Chemical and Biomedical Engineering - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 82
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Axial Dispersion and Mass Transfer of a Pulsed Solvent Extraction Column with Novel Ceramic Internals
    Yi, H ; Wang, Y ; Smith, KH ; Fei, W ; Stevens, GW (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2017-03-22)
    Two types of novel anticorrosive ceramic internals, the hybrid ceramic internal and ceramic plate, are designed and tested under pilot conditions for future industrial application in lithium extraction from salt lake brine. A standard liquid–liquid system with medium interfacial tension, 30% TBP in Shellsol 2046–water with acetic acid as solute, is used to test axial dispersion and mass-transfer parameters, which are important to determine height of extraction columns, over a range of operating conditions. Results show that the hybrid ceramic internal has 50% lower axial dispersion coefficient and 50% higher mass-transfer coefficient, both contributing to better mass-transfer performance. Under proper operating conditions, the height of the transfer unit of the hybrid ceramic internal can reach as low as approximately 0.2 m, which shows very good efficiency and makes it promising for application in the near future.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Review of Membranes for Helium Separation and Purification
    Scholes, CA ; Ghosh, UK (MDPI, 2017-03)
    Membrane gas separation has potential for the recovery and purification of helium, because the majority of membranes have selectivity for helium. This review reports on the current state of the research and patent literature for membranes undertaking helium separation. This includes direct recovery from natural gas, as an ancillary stage in natural gas processing, as well as niche applications where helium recycling has potential. A review of the available polymeric and inorganic membranes for helium separation is provided. Commercial gas separation membranes in comparable gas industries are discussed in terms of their potential in helium separation. Also presented are the various membrane process designs patented for the recovery and purification of helium from various sources, as these demonstrate that it is viable to separate helium through currently available polymeric membranes. This review places a particular focus on those processes where membranes are combined in series with another separation technology, commonly pressure swing adsorption. These combined processes have the most potential for membranes to produce a high purity helium product. The review demonstrates that membrane gas separation is technically feasible for helium recovery and purification, though membranes are currently only applied in niche applications focused on reusing helium rather than separation from natural sources.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Structure-Dependent Interfacial Properties of Chaplin F from Streptomyces coelicolor
    Dokouhaki, M ; Prime, EL ; Hung, A ; Qiao, GG ; Day, L ; Gras, SL (MDPI, 2017-09)
    Chaplin F (Chp F) is a secreted surface-active peptide involved in the aerial growth of Streptomyces. While Chp E demonstrates a pH-responsive surface activity, the relationship between Chp F structure, function and the effect of solution pH is unknown. Chp F peptides were found to self-assemble into amyloid fibrils at acidic pH (3.0 or the isoelectric point (pI) of 4.2), with ~99% of peptides converted into insoluble fibrils. In contrast, Chp F formed short assemblies containing a mixture of random coil and β-sheet structure at a basic pH of 10.0, where only 40% of the peptides converted to fibrils. The cysteine residues in Chp F did not appear to play a role in fibril assembly. The interfacial properties of Chp F at the air/water interface were altered by the structures adopted at different pH, with Chp F molecules forming a higher surface-active film at pH 10.0 with a lower area per molecule compared to Chp F fibrils at pH 3.0. These data show that the pH responsiveness of Chp F surface activity is the reverse of that observed for Chp E, which could prove useful in potential applications where surface activity is desired over a wide range of solution pH.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    The propensity of the bacterial rodlin protein RdlB to form amyloid fibrils determines its function in Streptomyces coelicolor
    Yang, W ; Willemse, J ; Sawyer, EB ; Lou, F ; Gong, W ; Zhang, H ; Gras, SL ; Claessen, D ; Perrett, S (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2017-02-17)
