Hasil untuk "physics.space-ph"

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S2 Open Access 2018
Soil pH mediates the balance between stochastic and deterministic assembly of bacteria

B. Tripathi, J. Stegen, Mincheol Kim et al.

Little is known about the factors affecting the relative influences of stochastic and deterministic processes that govern the assembly of microbial communities in successional soils. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis of bacterial communities using six different successional soil datasets distributed across different regions. Different relationships between pH and successional age across these datasets allowed us to separate the influences of successional age (i.e., time) from soil pH. We found that extreme acidic or alkaline pH conditions lead to assembly of phylogenetically more clustered bacterial communities through deterministic processes, whereas pH conditions close to neutral lead to phylogenetically less clustered bacterial communities with more stochasticity. We suggest that the influence of pH, rather than successional age, is the main driving force in producing trends in phylogenetic assembly of bacteria, and that pH also influences the relative balance of stochastic and deterministic processes along successional soils. Given that pH had a much stronger association with community assembly than did successional age, we evaluated whether the inferred influence of pH was maintained when studying globally distributed samples collected without regard for successional age. This dataset confirmed the strong influence of pH, suggesting that the influence of soil pH on community assembly processes occurs globally. Extreme pH conditions likely exert more stringent limits on survival and fitness, imposing strong selective pressures through ecological and evolutionary time. Taken together, these findings suggest that the degree to which stochastic vs. deterministic processes shape soil bacterial community assembly is a consequence of soil pH rather than successional age.

843 sitasi en Medicine, Biology
S2 Open Access 2018
Land use driven change in soil pH affects microbial carbon cycling processes

A. Malik, J. Puissant, Kate M. Buckeridge et al.

Soil microorganisms act as gatekeepers for soil–atmosphere carbon exchange by balancing the accumulation and release of soil organic matter. However, poor understanding of the mechanisms responsible hinders the development of effective land management strategies to enhance soil carbon storage. Here we empirically test the link between microbial ecophysiological traits and topsoil carbon content across geographically distributed soils and land use contrasts. We discovered distinct pH controls on microbial mechanisms of carbon accumulation. Land use intensification in low-pH soils that increased the pH above a threshold (~6.2) leads to carbon loss through increased decomposition, following alleviation of acid retardation of microbial growth. However, loss of carbon with intensification in near-neutral pH soils was linked to decreased microbial biomass and reduced growth efficiency that was, in turn, related to trade-offs with stress alleviation and resource acquisition. Thus, less-intensive management practices in near-neutral pH soils have more potential for carbon storage through increased microbial growth efficiency, whereas in acidic soils, microbial growth is a bigger constraint on decomposition rates. Land use intensification could modify microbial activity and thus ecosystem function. Here, Malik et al. sample microbes and carbon-related functions across a land use gradient, demonstrating that microbial biomass and carbon use efficiency are reduced in human-impacted near-neutral pH soils.

746 sitasi en Environmental Science, Medicine
S2 Open Access 2017
pH Sensitive Hydrogels in Drug Delivery: Brief History, Properties, Swelling, and Release Mechanism, Material Selection and Applications

M. Rizwan, R. Yahya, A. Hassan et al.

Improving the safety efficacy ratio of existing drugs is a current challenge to be addressed rather than the development of novel drugs which involve much expense and time. The efficacy of drugs is affected by a number of factors such as their low aqueous solubility, unequal absorption along the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, risk of degradation in the acidic milieu of the stomach, low permeation of the drugs in the upper GI tract, systematic side effects, etc. This review aims to enlighten readers on the role of pH sensitive hydrogels in drug delivery, their mechanism of action, swelling, and drug release as a function of pH change along the GI tract. The basis for the selection of materials, their structural features, physical and chemical properties, the presence of ionic pendant groups, and the influence of their pKa and pKb values on the ionization, consequent swelling, and targeted drug release are also highlighted.

693 sitasi en Materials Science, Medicine
S2 Open Access 2016
Universal dependence of hydrogen oxidation and evolution reaction activity of platinum-group metals on pH and hydrogen binding energy

Jie Zheng, Wenchao Sheng, Z. Zhuang et al.

