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

UBCO researchers light the way to cleaner water

Fluorescence lighting helps detect impurities in water

UBCO researchers light the way to cleaner water
2021-07-15
(Press-News.org) Shining a beam of light into potentially contaminated water samples may hold the key to real-time detection of hydrocarbons and pesticides in water.

UBC Okanagan researchers are testing the use of fluorescence to monitor water quality. The results, they say, show great promise.

When a beam of light is shone into the water, it excites the electrons in molecules of certain compounds and causes them to emit light. The characteristics of the emitted light are like a fingerprint and can be used to identify certain contaminants, explains Nicolas Peleato, an assistant professor at UBCO's School of Engineering.

"The challenge with using this fluorescence approach is that they are typically source-specific; meaning we have to calibrate for a particular water source and anticipate what specific contaminants we want to look for," says Peleato. "In our latest work, we have developed a data processing technique that expands the effectiveness from one water source to others." This means their new technique removes a lot of the guesswork at the beginning of the process. As Peleato points out, every water source has a slightly different composition of organic compounds, which can hide the contaminant signals, so calibrating for each source is crucial for detection accuracy.

Using machine learning algorithms, Peleato and his graduate student Ziyu Li have devised an approach that addresses the challenge of source-specific models through mapping their similarities. According to Li, it isn't quite a one-size-fits-all method but it is close. "By establishing a process that identifies similar patterns between water sources, the fluorescence detection becomes a viable option for real-time, accurate detection of hydrocarbons and pesticides," explains Li.

During the testing process, the researchers look for unique shapes of fluorescence signals. Each unique shape indicates the presence of impurities and helps researchers determine what the impurity is and distinguish it from other compounds.

Water contaminated with hydrocarbons is known to be carcinogenic and can be dangerous, or toxic, to flora and fauna.

The researchers are now turning their attention to using this new approach to detect and monitor chemicals, such as the major toxic contaminants in oil sand tailings ponds that may impact surface water and groundwater.

"Building a comprehensive model that seamlessly transitions from one water source to another will speed up monitoring, and has the potential to be a game changer," says Peleato.

INFORMATION:

This work was published in the journal Chemosphere, and funded in part by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
UBCO researchers light the way to cleaner water

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Repairs using light signals

2021-07-15
Repairing complex electrical appliances is time consuming and rarely cost-effective. The working group led by Prof. Dr. Karl Mandel, Professorship of Inorganic Chemistry at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU), has now developed a smart microparticle that enables defective components in these appliances to be identified more quickly and easily by using light signals. In the long-term, this could make repairs easier and extend the operating life of devices. The results have been published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials. To identify defective components in a device, particles known as supraparticles are applied to the individual parts. These particles measure between one and ten micrometres and under black light they provide information ...

Biomolecular bonsai: Controlling the pruning and strengthening of neuron branches

Biomolecular bonsai: Controlling the pruning and strengthening of neuron branches
2021-07-15
Fukuoka, Japan--At this very moment, the billions of neurons in your brain are using their trillions of connections to enable you to read and comprehend this sentence. Now, by studying the neurons involved in the sense of smell, researchers from Kyushu University's Faculty of Medical Sciences report a new mechanism behind the biomolecular bonsai that selectively strengthens these connections. How neuronal circuits remodel themselves over time, especially during early development, is an open question in neurobiology. At the start of neuronal development, neurons form excessive amounts of connections ...

Melting High Mountain Asia glaciers are revealed as a potential source of greenhouse gases

Melting High Mountain Asia glaciers are revealed as a potential source of greenhouse gases
2021-07-15
The cryosphere, a term used to describe the areas of the Earth's surface where water exists in solid form, plays an important role in regulating the Earth's climate. Due to cryospheric retreat; for example, the melting Greenland ice sheet in the Arctic, greenhouse gases that were formerly in "frozen storage" are now being released. High Mountain Asia, also known as the Tibetan Plateau, hosts the largest volume of glaciers outside the polar regions. However, Tibetan glaciers are currently excluded from global greenhouse gas budgets. According to Shichang Kang, leader of a group of researchers who recently became the first team to measure the flux variations of greenhouse gases (CO2 and CH4) in typical glacial basins in High Mountain Asia, it's important that Tibetan glaciers are not ...

Study IDs risk factors for irregular heartbeats in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy patients

Study IDs risk factors for irregular heartbeats in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy patients
2021-07-15
New research will help doctors identify, treat and prevent potentially dangerous irregular heartbeats in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a common heart condition in which the heart thickens and strains to pump blood. These chaotic heart rhythms are known as atrial fibrillation. Atrial fibrillation can be asymptomatic, but it can lead to blood clots, stroke or even heart failure. The new research, from an international team of doctors and scientists, identifies risk factors for major atrial fibrillation outcomes, such as the need for procedures or hospitalization for more than 24 ...