    Streptomyces bacteria form reproductive aerial hyphae that are covered with a pattern of pairwise aligned fibrils called rodlets. The presence of the rodlet layer requires two homologous rodlin proteins, RdlA and RdlB, and the functional amyloid chaplin proteins, ChpA-H. In contrast to the redundancy shared among the eight chaplins, both RdlA and RdlB are indispensable for the establishment of this rodlet structure. By using a comprehensive biophysical approach combined with in vivo characterization we found that RdlB, but not RdlA, readily assembles into amyloid fibrils. The marked difference in amyloid propensity between these highly similar proteins could be largely attributed to a difference in amino acid sequence at just three sites. Further, an engineered RdlA protein in which these three key amino acids were replaced with the corresponding residues from RdlB could compensate for loss of RdlB and restore formation of the surface-exposed amyloid layer in bacteria. Our data reveal that RdlB is a new functional amyloid and provide a biophysical basis for the functional differences between the two rodlin proteins. This study enhances our understanding of how rodlin proteins contribute to formation of an outer fibrillar layer during spore morphogenesis in streptomycetes.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Assessing Species Diversity Using Metavirome Data: Methods and Challenges
    Herath, D ; Jayasundara, D ; Ackland, D ; Saeed, I ; Tang, S-L ; Halgamuge, S (ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 2017)
    Assessing biodiversity is an important step in the study of microbial ecology associated with a given environment. Multiple indices have been used to quantify species diversity, which is a key biodiversity measure. Measuring species diversity of viruses in different environments remains a challenge relative to measuring the diversity of other microbial communities. Metagenomics has played an important role in elucidating viral diversity by conducting metavirome studies; however, metavirome data are of high complexity requiring robust data preprocessing and analysis methods. In this review, existing bioinformatics methods for measuring species diversity using metavirome data are categorised broadly as either sequence similarity-dependent methods or sequence similarity-independent methods. The former includes a comparison of DNA fragments or assemblies generated in the experiment against reference databases for quantifying species diversity, whereas estimates from the latter are independent of the knowledge of existing sequence data. Current methods and tools are discussed in detail, including their applications and limitations. Drawbacks of the state-of-the-art method are demonstrated through results from a simulation. In addition, alternative approaches are proposed to overcome the challenges in estimating species diversity measures using metavirome data.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Thickness-Dependent Characterization of Chemically Exfoliated TiS2 Nanosheets
    Sherrell, PC ; Sharda, K ; Grotta, C ; Ranalli, J ; Sokolikova, MS ; Pesci, FM ; Palczynski, P ; Bemmer, VL ; Mattevi, C (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2018-08)
    Monolayer TiS2 is the lightest member of the transition metal dichalcogenide family with promising applications in energy storage and conversion systems. The use of TiS2 has been limited by the lack of rapid characterization of layer numbers via Raman spectroscopy and its easy oxidation in wet environment. Here, we demonstrate the layer-number-dependent Raman modes for TiS2. 1T TiS2 presents two characteristics of the Raman active modes, A1g (out-of-plane) and Eg (in-plane). We identified a characteristic peak frequency shift of the Eg mode with the layer number and an unexplored Raman mode at 372 cm-1 whose intensity changes relative to the A1g mode with the thickness of the TiS2 sheets. These two characteristic features of Raman spectra allow the determination of layer numbers between 1 and 5 in exfoliated TiS2. Further, we develop a method to produce oxidation-resistant inks of micron-sized mono- and few-layered TiS2 nanosheets at concentrations up to 1 mg/mL. These TiS2 inks can be deposited to form thin films with controllable thickness and nanosheet density over square centimeter areas. This opens up pathways for a wider utilization of exfoliated TiS2 toward a range of applications.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    High-Mobility and High-Optical Quality Atomically Thin WS2
    Reale, F ; Palczynski, P ; Amit, I ; Jones, GF ; Mehew, JD ; Bacon, A ; Ni, N ; Sherrell, PC ; Agnoli, S ; Craciun, MF ; Russo, S ; Mattevi, C (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2017-11-02)
    The rise of atomically thin materials has the potential to enable a paradigm shift in modern technologies by introducing multi-functional materials in the semiconductor industry. To date the growth of high quality atomically thin semiconductors (e.g. WS2) is one of the most pressing challenges to unleash the potential of these materials and the growth of mono- or bi-layers with high crystal quality is yet to see its full realization. Here, we show that the novel use of molecular precursors in the controlled synthesis of mono- and bi-layer WS2 leads to superior material quality compared to the widely used direct sulfidization of WO3-based precursors. Record high room temperature charge carrier mobility up to 52 cm2/Vs and ultra-sharp photoluminescence linewidth of just 36 meV over submillimeter areas demonstrate that the quality of this material supersedes also that of naturally occurring materials. By exploiting surface diffusion kinetics of W and S species adsorbed onto a substrate, a deterministic layer thickness control has also been achieved promoting the design of scalable synthesis routes.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Printing two-dimensional gallium phosphate out of liquid metal
