ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
July 2024
Recalling the well-established theory of heterojunction formation between two different semiconductors or a semiconductor and a metal can elucidate the remarkable catalytic properties of nanohybrid systems employed in thermal catalysis. Upon the creation of heterojunctions, involved nanoparticles or nanometer-sized thin films, as a result of their dimensions, may become entirely filled with space charges generated from the development of depletion or accumulation regions. This phenomenon dictates the nature of catalytic sites and consequently affects the catalytic activity of such nanohybrids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, we prepared CoO-based thin films deposited on Kanthal steel wire gauze meshes by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis revealed a structure characterized by a combination of cobalt oxide and metallic cobalt embedded within a carbon matrix. Our primary objective was to gain insights into the roles of Co and CoO in CO hydrogenation reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA original electrochemical sensing platform, based on screen-printed electrodes modification with plasma polymerized acrylonitrile (pp-AN) nanofilms is proposed. For that purpose, plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) process was conducted in a parallel plate (13.56 MHz) plasma reactor for 2 min with discharge power of 10 W.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe permanent anti-mold protection of textile surfaces, particularly those utilized in the manufacture of outdoor sporting goods, is still an issue that requires cutting-edge solutions. This study attempts to obtain antifungal nanocoatings on four selected fabrics used in the production of high-mountain clothing and sleeping bags, and on PET foil as a model substrate, employing the cold plasma technique for this purpose. Three plasma treatment procedures were used to obtain such nanocoatings: plasma-activated graft copolymerization of a biocidal precursor, deposition of a thin-film matrix by plasma-activated graft copolymerization and anchoring biocidal molecules therein, and plasma polymerization of a biocidal precursor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe treated cells with a sublethal dose of nonequilibrium (cold) atmospheric-pressure He plasma and studied alterations in the genome of this fungus as well as changes in the phenotypic traits, such as assimilation of carbon from carbohydrates, hydrolytic enzyme activity, and drug susceptibility. There is a general problem if we use cold plasma to kill microorganism cells and some of them survive the process-whether the genotypic and phenotypic features of the cells are significantly altered in this case, and, if so, whether these changes are environmentally hazardous. Our molecular genetic studies have identified six single nucleotide variants, six insertions, and five deletions, which are most likely significant changes after plasma treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper proposed a kinetic model that can describe the changes in the adhesion properties of styrene-butadiene (SBS) block copolymer surfaces under the influence of low-temperature plasma treatment. As a measure of these changes, the peel strength of joints formed between the copolymer surface and the polyurethane adhesive was chosen. Five types of low-temperature low-pressure RF plasma, two inert plasmas (Ar and He), and three reactive plasmas (O, CO, and CCl) were tested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudies on the surface modification of commercial styrene-butadiene-styrene (SBS) rubber with different carbon black (CB) nanofiller content (10-80 parts per hundred parts of rubber (phr)) performed by low-pressure oxygen plasma are presented in this paper. The adhesion properties of the rubber were determined by the peel test for adhesive-bonded joints prepared with a water-based polyurethane (PU) adhesive. The chemical structure and morphology of the SBS rubber surface before and after plasma treatment were investigated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMastitis is a serious bovine diseases that can be caused by Prototheca zopfii, yeast-like algae belonging to the family Chlorellaceae. The substantial economic losses and health damage associated with bovine mastitis emphasize the need to develop effective strategies aimed at control of the infection. Unfortunately, P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of fluconazole consumption on the incidence of nosocomial non-C. albicans Candida infections remains unclear. In this study we investigated such a relationship in an intensive care unit (Poland) over an 11-year period (2002-2012).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChicken interleukin-2 (cIL-2), which was prepared by sensitizing chicken lymphocytes with concanavalin A, was administered to fertile broiler eggs on Day 18 of embryonation (0.1 mg in 200 mL distilled water). Controls (CON) received distilled water.