PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researcher: Study on element could change ballgame on radioactive waste

2014-03-24
(Press-News.org) TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Groundbreaking work by a team of chemists on a fringe element of the periodic table could change how the world stores radioactive waste and recycles fuel.

The element is called californium — Cf if you're looking at the Periodic Table of Elements — and it's what Florida State Professor Thomas Albrecht-Schmitt, the lead researcher on the project, calls "wicked stuff."

In carefully choreographed experiments, Albrecht-Schmitt and his colleagues found that californium had amazing abilities to bond and separate other materials. They also found it was extremely resistant to radiation damage.

"It's almost like snake oil," he said. "It sounds almost too good to be true."

Albrecht-Schmitt said that the discoveries could help scientists build new storage containers for radioactive waste, plus help separate radioactive fuel, which means the fuel could be recycled.

"This has real world application," he said. "It's not purely an academic practice."

Albrecht-Schmitt's work, "Unusual Structure, Bonding, and Properties in a Californium Borate," appears published in the newest edition of Nature Chemistry.

But, running the experiments and collecting the data were not small tasks.

After years of working with the U.S. Department of Energy, Albrecht-Schmitt obtained 5 milligrams of californium costing $1.4 million, paid for through an endowment to the university in honor of retired professor Gregory Choppin.

But that tiny, expensive element has opened a whole new world of nuclear chemistry.

"We're changing how people look at californium and how it can be used," Albrecht-Schmitt said.

All of the experiments were conducted at Florida State, but Albrecht-Schmitt also worked with theorists and scientists from nine universities and institutes, including Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which supplied the californium.

David A. Dixon, professor of chemistry at the University of Alabama, and his graduate student, Ted Garner, provided the calculations and theory on why the californium could bond in such unique ways, while scientists at Argonne National Laboratory helped correlate the theory with the experiments. Evgeny Alekseev and Wulf Depmeier of Germany also provided an improved understanding on the atomic structure of californium.

INFORMATION: END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Nasal spray delivers new type of depression treatment

2014-03-24
(Toronto) March 24, 2014 – A nasal spray that delivers a peptide to treat depression holds promise as a potential alternative therapeutic approach, research from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) shows. The study, led by CAMH's Dr. Fang Liu, is published online in Neuropsychopharmacology. In a previous study published in Nature Medicine in 2010, Dr. Liu developed a protein peptide that provided a highly targeted approach to treating depression that she hopes will have minimal side effects. The peptide was just as effective in relieving symptoms when ...

Life hots up for British birds

Life hots up for British birds
2014-03-24
Climate change may be bad news for billions, but scientists at the University of Sheffield have discovered one unlikely winner – a tiny British bird, the long-tailed tit. Like other small animals that live for only two or three years, these birds had until now been thought to die in large numbers during cold winters. But new research suggests that warm weather during spring instead holds the key to their survival. The findings come from a 20-year study of long-tailed tits run by Professor Ben Hatchwell at the Department of Animal and Plant Sciences. The recent work ...

Biased sex ratios predict more promiscuity, polygamy and divorce in birds

2014-03-24
Birds in female-dominated populations are more likely to ditch and 'divorce' their mates while promiscuity increases in predominantly male environments, according to new research. A joint study by the University of Sheffield and the University of Bath gives the first conclusive proof that rates of divorce and infidelity in birds are affected by the adult sex ratio of the population they live in – a theory previously discounted by biologists. The study, which examined the pair bonding and mating behaviour of 197 different species of bird, found the divorce rate was higher ...

Recovering valuable substances from wastewater

Recovering valuable substances from wastewater
2014-03-24
Not only plants, but also humans and animals need phosphorus, which is a building block of DNA. Many biological processes in our body can only take place if phosphorus atoms are also present. But farmers and industrial enterprises use so much of this element that soil is over-fertilized and waterways are contaminated. This is where the experts of the German Phosphorus Platform DPP come in. As they have made it their aim to recover the phosphorus from the water, on the one hand in order to protect the environment and on the other to reutilize this valuable raw material ...

Researchers grow carbon nanofibers using ambient air, without toxic ammonia

Researchers grow carbon nanofibers using ambient air, without toxic ammonia
2014-03-24
Researchers from North Carolina State University have demonstrated that vertically aligned carbon nanofibers (VACNFs) can be manufactured using ambient air, making the manufacturing process safer and less expensive. VACNFs hold promise for use in gene-delivery tools, sensors, batteries and other technologies. Conventional techniques for creating VACNFs rely on the use of ammonia gas, which is toxic. And while ammonia gas is not expensive, it's not free. "This discovery makes VACNF manufacture safer and cheaper, because you don't need to account for the risks and costs ...

Mice give ticks a free lunch

Mice give ticks a free lunch
2014-03-24
(Millbrook, NY) People living in northern and central parts of the U.S. are more likely to contract Lyme disease and other tick-borne ailments when white-footed mice are abundant. Mice are effective at transferring disease-causing pathogens to feeding ticks. And, according to an in-press paper in the journal Ecology, these "super hosts" appear indifferent to larval tick infestations. Drawing on 16 years of field research performed at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, New York, the paper found that white-footed mice with hundreds of larval ticks ...