    Syed, N ; Zavabeti, A ; Ou, JZ ; Mohiuddin, M ; Pillai, N ; Carey, BJ ; Zhang, BY ; Datta, RS ; Jannat, A ; Haque, F ; Messalea, KA ; Xu, C ; Russo, SP ; McConville, CF ; Daeneke, T ; Kalantar-Zadeh, K (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2018-09-06)
    Two-dimensional piezotronics will benefit from the emergence of new crystals featuring high piezoelectric coefficients. Gallium phosphate (GaPO4) is an archetypal piezoelectric material, which does not naturally crystallise in a stratified structure and hence cannot be exfoliated using conventional methods. Here, we report a low-temperature liquid metal-based two-dimensional printing and synthesis strategy to achieve this goal. We exfoliate and surface print the interfacial oxide layer of liquid gallium, followed by a vapour phase reaction. The method offers access to large-area, wide bandgap two-dimensional (2D) GaPO4 nanosheets of unit cell thickness, while featuring lateral dimensions reaching centimetres. The unit cell thick nanosheets present a large effective out-of-plane piezoelectric coefficient of 7.5 ± 0.8 pm V-1. The developed printing process is also suitable for the synthesis of free standing GaPO4 nanosheets. The low temperature synthesis method is compatible with a variety of electronic device fabrication procedures, providing a route for the development of future 2D piezoelectric materials.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Functionalised dairy streams: Tailoring protein functionality using sonication and heating
    Leong, TSH ; Walter, V ; Gamlath, CJ ; Yang, M ; Martin, GJO ; Ashokkumar, M (ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 2018-11-01)
    Ultrasound can be used to modify the functional interactions between casein and whey proteins in dairy systems. This study reports on ongoing developments in understanding the effect of ultrasound and heating on milk proteins in systems with modified casein-whey protein ratios (97:3, 80:20 and 50:50), prepared from milk protein concentrates that were fractionated by microfiltration, based on protein size. Heating of concentrated casein streams (9% w/w) at 80.0 °C for up to 9 min resulted in reduced gelation functionality and increased viscosity, even in the absence of added whey proteins. 20 kHz ultrasonication at 20.8 W calorimetric power for 1 min was able to break protein aggregates formed during heating, resulting in improved gelation and reduced viscosity. Interestingly, when heated whey protein was recombined with unheated casein the gelation properties were similar to unheated controls. In contrast, when heat treated casein streams were recombined with unheated whey protein, the gel forming functionality was reduced. This study therefore shows that using specific combinations of heat and/or ultrasound, fractionated dairy streams can be tailored for specific functional outcomes.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    A study of the effectiveness and energy efficiency of ultrasonic emulsification
    Li, W ; Leong, TSH ; Ashokkumar, M ; Martin, GJO (ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY, 2018-01-07)
    Three essential experimental parameters in the ultrasonic emulsification process, namely sonication time, acoustic amplitude and processing volume, were individually investigated, theoretically and experimentally, and correlated to the emulsion droplet sizes produced. The results showed that with a decrease in droplet size, two kinetic regions can be separately correlated prior to reaching a steady state droplet size: a fast size reduction region and a steady state transition region. In the fast size reduction region, the power input and sonication time could be correlated to the volume-mean diameter by a power-law relationship, with separate power-law indices of −1.4 and −1.1, respectively. A proportional relationship was found between droplet size and processing volume. The effectiveness and energy efficiency of droplet size reduction was compared between ultrasound and high-pressure homogenisation (HPH) based on both the effective power delivered to the emulsion and the total electric power consumed. Sonication could produce emulsions across a broad range of sizes, while high-pressure homogenisation was able to produce emulsions at the smaller end of the range. For ultrasonication, the energy efficiency was higher at increased power inputs due to more effective droplet breakage at high ultrasound intensities. For HPH the consumed energy efficiency was improved by operating at higher pressures for fewer passes. At the laboratory scale, the ultrasound system required less electrical power than HPH to produce an emulsion of comparable droplet size. The energy efficiency of HPH is greatly improved at large scale, which may also be true for larger scale ultrasonic reactors.