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBy mid-August 1995, 55% of broiler embryos in North America were vaccinated for Marek's disease using the INOVOJECT system, with 201 INOVOJECT machines placed with 16 of the top 25 poultry producers, providing the industry with the capacity to inject in excess of 400 million eggs per month or about 5 billion eggs per annum. In ovo administration of a bursal disease antibody-infectious bursal disease virus (BDA-IBDV) complexed vaccine to specific-pathogen-free (SPF) embryos was safer and more potent than conventional IBDV vaccine alone because it delayed the appearance of bursal lesions, produced no early mortality, produced higher geometric mean antibody titers against IBDV, and generated protective immunity against challenge. In ovo administration of a BDA-IBDV complexed vaccine to broiler embryos generated antibody titers against IBDV sooner than conventional virus vaccinates, and generated protective immunity against challenge Direct DNA injection of plasmid DNA encoding beta-galactosidase into breast muscle in ovo and posthatch was an effective means to achieve both gene transfer and expression, with potential for the development of gene vaccines using plasmids encoding protective antigens from poultry pathogens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA selective high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method with ultraviolet-visible (UV-VIS) detection was developed to measure therapeutic concentrations of spectinomycin in turkey plasma. Treatment of plasma samples with 3% trifluoroacetic acid in acetonitrile facilitated spectinomycin extraction and protein precipitation. After centrifugation, the stable derivatization reagent, 2,4-dinitrophenyl-hydrazine, was added to an aliquot of the supernatant, and the mixture was incubated for 30 min at 70 degrees C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBecause pale-bird syndrome (PBS), defined as the failure of birds to realize the color potential of their diet, has been demonstrated to be caused by malabsorption or by hyperexcretion of carotenoids, a method for measuring malabsorption of carotenoids would be useful. The absorption of dietary canthaxanthin, a red diketocarotenoid, into serum during aflatoxicosis was measured in an experiment with a 2 x 9 factorial arrangement of treatments (0 and 5 micrograms of aflatoxin/g of diet; serum collected at 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, and 24 h after a standard meal fed to four groups of 10 3-wk-old birds). Serum canthaxanthin levels determined by HPLC attained plateau values between 8 and 14 h after the meal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe progression of changes in carotenoid metabolism during pale-bird syndrome caused by a coccidial infection was investigated. Male broiler chickens 15 days of age on a yellow corn and soybean meal-based diet were infected with Eimeria acervulina oocysts and their serum, liver, and toe webs were sampled at 0, 4, 6, and 10 days postinfection for HPLC analysis of carotenoids. At 4 days postinfection a drastic reduction (71%) in serum lutein, the main body carotenoid, and smaller reductions in liver (58%) and toe webs (38%) occurred.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAflatoxin, a demonstrated cause of pale bird syndrome in chickens, was investigated for its effects on the depigmentation of chickens placed on a diet low in carotenoids. Chickens were pigmented by feeding for 3 wk a white corn-soy diet supplemented with 50 micrograms free lutein and 0 or 4 micrograms aflatoxin/g diet. Then birds were switched to the same diets unsupplemented with lutein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCanthaxanthin, (4,4'-diketo-beta,beta-carotene), a red carotenoid used to extend the dominant wavelength of the yellow pigments in the skin and egg yolk of chickens, was fed (70 micrograms/g diet) to chicks depleted of normal tissue oxycarotenoids. High performance liquid chromatography analysis of tissues from such chicks revealed that a portion of canthaxanthin was reduced to 4-hydroxyechinenone (4-hydroxy-4'-keto-beta,beta-carotene) that in turn was reduced in part to isozeaxanthin (4,4'-dihydroxy-beta,beta-carotene). The alcohols thus formed were acylated in part to 4-hydroxyechinenone monoester and isozeaxanthin monoester and diester.