Toronto Author Releases New Sales Aid

2014-03-24
With twelve years of sales experience, Dan Blaze fell sorrowfully into the realization that he didn't know everything there was to know about being in sales. During his sales experience, which has now reached a sixteen year plateau, Mr. Blaze has worked for various companies, in various industries, and has performed various roles, including cold-calling, direct-selling, field-sales, sales management and self-employment in sales and lead-generation. "The truth is, today, so many companies expect to hire experienced sales people, and so few companies are engaged ...

Jambalaya Brass Band to Perform at d.b.a. New Orleans

2014-03-24
In support of their latest successful CD release, On the Funky Side (currently charting on the CMJ, The Roots Music Report and the JazzWeek Charts), Jambalaya Brass Band will be performing three live sets at d.b.a. in New Orleans on Thursday, March 27, 2014, starting at 10:00 pm. Jambalaya Brass Band's previous CD, It's a Jungle Out There, resulted in heavy broadcast radio rotation on eighty-five stations nationwide, as well as countless national and worldwide Internet radio stations, and charted in the top five of the CMJ Charts, The Roots Music Report and the Cashbox ...

Stony Brook's Rodger Rau, New York's Christine Kenney Win Michelob ULTRA New York 13.1 Marathon

2014-03-24
Rodger Rau of Stony Brook, N.Y., and Christine Kenney of New York took first place in the men's and women's divisions of the 2014 Michelob ULTRA New York 13.1 Marathon today at Flushing Meadows Corona Park. Rau, 32, won in a time of 1:17:15, outpacing Jeffrey Meyers of Northfield, Ohio, by more than two and a half minutes. Kenney, 35, also blitzed the women's field, as her time of 1:25:29 was 2:39 faster than runner-up Lauren Meyer of Charlestown, Mass. Approximately 3,000 competitors began the half-marathon, while around 300 laced it up for the Life Time 5K. Juan Horiuchi, ...

Pro Wrestlers Vs. Zombies Exclusive Screening, Live Music Plus WWE Legends at Emagine Theatre on Wednesday April 9, 2014

2014-03-24
Join Detroit rockers Dead in 5 for a night of movies, music and mayhem at Emagine Theatre (200 N. Main St, Royal Oak, MI Ph: 248-414-1000) on Wednesday, April 9, 2014. The band hosts two screenings of horror B-Movie "Pro Wrestlers Vs. Zombies" starring WWE legends Rowdy Roddy Piper, Matt Hardy, Jim "Hacksaw" Duggan, Shane Douglas, and Olympic champ Kurt Angle. Screenings are at 7:30 pm and 10 pm. Tickets are $20 each and can be purchased in advance at Emagine Theater's web site: http://www.emagine-entertainment.com/coming-soon/ or at the box office. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How people identify scents and perceive their pleasantness

Evidence builds for disrupted mitochondria as cause of Parkinson’s

SwRI turbocharges its hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engine

Parasitic ant tricks workers into killing their queen, then takes the throne

New study identifies part of brain animals use to make inferences

Reducing arsenic in drinking water cuts risk of death, even after years of chronic exposure

Lower arsenic in drinking water reduces death risk, even after years of chronic exposure

Lowering arsenic levels in groundwater decreases death rates from chronic disease

Arsenic exposure reduction and chronic disease mortality

Parasitic matricide, ants chemically compel host workers to kill their own queen

Clinical trials affected by research grant terminations at the National Institutes of Health

Racial and ethnic disparities in cesarean birth trends in the United States

Light-intensity-dependent transformation of mesoscopic molecular assemblies

Tirzepatide may only temporarily suppress brain activity involved in “food noise”

Do all countries benefit from clinical trials? A new Yale study examines the data

Consensus on the management of liver injury associated with targeted drugs and immune checkpoint inhibitors for hepatocellular carcinoma (version 2024)

Bridging the gap to bionic motion: challenges in legged robot limb unit design, modeling, and control

New study reveals high rates of fabricated and inaccurate citations in LLM-generated mental health research

New 'heart percentile' calculator helps young adults grasp their long-term risk

SwRI expands capabilities in large-scale heat exchanger testing

CRISPR breakthrough reverses chemotherapy resistance in lung cancer

Study reveals potential and beauty of the world unseen

Duke-NUS study: Over 90% of older adults with dementia undergo burdensome interventions in their final year

Not all PTSD therapies keep veterans in treatment, study warns

New research shows how friends’ support protects intercultural couples

FAU Engineering secures NIH grant to explore how the brain learns to ‘see’

One of world’s most detailed virtual brain simulations is changing how we study the brain

How early morning practices affect college athletes’ sleep

Expanded effort will help standardize, improve care for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

World COPD Day: November 19, 2025

[Press-News.org] Researcher: Study on element could change ballgame on radioactive waste