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

A cool chemical separation technology

2021-03-09
(Press-News.org) Gas and liquid separation processes in the chemical industry could be made more efficient and environmentally friendly by using substances known as intrinsically porous materials (IPMs). KAUST researchers review the prospects for IPMs in the journal Accounts of Chemical Research.

Niveen Khashab and her team are currently heavily involved in IPM research. "We focus on making materials that will have an impact on the chemical and petrochemical industries in Saudi Arabia and the world," says Niveen Khashab, the corresponding author of the review.

IPM materials can separate gases and liquids without using traditional high-temperature methods like heat-driven distillation.

"Through the review, we identified some IPMs with impressive performance," says Gengwu Zhang, a postdoc in Niveen Khashab's team. He explains that these IPMs, like other porous materials being developed, could save 70 to 90 percent of the energy costs of existing technologies, with consequent environmental advantages.

A key advantage of IPMs over many other porous materials is their stability and ability to maintain their porous properties in the solid, liquid, gas or solution states. They can also be readily processed and modified when in solution, unlike many alternatives.

"They can be easily prepared on a large scale by using cheap starting materials," says Zhang, "Some of them are even commercially available products."

IPMs have diverse chemical structures, but they share the property of being permeated with pores that have sizes and chemical natures that make them suitable for separating and purifying different molecules. The structure of the pores determines which chemicals they can selectively adsorb, block or allow to pass through.

The KAUST authors reviewed the state of research into several IPMs, ranging from large individual molecules with internal pores to giant assemblies of molecules held together by weak multimolecular interactions.

The most promising IPMs identified in the review include the chemicals cyclodextrin, cucurbiturils, pillararenes, trianglamines and porous organic cages (POCs). These are all carbon-based or "organic" compounds. Cyclodextrins are ring-like carbohydrate structures produced from natural starch. The other compounds are specialized products of synthetic organic chemistry. The potential of these materials has been demonstrated by their performance in separating common industrial gases and liquid derivatives of the central industrial chemical benzene.

Khashab explains that the KAUST team are now addressing the challenge of scaling up their own work on IPMs, saying: "We have started discussions with Aramco for a pilot plan for liquid separations that should begin this year."

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

First the treats, then the tough stuff: A bacterial dinner plan for degrading algal blooms

First the treats, then the tough stuff: A bacterial dinner plan for degrading algal blooms
2021-03-09
The annually occurring algal spring blooms play an important role for our climate, as they remove large amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. However, they are an ephemeral phenomenon. Most of the carbon is released into the water once the algae die. There, bacteria are already waiting to finish them off and consume the algal remains. Previous studies have shown that in these blooms, different algae can come out on top each year. However, within the bacteria subsequently degrading the algae, the same specialised groups prevail year after year. Apparently not the algae themselves but rather their components ...

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused changes to people's wellbeing around the world

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused changes to peoples wellbeing around the world
2021-03-09
According to an international study published in Frontiers in Psychology, people around the world have reported changes in their physical activity levels, wellbeing, and eating habits during the first stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. A decrease in physical activity during the pandemic was associated with poorer perceived physical and mental health. Reduced exercise was also associated with perceptions of weight gain and decreased sleep. More than a thousand individuals from several countries with different containment measures participated in an online survey that explored changes in physical activity, eating, sleep, physical and mental health, and wellbeing during the first lockdown phases ...

COVID-19 testing in schools complex but doable, worth the effort -- RAND study

2021-03-09
A RAND Corporation report funded by The Rockefeller Foundation shows that COVID-19 testing can be effectively integrated into K-12 schools' pandemic response plans, helping families and staff feel more comfortable with in-person instruction. The report found that even for well-resourced districts and schools, launching a COVID-19 testing program was a major undertaking that required access to rapid-turnaround tests, additional staffing or strong partners for logistical support, technical assistance for the design and execution of testing programs, and a strategy for successfully engaging the school community to participate ...

Safe, simple additive could cut agrochemical pollution

2021-03-09
Adding a simple polymer to fertilizers or pesticides could dramatically reduce agricultural pollution, suggests a new study by researchers at the University of British Columbia. When agrochemicals are sprayed onto crops, a large amount typically ends up in the surrounding environment due to droplets splashing, rebounding or rolling off the target plants. This amount could be cut at least in half by mixing fertilizers and pesticides with a small quantity of polyethylene oxide, a common polymer additive that improves the ability of agrochemical solutions to stick to plant surfaces, ...

Eastern Oregon forest restoration efforts hampered by diameter limits on tree cutting

Eastern Oregon forest restoration efforts hampered by diameter limits on tree cutting
2021-03-09
CORVALLIS, Ore. - A quarter-century-old harvesting restriction intended to last one year has served as an obstacle to returning eastern Oregon national forests to the healthier, more fire-resilient conditions they embodied in the late 1800s, research by the Oregon State University College of Forestry shows. The findings, published in Ecosphere, are both important and timely because the U.S. Forest Service recently revised what has widely become known as the "21-inch rule" - a prohibition against cutting trees greater than 21 inches in diameter at breast height on Forest Service land in eastern Oregon. "Under the old policy, live trees more than 21 inches in diameter ...

