Hydroxyapatite/ Chitosan Biocomposite for Remazol Blue Dyes Removal

2014 ◽  
Vol 695 ◽  
pp. 106-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sofiah Hamzah ◽  
M.F.M. Salleh

This study aimed to synthesis and characterized hydroxyapatite/ chitosan biocomposite for Remazol Blue Dyes Removal. Hydroxyapatite was extracted from egg shell and incooporated with commercial chitosan to improve its mechanical strength and adsorption capacity. The prepared adsorbent was characterized in term of morphology using scanning electron microscope and the presence of funtional group in this biocomposite were confirmed by ATR-FTIR. Performance of hydroxyapatite/ chitosan was evaluted by its efficiency for remazol blue dyes removal. The observed results show that the developed adsorbent achieved the highest adsorption capacity for about 95 % dyes removal. The findings in this study perhaps can be used as a fundamental knowledge for the development of dyes wastewater treatment mainly in textile industry.

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 88-104
Author(s):  
Ph. V. Sapozhnikov ◽  
A. I. Salimon ◽  
A. M. Korsunsky ◽  
O. Yu. Kalinina ◽  
F. S. Senatov ◽  
...  

The topic of interactions between plastic and natural communities is now more relevant than ever before. Gradual accumulation of artificial polymer products and their fragments in the natural environment has reached a level at which it is already impossible to ignore the affect of these materials on living organisms. First and foremost, microorganism colonies inhabiting different biotopes, both aquatic and terrestrial, have been affected. These species are at the front-end of interaction with plastic, including those present in marine ecosystems. Nevertheless, in order to understand these processes, it is necessary to take into account several aspects of such interactions: the impact of different types of plastic on microbial community through the release of their decomposed products into the environment, the forms of plastic usage by microorganisms themselves, including mechanisms for surface colonization, as well as possible biodegradation processes of polymers due to the actions of microorganisms. At the same time, types of plastic may differ not only in mechanical strength, but also in their resistance to biodegradation caused by microorganisms. Experiments with surface colonization of types of plastic, which are different in composition and mechanical strength, provide a wide range of results that are not just relevant for understanding modern natural processes involving plastic: these results are also important for application in certain areas of technology development (for example, when creating composite materials). In particular, researches into the forms and mechanisms of sustainable colonization of particularly strong polymers by diatoms from natural communities are of great interest. Due to the fouling of surface of particularly strong synthetic polymers by diatoms, it is possible to form a single diatom-polymeric composite with general properties being already substantially different from those of the polymer itself. For example, when a polymer is fouled with diatoms that are firmly held on its surface due to physiological mechanisms that ensure their reliable fixation, total surface area of the composite increases by 2–3 orders of magnitude compared with this of bare polymer. Such composites and their properties are formed due to mechanisms of substrate colonization used by diatoms from natural marine cenoses – during the transfer of these mechanisms to a new material being prospective for diatom settlement. The practical applications of these composites lie in the sphere of heat and sound insulation, as well as in the field of creating prosthetic tissues for bone operations. In our experiments, we tracked the sequence of development of a stable composite when diatoms colonized the surface of samples of a particularly strong synthetic polymer being resistant to corrosion. In this case, the sample population process took place on the basis of colonies formed in accumulative cultures from the natural marine environment. Samples of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) with a smooth and porous surface structure (with an open cell, bulk porosity up to 80 %) were colonized by diatoms Karayevia amoena (Hust.) Bukht., 2006, Halamphora coffeaeformis (C. Agardh) Levkov, 2009, and Halamphora cymbifera (W. Greg.) Levkov, 2009. These laboratory experiments lasted for three weeks. Accumulative microphyte cultures, on the basis of which the experiments were conducted, were obtained from the Baltic Sea (Baltiysk area, Russia) and the Arabian Sea (Mumbai area, India). The types and stages of development of colonial settlements on various elements of the frontal surface microrelief and in the underlying caverns were studied using a scanning electron microscope on samples subjected to stepwise thermal drying. Individual cells of K. amoena, H. coffeaeformis, and H. cymbifera, their chain-like aggregates, and outstretched colonial settlements occupied varying in degree non-homogeneous microrelief surface elements, forming structures with a thickness of 1–2 layers with an average settlement height of 1–1.3 single specimen height. K. amoena cells were tightly fixed to the polymer substrate using the pore apparatus of the flap of the frustule. Observations using scanning electron microscope revealed shell imprints on the substrate, which were signs of a polymer substrate introduction into hypotheca areoles. The spread mechanisms of diatoms of three mentioned species on various elements of UHMWPE surface were explored, as well as the formation of the characteristic elements of colonial settlements, including for K. amoena – consecutively in the form of “pots” and spheres, by means of interaction with polymer surface and its extension with the increase in the number of tightly attached cells in the colonial settlement.