A rapid method to quantify antibodies against SARS-CoV-2

A rapid method to quantify antibodies against SARS-CoV-2
2021-07-15
Scientists have developed a rapid, highly accurate test to detect antibodies against the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 in human serum, opening a new avenue for understanding the full extent of the pandemic and evaluating the effectiveness of vaccines. In the 18 months since the emergence of Covid-19 pandemic, great strides have been made in discovering and inventing various approaches to track and control the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Rapid and accurate diagnosis has always been vital in this regard. The gold standard since the beginning of the pandemic has been the RT-PCR method; however, it is time-consuming, labor-intensive, and requires sophisticated ...

The cells combating a deadly lung disease

The cells combating a deadly lung disease
2021-07-15
Single-cell RNA sequencing has revealed a subset of cells that could provide protection from a rare, but severely debilitating and fatal, lung disease. The findings were published by Nagoya University researchers and colleagues in the European Respiratory Journal. Further research could lead to new therapeutic strategies for the disease, called idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Approximately 15 in every 100,000 people worldwide develop IPF. Its prognosis and five-year survival rate can be worse than many types of cancer. It involves the development of scar tissue on the lung, impairing gas exchange and making ...

Report outlines how public transit agencies can advance equity

2021-07-15
Austin, Texas (July 15, 2021) Access to high-quality public transportation can make communities more equitable by increasing access to critical opportunities such as employment, health care and healthy food, particularly for low-income individuals and people of color. A END ...

Looking beyond the numbers to see pandemic's effect on nursing home residents

Looking beyond the numbers to see pandemics effect on nursing home residents
2021-07-15
INDIANAPOLIS -- Nursing homes throughout the United States have been devastated by the COVID-19 pandemic with many perceptions and misperceptions but little documentation about what has happened on a day-by -day basis to residents in these facilities. A study from Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University School of Medicine research scientists is one of the first to describe and identify patterns in the course of COVID-19 in the typically frail individuals who reside in nursing homes. Much has been written about number of deaths, vaccine uptake and ...

Silicon in drinking water caused irreversible lung pathologies in rodents

2021-07-15
Bone density, skin and hair health, and the mobility of joints depend to a great extent on the microelement of silicon. We mostly get it with food, but silicon is also consumed with some biologically active additives that promise beauty, longevity, and youth. The element can also be found in drinking water of a natural origin: usually, it is included in the compound of sodium salt and metasiliconic acid. However, in the case of microelements, one should be extremely careful: a deficiency could lead to diseases, but an overdose could bring negative effects too. Together with colleagues from the Chuvash State University and the Hamburg Medical University, scientists of Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University studied the effect of prolonged silicon consumption in relatively ...

The virus trap

2021-07-15
To date, there are no effective antidotes against most virus infections. An interdisciplinary research team at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) has now developed a new approach: they engulf and neutralize viruses with nano-capsules tailored from genetic material using the DNA origami method. The strategy has already been tested against hepatitis and adeno-associated viruses in cell cultures. It may also prove successful against corona viruses. There are antibiotics against dangerous bacteria, but few antidotes to treat acute viral infections. Some infections can be prevented by vaccination but developing new vaccines is a long and laborious process. Now an interdisciplinary research team from the Technical University of Munich, the Helmholtz Zentrum München and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Replanted rainforests may benefit from termite transplants

AI has untapped potential to advance biodiversity conservation, study finds

Study of velvet worm slime could revolutionize sustainable material design

New drone-assisted 3D model offers a more accurate way to date dinosaur fossils

New study reveals how inter-species interactions control structure and mechanics of double networks materials

Researchers identify two new crocodile species

Study suggests we don’t just hear music, but ‘become it’

McGill researchers develop practical new tool for detecting nanoplastics and microplastics in the environment

The ISSCR announces Montréal as the location for its 2026 Annual Meeting 8-11 July 2026

New study shows individuals prefer when firms stay apolitical on polarizing issues

University of Tennessee designated a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cybersecurity

Research update: Okra, fenugreek extracts remove most microplastics from water

Heat and drought are quietly hurting crop yields

Gender characteristics of service robots can influence customer decisions

Ultra-thin bismuth holds unexpected promise for green electronics: researcher

Discovery: a better, more targeted termite terminator

Researchers harness brain activity to look at how we perceive faces from other racial groups differently

New research finds leadership-backed training key to better policing

Slickrock: USU geologists explore why Utah's Wasatch Fault is vulnerable to earthquakes

„Looking Through Objects. Women in Contemporary Polish Design” – exhibition at Design Museum Brussels

NCCN Policy Summit builds bridges between primary care and oncology for better cancer outcomes

Physician-led online nutrition intervention program is practical, cost-effective, and successful at improving patient health

Long COVID may cause long-term changes in the heart and lungs and may lead to cardiac and pulmonary diseases

Albert Einstein College of Medicine launches Data Science Institute

Half of U.S. adults acknowledge health benefits of eating a plant-based diet

Food as medicine: How diet shapes gut microbiome health

Bridging Worlds: USU physicists develop novel test of the Holographic Principle

Silver nanoparticles produced by fungus could be used to prevent and treat COVID-19

Subtle edits yield big results in microbes

Scientists discover a new way to convert corn waste into low-cost sugar for biofuel

[Press-News.org] UBCO researchers light the way to cleaner water
Fluorescence lighting helps detect impurities in water