Direct observation of coherence energy scale of Hund's metal

Direct observation of coherence energy scale of Hunds metal
2021-03-09
Strongly correlated systems are materials that exhibit strong interactions between electrons, a property unseen in ordinary conductors or insulators. Typical examples include metal-insulator transitions or unconventional high-temperature superconductivity where the resistance becomes zero at high temperatures. There have been studies to explain this strong interaction between electrons and their characteristic energy scales, but no direct observation on such energy scales through theory or experiments has been reported. To this, the POSTECH-IBS joint research team has succeeded in directly observing the evolution of coherence energy ...

Steroid abuse by men leads to long-lasting impaired testicular function

2021-03-09
WASHINGTON--Illegal use of anabolic steroids not only has dangerous side effects during use but also can harm of men's testicular function years after they stop abusing steroids, according to a study published in the Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. Anabolic steroids are synthetic forms of testosterone, and their abuse is prevalent among athletes worldwide. Some people use these steroids without a prescription to improve athletic performance or get a more muscular look. Known side effects of these drugs in men include breast growth, hair loss, shrunken testicles and lower testosterone levels. Also called hypogonadism, low testosterone can cause decreased sex drive, poor erections and a low sperm count. "It is still debated whether illicit ...

Citizen scientists help expose presence of invasive Asian bamboo longhorn beetle in Europe

Citizen scientists help expose presence of invasive Asian bamboo longhorn beetle in Europe
2021-03-09
A worryingly high number of Asian bamboo longhorn beetles (Chlorophorus annularis) turn out to have been emerging across Europe for about a century already, finds an international research team, headed by researchers from the Center of Natural History, University of Hamburg, Germany. Curiously, the recent records of the invasive, non-native to the Old Continent species are mostly sourced from citizen scientists and online platforms, which proves the power of involving the public in species monitoring. The study is published in the open-access, peer-reviewed ...

CBD reduces plaque, improves cognition in model of familial Alzheimer's

CBD reduces plaque, improves cognition in model of familial Alzheimers
2021-03-09
A two-week course of high doses of CBD helps restore the function of two proteins key to reducing the accumulation of beta-amyloid plaque, a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease, and improves cognition in an experimental model of early onset familial Alzheimer's, investigators report. The proteins TREM2 and IL-33 are important to the ability of the brain's immune cells to literally consume dead cells and other debris like the beta-amyloid plaque that piles up in patients' brains, and levels of both are decreased in Alzheimer's. The investigators report ...

An analysis of SARS-CoV-2 mutations in 1,000+ individuals from the UK

2021-03-09
An analysis of SARS-CoV-2 genome diversity in more than 1,000 people in the United Kingdom suggests that if viral mutations do arise, they can be transmitted in some cases but they rarely persist in subsequent transmissions. "Our observations indicate the within-host emergence of vaccine- and therapeutic-escape mutations is likely to be relatively rare," say the authors, "at least during early infection when viral loads are high." However, because mutations that can escape therapies like antibodies were identified, including in higher viral load samples, the authors encourage continued monitoring and vigilance, particularly as vaccines and therapeutics that put "pressure" on viruses to adapt are rolled out more widely. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Modulation of antiviral response in fungi via RNA editing

Global, regional, and national burden of nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage

Earliest use of psychoactive and medicinal plant ‘harmal’ identified in Iron Age Arabia

Nano-scale biosensor lets scientists monitor molecules in real time

Study shows how El Niño and La Niña climate swings threaten mangroves worldwide

Quantum eyes on energy loss: diamond quantum imaging for next-gen power electronics

Kyoto conundrum: More hotels than households exist in ancient capital

Cluster-root secretions improve phosphorus availability in low-phosphorus soil

Hey vespids, what's for dinner? DNA analysis of wasp larvae’s diverse diet

Street smarts: how a hawk learned to use traffic signals to hunt more successfully

Muscle quality may hold clues to early cognitive decline

Autophagy and lysosomal pathways orchestrate unconventional secretion of Parkinson’s disease protein

Mystery of “very odd” elasmosaur finally solved: one of North America’s most famous fossils identified as new species

Half the remaining habitat of Australia's most at-risk species is unprotected

Study reveals influence behind illegal bear bile consumption in Việt Nam

Satellites offer new view of Chesapeake Bay’s marine heat waves

Experimental drug may benefit some patients with rare form of ALS

Early testing could make risky falls a thing of the past for elderly people

A rule-breaking, colorful silicone that could conduct electricity

Even weak tropical cyclones raise infant mortality in poorer countries, USC-led research finds

New ketamine study promises extended relief for depression

Illinois physicists develop revolutionary measurement tool, exploiting quantum properties of light

Moffitt to present plenary and late-breaking data on blood, melanoma and brain metastases at ASCO 2025

Future risk of wildfire and smoke in the South

On-site health clinics boost attendance in rural classrooms

Ritu Banga Healthcare Disparities Research Awards support innovative science

New tools to treat retinal degenerations at advanced stages of disease

Brain drain? More like brain gain: How high-skilled emigration boosts global prosperity

City of Hope researchers to present cancer advances that could boost survival at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting

A new approach could fractionate crude oil using much less energy

[Press-News.org] A cool chemical separation technology