sexta-feira, 15 de abril de 2011

Mesoporous films can mimic living

A fully synthetic ion-sensitive mesoporous interface opens a new branch in the applications of this kind of system and exhibits characteristics so far believed to be a distinctive feature of biological systems


One of the most intriguing features of living systems is the selectiveness of biological membranes. They can let the necessary substances pass while blocking others, and when their needs change the “rules” are inverted. Is this a specific behavior of living organisms or one can emulate such behavior in synthetic systems?  If that is possible, it would be very useful for a number of applications, as well as an interesting source of basic investigations about physico-chemistry and biophysics.
Biological membrane selective ability was already partially reproduced in human-made artifacts. As an example, it can be done with mesoporous films, a thin layer deposited onto a substrate that has pores with sizes between 2 and 50 nm. Scientists have already built artificial systems that can select if an anion or a cation (or both of them) will pass, depending on the situation – as an example, on the pH in the vicinties. This is similar to the acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) in neurons of the peripherical sensory and central nervous systems. However, these neurons can also block both of them, cations and anions – what the available synthetic systems couldn't do. Full selectiveness like this remained a distintive feature of biological organisms.
Until now. It was done for the first time by a team of researchers led by Galo Soler-Illia, from the Centro Atómico Constituyentes, in Argentina, with scientists from the Max-Planck-Institute für Polymerforschung, in Germany, Tenaris (steel company)  and the Institute of Theoretical and Applied Physicochemical Researches (INIFTA), the last two also in Argentina. The results were published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS) 131, 10866 (2009).

What we already knew
The paper describes two experiments. The first presents a partial selectiveness as described above – no novelty yet –, but the second behaves exactly like the neuronal ASICs, due to a modification in the mesoporous film. To understand how it works, let's see how the emulations made of mesoporous films are commonly done. In a normal situation – if nobody is worried about selectiveness –, molecules of substances of interest can pass easily through the pores. In order to block the passage of ions, the idea is to build the film in such a way that it has electric charges fixed at the inner walls of its pores. If these charges are negative, negative ions will not be able to pass and positive ions will be attracted through the pores. And vice-versa.
The first experiment described in the paper was of this kind. They deposited a silica (SiO2) mesoporous film onto a silicon and indium tin oxide (ITO) substrate. The resulting surface inside the pores was covered by Si–OH chemical groups. However, these groups release several hydrogens ions (positive) to the environment, depending on the pH nearby. So the Si–OH groups at the surfaces became silanolate groups (Si–O–), that kept negative charges, as in the Figure 1.



Figure 1 – Simplified scheme of two pores in the silica film (at left) and the inner surface of one of them (center and right). At right, hydrogens have been liberated from silica molecules to contribute to the pH of the environment; silica has then become negatively charged (as silanolates).
To understand what was happening, the authors had first to characterize the system they were studying, specially to know its pore architecture. Measurements performed at the Brazilian Synchrotron Laboratory (LNLS), such as grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GI SAXS) and analysis of X-ray reflectivity, were essential for this knowledge.
One has to control the electric charges in the pores, so that the film permeability may be varied at will. This can be achieved by varying the pH. A very low pH means a large amount of hydrogen ions available, that tends to neutralize the negative charge of the silanolate groups and consequently to decrease the number of blocked ions.
The selective ability of this arrangement was tested with Ru(NH3)63+ positive ions and Fe(CN)63– negative ions. The behavior of the system in these situations was probed by means of cyclic voltammetry (CV). CV is a widely used method to measure the concentration and the diffusion dynamics of ions in solution, by measuring the current generated by the oxidation or reduction processes of such ions on a conductive electrode. Mesoporous films deposited onto the conductive Si or ITO substrates behave as a very thin membrane. A cyclic voltage perturbation leads to oxidation and reduction peaks when the ions travel across the pore system and exchange electrons at the electrode surface, giving rise to a cyclic voltammogram as in Fig. 2.