2013 ◽  
Vol 53 (12) ◽  
pp. 1291 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Roberts ◽  
Kapil Chousalkar ◽  
Samiullah

Eggs were collected from commercial caged layer flocks in early, mid, late and very late lay. Eggs were candled and scored for translucency. Cuticle cover was estimated using MST Cuticle Stain and a Konica Minolta hand-held spectrophotometer. Traditional measures of egg quality were determined using specialised equipment. Shell ultrastructural features were scored following plasma ashing of shell samples and viewing under a benchtop scanning electron microscope. Translucency score was significantly higher in late lay than for all other age groups. Shell quality declined with increasing flock age. However, the extent of cuticle cover on the egg shell was not significantly different among flock age groups. The incidence of shell ultrastructural features associated with good quality shells was lower for older flocks and incidence of ultrastructural features associated with poorer quality shells was higher for older flocks. Translucency score had a low correlation with the ultrastructural features of the mammillary layer.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 813-820
Author(s):  
Junxia Zhang ◽  
Zehua Wang ◽  
Binwu Wang ◽  
Xiaopeng Song

An experimental method was applied to prepare nanographene, in which its surface feature was analyzed using scanning electron microscope and Fourier infrared ray analyzer. A methylene blue (MB) solution was adopted to measure the molecule adsorption of nanographene and graphite and demonstrated that nanographene had more molecule adsorption than that by graphite. As the concentration of MB solution increased, the molecule adsorption of nanographene ascended. As the stirring time of a magnetic stirrer decreased, the molecule adsorption of nanographene in the MB solution increased significantly. Meanwhile, the increment in the absorption amount of graphite reduced. As the dosage of nanographene and graphite increased, the absorption capacity of nanographene reached a peak value of 40 mg, which was two- or threefold higher than that of graphite. Hence, nanographene has higher molecule adsorption capacity than graphite.


Parasitology ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 367-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Hockley

Small spines of maximum size 0.28 μm × 0.5 μm have been found all over the shells of the eggs of Schistosoma mansoni and S. haematobium. The small spines on S. haematobium eggs are less pointed than those on S. mansoni eggs. They consist of inner and outer parts made up of subunits, and they are continuous with the main part of the shell underneath. S. mansoni eggs still within the blood vessels of the gut have extracellular material between the spines and there is cell debris over them. The scanning electron microscope shows the increased surface area of the egg shell due to the small spines.I wish to thank many people for their help with this work and in particular Dr F. Hawking, Dr S. R. Smithers and Mrs. L. Ebden.


2011 ◽  
Vol 221 ◽  
pp. 640-643 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heng Zhu ◽  
Xiao Yan Lin ◽  
Xiu Rong Zhuo ◽  
Xue Gang Luo ◽  
Chi Zhang

The spherical lignin/polylactide (PLA) adsorbent was prepared by solvent evaporation. The dispersed phase contents, the PLA concentration and ratio of PLA to lignin on the diameter and mechanical strength of the PLA/lignin composite adsorbent spheres were investigated and the morphology structure and mechanical strength of the adsorbent were characterized by scanning electron microscope (SEM) and dynamic mechanical analyzer (DMA). The results showed that the adsorbent has porous structure, and the mechanical strength increased significantly as the ratio of PLA to lignin as 4:1.


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