This paper assesses the impacts to the growth rate, health, oxygen production, and carbon dioxide fixation and nitrogen assimilation of Chlorella vulgaris while sparging the culture with various influent concentrations of carbon dioxide. Selected concentrations reflect a cabin environment with one crew member (0.12% v/v) and four crew members (0.45% v/v). Stepwise, sustained changes in influent carbon dioxide concentration on day four of the eight-day experiments simulated a dynamic crew size, reflective of a planetary surface mission. Control experiments used constant influent concentrations across eight days. Significant changes in growth rate (0.12%-to-0.45%: 57% increase; 0.45%-to-0.12%: 59% reduction) suggest a positive correlation between metabolic activity of C. vulgaris and environmental carbon dioxide concentration. Statistical tests illustrate that algae are more sensitive to reductions in influent carbon dioxide. No specific correlation of the nitrogen assimilation rate to influent carbon dioxide, suggesting a nitrogen-limited or irradiance-limited system. Photosynthetic yield results (0.59-0.72) indicate that the culture was minimally stressed in all tested conditions. This paper compares these results to findings of published, steady-state experiments conducted under similar carbon dioxide environments. The findings presented here imply that a sufficient volume of C. vulgaris, with nutrient supplementation or biomass harvesting, could support the respiratory requirements of a long duration human mission with a dynamic cabin environment and these data can be used in future dynamic models.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lssr.2021.03.005 | DOI Listing |
PLoS One
January 2025
Division of Neurology, Department of Medicine, The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Background: Aeromedical transfer of patients with ischemic stroke to access hyperacute stroke treatment is becoming increasingly common. Little is known about how rapid changes of altitude and atmospheric pressure can impact cerebral perfusion and ischemic burden. In patients with ischemic stroke, there is a theoretical possibility that this physiologic response of hypoxia-driven hyperventilation at higher altitude can lead to a relative drop in PaCO2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
January 2025
Department of Natural Resource Management, College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Jimma University, Jimma, Ethiopia.
Assessing the impacts of forest cover change on carbon stock and soil moisture dynamics is critical for understanding environmental degradation and guiding sustainable land management. This study evaluates the effects of forest cover change on carbon stock and soil moisture dynamics in Nensebo Forest from 1993 to 2023 using geospatial techniques. Landsat imagery including TM (1993), ETM + (2009), and OLI/TIRS (2023) were used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
January 2025
Nuclear Waste Disposal Research & Analysis Department, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185, United States.
Fluid-silica interfaces are ubiquitous in chemistry, occurring in both natural geochemical environments and practical applications ranging from separations to catalysis. Simulations of these interfaces have been, and continue to be, a significant avenue for understanding their behavior. A constraining factor, however, is the availability of accurate force fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
January 2025
Department of Chemical Engineering, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, 02115, USA.
Discovering electrocatalysts that can efficiently convert carbon dioxide (CO) to valuable fuels and feedstocks using excess renewable electricity is an emergent carbon-neutral technology. A single metal atom embedded in doped graphene, , single-atom catalyst (SAC), possesses high activity and selectivity for electrochemical CO reduction (COR) to CO, yet further reduction to hydrocarbons is challenging. Here, using density functional theory calculations, we investigate stability and reactivity of a broad SAC chemical space with various metal centers (3d transition metals) and dopants (2p dopants of B, N, O; 3p dopants of P, S) as electrocatalysts for COR to methane and methanol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
University of Science and Technology of China, Division of Nanomaterials & Chemistry, Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at Microscale, CHINA.
Electrolysis of carbon dioxide (CO2) in acid offers a promising route to overcome CO2 loss in alkaline and neutral electrolytes, but requires concentrated alkali cations (typical ≥3 M) to mitigate the trade-off between low pH and high hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) rate, causing salt precipitation. Here we report a strategy to resolve this problem by introducing tensile strain in a copper (Cu) catalyst, which can selectively reduce CO2 to valuable multicarbon products, particularly ethylene, in a pH 1 electrolyte with 1 M potassium ions. We find that the tension-strained Cu creates an electron-rich surface that concentrates diluted potassium ions, contributing to CO2 activation and HER suppression.
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