Figure 2 – Cyclic voltammograms corresponding to a mesoporous silica film deposited on an ITO electrode in the presence of 1 mM Ru(NH3)63+ (red trace) and 1 mM Fe(CN)63– (blue trace). (a) pH = 8, (d) pH = 1.
Charged ions can be detected because they leave “marks” in the voltammogram – the up and down peaks in the closed curves. The voltage at which these peaks appear is a signature of the ion. It happens because, as the voltage approaches to the reduction potential of the ion, electrolysis at the electrode becomes more intense and so the measured electric current increases. The same happened when the voltage is driven back to the original value, but with inverted polarization – so a closed curve results.
One can see that, with low pH, there is a small decrease in the concentration of Ru(NH3)63+ inside the pores and a small increase in Fe(CN)63–. This was expected, because low pH means few hydrogens out from the Si–OH groups and few negative charges in the pores (and so less negative ions blocked and less positive ions atracted through the pores).

Just like neurons
Now it comes the innovation. An interesting thing happened when the authors modifyed the silica mesoporous films by growing poly(methacryloyl-L-lysine) (PML) brushes in the substrate. A polymer brush is a layer of polymer deposited onto a substrate in such a way that long molecular chains are fixed at the surface at one of their ends, resulting in a structure similar to a brush. The authors used PML because it is a zwitterionic molecule – what means that it has positive and negative net charges in different parts of it. The characterization of the new films demanded some additional measurements, like the fraction of the pore volumes filled with the polymer, that was determined by X-ray reflectometry (XRR) at the LNLS.
Again, the charges may be controlled by varying the pH. Because of the zwitterionic character of PML, one may even change the charges from positive to negative, as schemed in Fig. 3.



Figure 3 – One extremity of the PML molecule. Normally it is positively charged in the nitrogen group and negatively in the carboxyl; but one of these charges may be preferred depending on the pH.
So one might expect that at high pH positive ions would pass and negative ions would be blocked –  and at low pH the opposite phenomenon would happen. However, the voltammogram obtained by the authors was surprising:


Figure 4 – The same as in Figure 2, but with mesoporous film modified with a PML polizwitterionic brush.
For low pH, the positive ions didn't pass, but the negative ones didn't either! Why did this unexpected behavior happen?
Charges versus charges
The researchers formulated an explanation. The film had two charges inside its pores: the one due to silanolate and the one due to PML. When the pH was grater than 5, PML had the same charge signal as silanolate (negative) and so the system blocked the negative ions and let the positive ones pass. But, when the pH was less than 5, PML and silanolate charges were opposite. As a result, they blocked both positive and negative ions. See fig. 5.
 


Figure 5 – Schematic description of the microscopic processes responsible for the results in Figure 4. Compare the right sides with Figure 1 – now there are the PML molecules linked to the silanolates.  In (a), PML has the same charge signal as silanolate; negative ions are blocked and positive ions are attracted. In (b), PML is positive and silanolate negative; both ions are blocked.
The importance of this achievement does not lie only in the reproduction of a behavior until now believed to be specific of biological systems. It may also open a whole new branch of applications of mesoporous matrices, that have been so far considered as just scaffolds to create nanoscopic channels. The scientists concluded the paper with very optimistic remarks: “We consider that these results can lead to a new way of looking at interdisciplinary research in molecular materials science and trigger a cascade of new, refreshing ideas in nanochemistry aimed at the rational design of hyperfunctional assemblies with unprecedented properties.”

This work was published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS) 131, 10866 (2009) by Alejandra Calvo, Basit Yameen, Federico J. Williams,Galo J.A.A. Soler-Illia and
Omar Azzaroni.
All figures were taken from the original article above.
 

