the failure of Li-metal batteries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Anaerobic gut fungi are the primary colonizers of plant material in the rumen microbiome, but are poorly studied due to a lack of characterized isolates. While most genera of gut fungi form extensive rhizoidal networks, which likely participate in mechanical disruption of plant cell walls, fungi within the genus do not possess these rhizoids. Here, we describe a novel fungal isolate, , which forms spherical sporangia with a limited rhizoidal network yet secretes a diverse set of carbohydrate active enzymes (CAZymes) for plant cell wall hydrolysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * Using a mixture of different microbes, particularly anaerobic fungi and domesticated microbes, can effectively distribute the work needed for better product yields and diversity.
  • * Anaerobic fungi release sugars from biomass, which can be utilized by engineered microbes like Saccharomyces cerevisiae to produce valuable chemicals, while also leaving other sugars available for additional microbial pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Catalytically active individual gold (Au) and cerium oxide (CeO) nanoparticles (NPs) are well known to exhibit specific enzyme-like activities, such as natural catalase, oxidase, superoxide dismutase, and peroxidase enzymes. These activities have been maneuvered to design several biological applications such as immunoassays, glucose detection, radiation and free radical protection and tissue engineering. In biological systems, multienzyme complexes are involved in catalyzing important reactions of essential metabolic processes such as respiration, biomolecule synthesis, and photosynthesis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Developing hierarchical porous carbon (HPC) materials with competing textural characteristics such as surface area and pore volume in one material is difficult to accomplish, particularly for an atomically ordered graphitic carbon. Herein we describe a synthesis strategy to engineer tunable HPC materials across micro-, meso-, and macroporous length scales, allowing the fabrication of a graphitic HPC material (HPC-G) with both very high surface area (>2500 m/g) and pore volume (>11 cm/g), the combination of which has not been attained previously. The mesopore volume alone for these materials is up to 7.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF