Besides presence of heavy metals, especially arsenic in water bodies, northern India is striving to obliterate crop residue, which is otherwise burnt to make the fields ready for subsequent crop, causing acute air pollution. Through this study, an effort has been made to utilize wheat-straw cellulose to develop inexpensive and efficacious sensing cum annihilation system for deleterious arsenite ions As(III) in water by grafting a novel fluorophore, 3-bromofluoranthene on cellulose (BF@CFs). BF@CFs were characterized for structural, morphological and thermal properties using FTIR, XRD, TGA, FESEM, EDS and TEM, which confirmed the successful insertion of fluoranthene molecule on cellulose while preserving its crystalline nanofibrous structure. Fluorescent studies indicated strong affinity of BF@CFs towards arsenite ions exhibiting "turn on" fluorescence response attributed to inhibition of photo induced electron transfer (PET) and metal ion chelation with a limit of detection of 2.8 ng L, lower than WHO prescribed limit of 10 μg L. Besides sensing, the porous fibrous network of BF@CFs exhibited good adsorption of As(III) ions with maximum adsorption of 171.2 μg g at 35 min under optimized conditions. BF@CFs displayed 95.2% removal efficiency with 2 μg L concentration of As (III) ions at room temperature and neutral pH observed by atomic absorption spectrophotometer coupled with hydride generation assembly (HG-AAS) measurements. BF@CFs retained adsorption 97.3% efficiency after five adsorption/ desorption cycles displaying excellent reusability and stability, strengthening its potential as dual functional sensor and adsorbent.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.127722 | DOI Listing |
Materials (Basel)
November 2024
Grupo de Investigación Estudios Interdisciplinarios, Facultad de Ingeniería, Universidad Nacional de Chimborazo, Av. Antonio José de Sucre km 1½ vía Guano, Riobamba 060103, Ecuador.
The adsorption of As(V) and As(III) (0.01-1 mM) on a calcined oxidic lithologic material substrate with pH-dependent surface variable charges, chemically modifiable, was investigated. The substrate was prepared via thermal treatment using a natural lithologic material rich in amphoteric oxides of Fe, Al, Mn and Ti.
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November 2024
State Key Laboratory of Chemo/Biosensing and Chemometrics, Hunan University, Changsha, 410082, China. Electronic address:
Sci Adv
November 2024
Shenzhen Bay Laboratory, Shenzhen 518132, China.
-methyladenosine (mA)-modified mRNAs and their cytoplasmic reader YTHDFs are colocalized with stress granules (SGs) under stress conditions, but the interplay between mA modification and SG stability remains unclear. Here, we presented a spatiotemporal mA imaging system (SMIS) that can monitor the mA modification and the translation of mRNAs with high specificity and sensitivity in a single live cell. SMIS showed that mA-modified reporter mRNAs dynamically enriched into SGs under arsenite stress and gradually partitioned into the cytosol as SG disassembled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiome
November 2024
School of Ecological and Environmental Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China.
Background: Arsenic (As) metabolism pathways and their coupling to nitrogen (N) and carbon (C) cycling contribute to elemental biogeochemical cycling. However, how whole-microbial communities respond to As stress and which taxa are the predominant As-transforming bacteria or archaea in situ remains unclear. Hence, by constructing and applying ROCker profiles to precisely detect and quantify As oxidation (aioA, arxA) and reduction (arrA, arsC1, arsC2) genes in short-read metagenomic and metatranscriptomic datasets, we investigated the dominant microbial communities involved in arsenite (As(III)) oxidation and arsenate (As(V)) reduction and revealed their potential pathways for coupling As with N and C in situ in rice paddies.
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November 2024
IIIA - Instituto de Investigación e Ingeniería Ambiental, CONICET, Universidad Nacional de San Martín, Campus Miguelete, Av. 25 de Mayo y Francia, 1650 San Martín, Prov. de Buenos Aires, Argentina. Electronic address:
ZnAlFe mixed metal oxides (ZnAlFe-MMOs) were synthesized from layered double hydroxides (LDHs) prepared by the coprecipitation method at pH 9 using an initial weight composition of Zn = 75%, Al = 15% and Fe = 10%, with or without the addition of citric or oxalic acid. The solids were calcined at 400 °C to obtain the respective MMOs, which exhibited relatively high specific surface areas (165.3-63.
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