The Periodic Table of Videos

http://www.periodicvideos.com/

terça-feira, 13 de abril de 2010

Fibras ópticas

Fibras Ópticas


Uma fibra óptica é composta basicamente de material dielétrico (em geral, sílica ou plástico), segundo uma longa estrutura cilíndrica, transparente e flexível, de dimensões microscópicas comparáveis às de um fio de cabelo. A estrutura cilíndrica básica da fibra óptica é formada por uma região central, chamada de núcleo, envolta por uma camada, também de material dielétrico, chamada casca, como mostrado na figura abaixo. A secção em corte transversal mais usual do núcleo é a circular, porém fibras ópticas especiais podem ter um outro tipo de secção (por exemplo, elíptica). A composição da fibra óptica, com material de índice de refração ligeiramente inferior ao do núcleo, oferece condições à propagação de energia luminosa através do seu núcleo. A fibra óptica propaga luz por reflexões sucessivas. A capacidade de transmissão (banda passante) de uma fibra óptica é função do seu comprimento, da sua geometria e do seu perfil de índices de refração. Existem duas classes principais de fibras: monomodo e multimodo.
A atenuação em fibras ópticas é causada por múltiplas fontes. Nelas existem regiões espectrais (janelas de transmissão) onde a atenuação é mínima.


Vantagens das Fibras Ópticas

As fibras ópticas, devido as suas características, apresentam algumas vantagens em relação aos suportes físicos de transmissão convencionais, tais como o par trançado e o cabo coaxial. Estas são as seguintes:

Perdas de transmissão baixa e banda passante grande
Pequeno tamanho e peso
Imunidade a interferências
Isolação elétrica
Segurança do sinal
Matéria-prima abundante

As fibras ópticas tem sido uma alternativa superior aos satélites em sistemas de transmissão a longa distância caracterizados por um grande tráfego ponto-a-ponto. Por outro lado, em aplicações multiponto, como aplicações de difusão de TV, os satélites são a melhor alternativa.

Desvantagens das Fibras Ópticas

O uso das fibras ópticas também possue algumas desvantagens em relação aos suportes de transmissão convencionais:
Fragilidade das fibras ópticas sem encapsulamento
Dificuldade de conexões das fibras ópticas
Acopladores tipo T com perdas muito grandes
Impossibilidade de alimentação remota de repetidores
Falta de padronização dos componentes ópticos

Instalação

Em razão das dimensões envolvidas, a instalação de fibras ópticas exige o uso de técnicas sofisticadas e de muita precisão, a fim de limitar as perdas de acoplamento. A junção ponto-a-ponto de dois ou mais segmentos de fibra óptica pode ser realizada de modo permanente através de emendas ou por meio de conectores mecânicos de precisão. As junções multiponto utilizam-se de acopladores de diversos tipos.

Aplicações

Os sistemas de transmissão por fibras ópticas podem ser classificados segundo algumas características básicas. Estas características estão associadas às aplicações dos sistemas ou à especificidade de alguma técnica, configuração ou dispositivo utilizado pelo sistema. Tipos de sistemas:
Sistemas de comunicação
Sistemas sensores
Aplicações militares

O biodiesel

Olá nós sabemos que o biodiesel é uma uma nova fonte de energia,este é fabricado a partir de fontes de que diriamos ecológicamente renováveis, aqui tem-se um artigo do site biodieselbr.com que nos ajuda a entender mais sobre este combustível inovador:

Tudo Sobre Biodiesel


O Que é Biodiesel?

Biodiesel é uma alternativa aos combustíveis derivado do petróleo. Pode ser usado em carros e qualquer outro veículo com motor diesel. Fabricado a partir de fontes renováveis (girassol, soja, mamona), é um combustível que emite menos poluentes que o diesel. Saiba aqui porque todos estão falando deste biocombustível.

Vantagens do Biodiesel :

Cada vez mais o preço da gasolina, diesel e derivados de petróleo tendem a subir. A cada ano o consumo aumenta e as reservas diminuem. Além do problema físico, há o problema político: a cada ameaça de guerra ou crise internacional, o preço do barril de petróleo dispara.