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanism by which aflatoxin causes paling in chickens was investigated by measuring its effect on the restoration of pigments in 3-wk-old birds made pale by feeding a white corn-soy diet. Pigment restoration was accomplished by feeding the same diet supplemented with lutein (70 micrograms/g of diet), which is the major oxycarotenoid pigment in chicken diets and tissues. The oxycarotenoids (free, monoester, and diester forms of lutein) in the toe web, liver, serum, and jejunal mucosa of control and aflatoxin-fed (2 micrograms/g of diet) birds were measured by HPLC at 0, 1, 2, 3, 6, and 9 days of repletion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh performance liquid chromatography of yolks of hens fed a diet based on yellow corn, alfalfa, and soybeans revealed over 20 cartenoids. Lutein, lutein monester, lutein diester, 3'-oxolutein, cryptoxanthin, zeaxanthin, beta-carotene, and zeacarotene were identified by their retention times, visible absorption spectra, behavior on saponification, and their presence or absence when lutein was the primary carotenoid fed. Three weeks after placing the hens on a white corn-soy-based diet supplemented with lutein (20 micrograms/g diet), cryptoxanthin, zeaxanthin, and zeacarotene were undetectable in the yolk and lutein, lutein monoester, lutein diester, and 3'-oxolutein assumed new equilibrium concentrations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFYoung chickens were fed from hatching until 3 wk of age with a white corn-soy diet amended with lutein diester to supply 25 micrograms lutein/g diet and with varying amounts of aflatoxin (0, 1, 2, 4, and 8 micrograms/g diet). The lutein diester was added as a stabilized, microencapsulated extract of marigold (Tagetes erecta) petals. Aflatoxin had no significant effect on the partial conversion of lutein diester to lutein monoester and lutein that occurs in the jejunum of normal chickens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFYoung chickens were fed from hatching until 3 weeks of age with a white corn-soy diet (containing 1.36 micrograms total carotenoids per gram of diet) amended with a commercial preparation of lutein, a dihydroxycarotenoid, to supply 25 micrograms free lutein per gram diet. The diet which also contained 0, 1, 2, 4, or 8 micrograms aflatoxin per gram of diet was fed to four groups of ten chickens per aflatoxin treatment until they were 3 weeks old.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanism by which ochratoxin impairs the ability of chickens to utilize dietary carotenoids for carcass pigmentation was investigated. Graded doses of pure ochratoxin A (0, .5, 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF3'-Oxolutein (3-hydroxy-3'-oxo-beta,epsilon-carotene) was isolated using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) from the tissues and egg yolks of chicken fed a diet high in lutein and free of detectable 3'-oxolutein. It was identified by HPLC retention time, absorption spectrum identical to lutein and its esters, disappearance under alkaline conditions without giving rise to lutein, formation of an alkali labile palmitate, formation of a 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazone, and reduction to lutein from which the dipalmitate was prepared. In each instance the isolated compound behaved identically with authentic 3'-oxolutein prepared by nickel peroxide oxidation of lutein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFYoung broiler chickens were fed from hatching until 3 weeks of age with a white corn-soy diet amended with varying amounts of lutein diester to supply 0, 5, 10, 20, 40, and 80 micrograms free lutein/g diet. The lutein diester was added as a stabilized, microencapsulated extract of marigold (Tagetes erecta) petals. The concentrations of lutein diester, lutein monoester, and lutein in the contents of the jejunum and large intestine and in serum, liver, and toe web from these birds were measured by high pressure liquid chromatography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA white corn-soy diet amended with varying levels (0, 5, 10, 20, 40, and 80 ppm) of canthaxanthin, a red diketocarotenoid available by chemical synthesis, and fed to young broiler chickens for 3 weeks has the attributes of a useful experimental model for the study of absorption, transport, and deposition of oxycarotenoids. On high pressure liquid chromatography of extracts of the diet and tissues of the birds, canthaxanthin predominated over the background level of nonspecific carotenoids. The concentrations of canthaxanthin found in the contents of the jejunum and large intestine and in the serum, liver, and toe web were directly proportional to the dietary concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA model for the study of pigmentation in young chickens is described in which a white corn-soy based diet supplemented with varying amounts of free lutein (0, 5, 10, 20, 40, and 80 micrograms/g diet) was fed from hatching until 3 weeks of age. The carotenoid content of tissues dissected from chicks of the various groups was measured by high pressure liquid chromatography. In intestinal contents, three forms of lutein were found, with lutein monoester greater than free lutein greater than lutein diester.
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