shell forming
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Nanomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 2776
Author(s):  
Yuan Huang ◽  
Haoting Yan ◽  
Chenyang Zhang ◽  
Yize Wang ◽  
Qinhong Wei ◽  
...  

Metal-supported catalyst with high activity and relatively simple preparation method is given priority to industrial production. In this work, this study reported an easily accessible synthesis strategy to prepare Mott-Schottky-type N-doped carbon encapsulated metallic Co (Co@Np+gC) catalyst by high-temperature pyrolysis method in which carbon nitride (g-C3N4) and dopamine were used as support and nitrogen source. The prepared Co@Np+gC presented a Mott-Schottky effect; that is, a strong electronic interaction of metallic Co and N-doped carbon shell was constructed to lead to the generation of Mott-Schottky contact. The metallic Co, due to high work function as compared to that of N-doped carbon, transferred electrons to the N-doped outer shell, forming a new contact interface. In this interface area, the positive and negative charges were redistributed, and the catalytic hydrogenation mainly occurred in the area of active charges. The Co@Np+gC catalyst showed excellent catalytic activity in the hydrogenation of phenylacetylene to styrene, and the selectivity of styrene reached 82.4%, much higher than those of reference catalysts. The reason for the promoted semi-hydrogenation of phenylacetylene was attributed to the electron transfer of metallic Co, as it was caused by N doping on carbon.


Pharmaceutics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 1528
Author(s):  
Yoen-Ju Son ◽  
Danforth P. Miller ◽  
Jeffry G. Weers

This manuscript critically reviews the design and delivery of spray-dried particles for the achievement of high total lung doses (TLD) with a portable dry powder inhaler. We introduce a new metric termed the product density, which is simply the TLD of a drug divided by the volume of the receptacle it is contained within. The product density is given by the product of three terms: the packing density (the mass of powder divided by the volume of the receptacle), the drug loading (the mass of drug divided by the mass of powder), and the aerosol performance (the TLD divided by the mass of drug). This manuscript discusses strategies for maximizing each of these terms. Spray drying at low drying rates with small amounts of a shell-forming excipient (low Peclet number) leads to the formation of higher density particles with high packing densities. This enables ultrahigh TLD (>100 mg of drug) to be achieved from a single receptacle. The emptying of powder from capsules is directly proportional to the mass of powder in the receptacle, requiring an inhaled volume of about 1 L for fill masses between 40 and 50 mg and up to 3.2 L for a fill mass of 150 mg.


Author(s):  
Yoen-Ju Son ◽  
Danforth P. Miller ◽  
Jeffry G. Weers

This manuscript critically reviews the design and delivery of spray-dried particles for the achievement of high total lung doses (TLD) with a portable dry powder inhaler. We introduce a new metric termed the product density, which is simply the TLD of a drug divided by the volume of the receptacle it is contained within. The product density is given by the product of three terms: the packing density (the mass of powder divided by the volume of the receptacle), the drug loading (the mass of drug divided by the mass of powder), and the aerosol performance (the TLD divided by the mass of drug). This manuscript discusses strategies for maximizing each of these terms. Spray drying at low drying rates with small amounts of a shell-forming excipient (low Peclet Number) leads to formation of higher density particles with high packing densities. This enables ultrahigh TLD (>100 mg of drug) to be achieved from a single receptacle. Emptying of powder from capsules is directly proportional to the mass of powder in the receptacle, requiring an inhaled volume of about 1 L for fill masses between 40 and 50 mg and up to 3.2 L for a fill mass of 150 mg.


Metals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1135
Author(s):  
Chengnan Jin ◽  
Sehun Rhee

In the flux-cored arc welding process, which is most widely used in shipbuilding, a constant external weld bead shape is an important factor in determining proper weld quality; however, the size of the weld gap is generally not constant, owing to errors generated during the shell forming process; moreover, a constant external bead shape for the welding joint is difficult to obtain when the weld gap changes. Therefore, this paper presents a method for monitoring the weld gap and controlling the weld deposition rate based on a deep neural network (DNN) for the automation of the hull block welding process. Welding experiments were performed with a welding robot synchronized with the welding machine, and the welding quality was classified according to the experimental results. Welding current and voltage signals, as the robot passed through the weld seam, were measured using a trigger device and analyzed in the time domain and frequency domain, respectively. From the analyzed data, 24 feature variables were extracted and used as input for the proposed DNN model. Consequently, the offline and online performance verification results for new experimental data using the proposed DNN model were 93% and 85%, respectively.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md. Rajib Sharker ◽  
Zahid Parvez Sukhan ◽  
Kanij Rukshana Sumi ◽  
Sang Ki Choi ◽  
Kap Seong Choi ◽  
...  

Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) are a family of metalloenzymes that can catalyze the reversible interconversion of CO2/HCO3–, ubiquitously present in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. In the present study, a CA II (designated as HdhCA II) was sequenced and characterized from the mantle tissue of the Pacific abalone. The complete sequence of HdhCA II was 1,169 bp, encoding a polypeptide of 349 amino acids with a NH2-terminal signal peptide and a CA architectural domain. The predicted protein shared 98.57% and 68.59% sequence identities with CA II of Haliotis gigantea and Haliotis tuberculata, respectively. Two putative N-linked glycosylation motifs and two cysteine residues could potentially form intramolecular disulfide bond present in HdhCA II. The phylogenetic analysis indicated that HdhCA II was placed in a gastropod clade and robustly clustered with CA II of H. gigantea and H. tuberculata. The highest level of HdhCA II mRNA expression was detected in the shell forming mantle tissue. During ontogenesis, the mRNA of HdhCA II was detected in all stages, with larval shell formation stage showing the highest expression level. The in situ hybridization results detected the HdhCA II mRNA expression in the epithelial cells of the dorsal mantle pallial, an area known to express genes involved in the formation of a nacreous layer in the shell. This is the first report of HdhCA II in the Pacific abalone, and the results of this study indicate that this gene might play a role in the shell formation of abalone.


Author(s):  
Marco Lo Presti ◽  
Danilo Vona ◽  
Roberta Ragni ◽  
Stefania R. Cicco ◽  
Gianluca Maria Farinola

Abstract Biomineralization ubiquitously occurs in plankton, featuring hierarchically nanostructured shells that display several properties that benefit their host survival. Nanostructures’ shapes and many of these properties are tunable through in vitro or in vivo modification of microorganisms, making their shells very appealing for applications in materials sciences. Despite the abundance of shell-forming species, research has focused mainly on diatoms and coccolithophores microalgae, with current scientific literature mostly targeting the development of photonic, biomedical and energy storage/conversion devices. This prospective article aims to critically overview potentialities of nanomaterials from biomineralizing plankton, possible outcomes and technological impact relevant to this technology. Graphic Abstract


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 1800
Author(s):  
Shaochuan Lai ◽  
Yongjun He ◽  
Daoying Xiong ◽  
Yao Wang ◽  
Kaibin Xiao ◽  
...  

The self-healing system based on microencapsulated epoxy-amine chemistry is currently the self-healing system with the most practical application potential. It can be widely used in many epoxy-based materials with a size restriction for the microcapsules, such as fiber-reinforced composites, anti-corrosion coatings, etc. Although epoxy microcapsules of different sizes can be fabricated using different techniques, the preparation of polyamine microcapsules with suitable sizes and good performance is the prerequisite for further developing this self-healing system. In this investigation, based on the novel microencapsulation technique via integrating microfluidic T-junction and interfacial polymerization, the feasibility of preparing small-size polyamine microcapsules and the process regulation to optimize the properties of the small-size microcapsules were studied. We show that polyamine microcapsules with sizes smaller than 100 μm can be obtained through the T-junction selection and the feeding rate control of the polyamine. To regulate the small-size microcapsules’ quality, the effects of the concentration of the shell-forming monomer and the solvent with different polarity in the reaction solution and the reaction condition were studied. It shows that dry, free-flowing small-size microcapsules can still be obtained when the shell-forming monomer concentration is higher and the solvent’s polarity is lower, compared with the preparation of larger polyamine microcapsules. Although the change of reaction conditions (reaction temperature and duration) has a certain effect on the microcapsules’ effective core content, it is relatively small. The results of this investigation further promote the potential application of the self-healing systems based on microencapsulated epoxy-amine chemistry in materials with a size restriction for the microcapsules.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Jackson

Molluscs have evolved the capacity to fabricate a wide variety of shells over their 540+ million-year history. While modern sequencing and proteomic technologies continue to expand the catalog of molluscan shell-forming proteins, a complete functional understanding of how any mollusc constructs its shell remains an ambitious goal. This lack of understanding also constrains our understanding of how evolution has generated a plethora of molluscan shell morphologies. Taking advantage of a previous expression atlas for shell-forming genes in Lymnaea stagnalis, I have characterized the spatial expression patterns of seven shell-forming genes in the terrestrial gastropod Cepaea nemoralis, with the aim of comparing and contrasting their expression patterns between the two species. Four of these genes were selected from a previous proteomic screen of the C. nemoralis shell, two were targeted by bioinformatics criteria designed to identify likely shell-forming gene products, and the final one was a clear homolog of a peroxidase sequence in the L. stagnalis dataset. While the spatial expression patterns of all seven C. nemoralis genes could be recognized as falling into distinct zones within the mantle tissue similar to those established in L. stagnalis, some zones have apparently been modified. These similarities and differences hint at a modularity to the molluscan mantle that may provide a mechanistic explanation as to how evolution has efficiently generated a diversity of molluscan shells.


2021 ◽  
pp. 002199832098761
Author(s):  
Serena Ferraro ◽  
Sergio Pellegrino

The general scaling trend for brittle materials, in which the strength increases when the sample size decreases, is reversed in plain-weave laminates of Astroquartz® and cyanate ester resin. Specifically, both the shear stiffness and the compressive strength decrease for test samples with widths smaller than 15 times the wavelength of the fabric, and observations at the microscale explain this behavior. The derived scaling is applied to the analysis of a deployable thin shell forming a 90∘ corner hinge with five cutouts on each side. The cutouts leave narrow strips of material with width as small as one fabric wavelength, forming structural ligaments whose strength and stiffness are subject to strong size-scaling effects. A numerical simulation of the folding process followed by a failure analysis is presented, using two alternative material models and failure criteria. The size independent model predicts that the structure will remain damage-free after it is folded and deployed, whereas the size-scaled model predicts that failure will occur. The correctness of the size-scaled model prediction is verified by measuring localized damage in a physical prototype, using x-ray CT scans.


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