Aspectos Econômicos do Biodiesel

Para aumentar sua competitividade, os custos de produção do biodiesel podem ser minimizados através da venda dos co-produtos gerados durante o processo de transesterificação, tais como a glicerina, adubo e ração protéica vegetal.

Especificações do Biodiesel

Em função da importância do biodiesel e da futura regulamentação para sua utilização no país, o estabelecimento de padrões de qualidade para o biodiesel se constitui um fator primordial para sua adoção ser bem sucedida.

História e Biodiesel

Durante a Exposição Mundial de Paris, em 1900, um motor diesel foi apresentado ao público funcionando com óleo de amendoim. Os primeiros motores tipo diesel eram de injeção indireta. Tais motores eram alimentados por petróleo filtrado, óleos vegetais e até mesmo por óleos de peixe.


Processo de Produção de Biodiesel

A molécula de óleo vegetal é formada por três moléculas de ácidos graxos ligadas a uma molécula de glicerina, o que faz dele um triglicídio. O processo para a transformação do óleo vegetal em biodiesel chama-se TRANSESTERIFICAÇÃO.

Balanço Energético do Biodiesel

Quando os pesquisadores calculam o balanço energético líquido para um biocombustível, eles consideram a energia exigida para produzir a colheita (coisas como fertilizantes, pesticidas, e diesel de trator), e então somam a energia necessária para processar a planta colhida em etanol ou biodiesel. Eles subtraem a quantia de energia que entra no processo da quantia de energia que sai.

Biodiesel no Brasil

O Brasil apresenta grandes vantagens para produção de biocombustíveis, pois apresenta geografia favorável, situa-se em uma região tropical, com altas taxas de luminosidade e temperaturas médias anuais. Associada a disponibilidade hídrica e regularidade de chuvas, torna-se o país com maior potencial para produção de energia renovável.
Fábricas / Usinas de Biodiesel
Após um intenso trabalho de pesquisa e coleta de dados, apresentamos o trabalho mais completo e abrangente sobre todos os projetos de produção de biodiesel no Brasil.

Efeito Estufa - Greenhouse Effect

O biodiesel permite que se estabeleça um ciclo fechado de carbono no qual o CO2 é absorvido quando a planta cresce e é liberado quando o biodiesel é queimado na combustão do motor.

Agricultura Familiar, Emprego e o Lado Social do Biodiesel

O grande mercado energético brasileiro e mundial poderá dar sustentação a um imenso programa de geração de emprego e renda a partir da produção do biodiesel. A produção de oleaginosas em lavouras familiares faz com que o biodiesel seja uma alternativa importante para a erradicação da miséria no país.

Impostos sobre Biodiesel

Assim é reconhecido internacionalmente que o biodiesel, atualmente, não é competitivo em relação ao óleo diesel, sem que haja fortes incentivos fiscais.

Rendimento de óleo das Sementes

As oleaginosas promissoras para a produção do biodiesel, devem ter avaliadas suas reais potencialidades técnicas e seus efeitos secundários.

Legislação e Decretos sobre Biodiesel

Todas as leis, decretos e portarias concernentes ao Biodiesel. O biodiesel pelos olhos do governo.
Financiamento para construção de usinas

O BNDES já conta com o Programa de Apoio Financeiro a Investimentos em Energia. Esse programa tem por objetivo propiciar o aumento da oferta, a otimização do consumo atual e a atração de novos investidores.

Glicerina - Sub-produto do biodiesel

A Glicerina é produzida por via química ou fermentativa. Tem uma centena de usos, principalmente na indústria química. Os processos de produção são de baixa complexidade tecnológica.

PróAlcool - Programa Brasileiro de Álcool

O PROÁLCOOL foi um programa bem-sucedido de substituição em larga escala dos derivados de petróleo. Foi desenvolvido para evitar o aumento da dependência externa de divisas quando dos choques de preço de petróleo.

5 coisas interessantes sobre o LHC

Encontrei um artigo americano sobre o LHC, o "laboratóro" físico em pauta:

1- The Large Hadron Collider is kept colder than outer space


The first thing you didn’t know about the LHC is that it's the world’s largest fridge.
Accelerating charged particles like protons requires a powerful magnetic field, one that can only be produced by using magnets that are first cooled with liquid hydrogen and then supercooled with superfluid helium. Together, this cryogenic distribution system lowers the magnets to an astonishingly cold -456.34F (-271.3C), a temperature slightly colder than that of deep outer space (-454F/-270C). The niobium-titanium cables in the magnets are so cold that they lose all their electrical resistance and become superconducting magnets.
These superconducting magnets create a magnetic field with the force necessary to accelerate the proton beams to 99.9999991% of the speed of light -- the speed at which they collide.

2- The Large Hadron Collider may be trying to sabotage itself

Particle physicists can be divided into two groups: theoretical physicists and experimental physicists. One thinks while the other does, and each figures the other for a chump. Nobel laureate and experimental physicist Leon Lederman once wrote: “If I occasionally neglect to cite a theorist, it’s not because I’ve forgotten, it’s probably because I hate him.”
This disdain is easy to understand after reading the recent work of Holger Nielsen and Masao Ninomiya. As physicists work around the clock to fix the LHC, these two theoretical physicists have offered, as their primary contribution, the following reason for why the LHC is not working: From the moment of the Big Bang, God/nature has hated the fundamental particle researchers hope to create with the LHC -- the so-called Higgs Boson -- with a passion. In fact, it hates it so much that it has sent a Higgs particle into the future in order to kill the machine intent on discovering it.

3- The Large Hadron Collider could win Stephen Hawking his Nobel Prize

For years, celebrated physicist Stephen Hawking has suffered from a severe impediment, one that almost never strikes his peers: Hawking is a best-selling author.
His 1988 book, A Brief History of Time, introduced millions to the basics behind black holes, those astro-toilets with gravitational fields so mighty not even light can avoid the flush. Such unbridled commercial success arrested his credibility in the scientific community the way ALS has paralyzed his body; however, with some luck the LHC could change all that.
In 1974, Hawking published a paper in Nature called "Black Hole Explosions?" predicting that the death of a black hole would produce a burst of thermal radiation (now called Hawking radiation). Should the LHC, as some fear, create a mini black hole (the odds aren't very good) and it dies according to prediction, many agree that it would earn Hawking the Nobel Prize in Physics.
Curiously, Hawking radiation is so widely accepted that scientists at CERN actually used it in a 2003 safety report to dismiss the danger of mini black holes, writing "any microscopic black holes produced at the LHC are expected to decay by Hawking radiation before they reach the detector walls."

4- The Large Hadron Collider contained the hottest spot in the solar system

The superfluid helium within the LHC's superconducting magnets lowers the temperature inside the beam pipes to a chilly -456.34F (-271.3C), but there will be moments within those pipes when the weather changes -- drastically.
Prior to March 2010, officials expected two proton beams to collide 600 million times every second; each collision was expected to create temperatures estimated to be about 100,000 times hotter than the temperature at the core of our sun, which normally runs at around 15,000,000 Kelvin. That equates to a scorching 27 trillion F (1.5 trillion C), so it's fortunate that those moments won't last more than about one trillionth of one second.

5- The Large Hadron Collider relies on Einstein's famous equation

The last thing you didn't know about the LHC is that it won't violate the laws of nature.
Albert Einstein's famous 1905 mass-energy equivalence, E=mc², revolutionized the way we see the world. Its applications are everywhere including nuclear weapons, in which a mass, such as a lump of Plutonium, is converted into energy. The LHC relies on the same equation, though inverted to m=E/c2 .