A universal correlation is established between HOR/HER activity and hydrogen binding energy on platinum-group metals. Understanding how pH affects the activity of hydrogen oxidation reaction (HOR) and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is key to developing active, stable, and affordable HOR/HER catalysts for hydroxide exchange membrane fuel cells and electrolyzers. A common linear correlation between hydrogen binding energy (HBE) and pH is observed for four supported platinum-group metal catalysts (Pt/C, Ir/C, Pd/C, and Rh/C) over a broad pH range (0 to 13), suggesting that the pH dependence of HBE is metal-independent. A universal correlation between exchange current density and HBE is also observed on the four metals, indicating that they may share the same elementary steps and rate-determining steps and that the HBE is the dominant descriptor for HOR/HER activities. The onset potential of CO stripping on the four metals decreases with pH, indicating a stronger OH adsorption, which provides evidence against the promoting effect of adsorbed OH on HOR/HER.

667 sitasi en Chemistry, Medicine
S2 Open Access 2018
pH in nature, humans and skin

E. Proksch

The pH plays an important physiological role in nature and humans. pH varies from 1 to 8 in human organs with tight regulation in blood and epithelia of barrier organs. The physiological pH of the stratum corneum is 4.1–5.8 and several mechanisms contribute to its formation: filaggrin degradation, fatty acid content, sodium‐hydrogen exchanger (NHE1) activation and melanosome release. First, the acidic pH of the stratum corneum was considered to present an antimicrobial barrier preventing colonization (e.g. by Staphylococcus aureus and Malassezia). Later on, it was found that the pH influences skin barrier function, lipid synthesis and aggregation, epidermal differentiation and desquamation. Enzymes of ceramide metabolism (e.g. β‐glucocerebrosidase or acid sphingomyelinase) as well as proteases (e.g. chymotryptic enzyme or cathepsin D linked to epidermal differentiation and desquamation) are regulated by the pH. Experimental disruption of the physical barrier leads to an increase of pH, returning to normal levels only after many hours. Inflammatory skin diseases and diseases with an involvement of the epidermis exhibit a disturbed skin barrier and an increased pH. This is known for atopic dermatitis, irritant contact dermatitis, ichthyosis, rosacea and acne, but also for aged and dry skin. Normalizing the pH by acidification through topical treatment helps to establish a physiological microbiota, to repair skin barrier, to induce epidermal differentiation and to reduce inflammation.

524 sitasi en Chemistry, Medicine
S2 Open Access 2019
pH effects on the electrochemical reduction of CO(2) towards C2 products on stepped copper

Xinyan Liu, P. Schlexer, Jianping Xiao et al.

We present a microkinetic model for CO(2) reduction (CO(2)R) on Cu(211) towards C2 products, based on energetics estimated from an explicit solvent model. We show that the differences in both Tafel slopes and pH dependence for C1 vs C2 activity arise from differences in their multi-step mechanisms. We find the depletion in C2 products observed at high overpotential and high pH to arise from the 2nd order dependence of C-C coupling on CO coverage, which decreases due to competition from the C1 pathway. We further demonstrate that CO(2) reduction at a fixed pH yield similar activities, due to the facile kinetics for CO2 reduction to CO on Cu, which suggests C2 products to be favored for CO2R under alkaline conditions. The mechanistic insights of this work elucidate how reaction conditions can lead to significant enhancements in selectivity and activity towards higher value C2 products. CO2 conversion to reduced products provides a use for greenhouse gases, but reaction complexity stymies mechanistic studies. Here, authors present a microkinetic model for CO2 and CO reduction on copper, based on ab initio simulations, to elucidate pH’s impact on competitive reaction pathways.

479 sitasi en Medicine, Chemistry
S2 Open Access 2019
A Multifunctional Pro‐Healing Zwitterionic Hydrogel for Simultaneous Optical Monitoring of pH and Glucose in Diabetic Wound Treatment

Yingnan Zhu, Jiamin Zhang, Jiayin Song et al.

Diabetic ulcer is the most common kind of chronic wound worldwide. Though great efforts have been devoted, diabetic ulcer still remains as a challenge that requires constant monitoring and management. In this work, a multifunctional zwitterionic hydrogel is developed to simultaneously detect two fluctuant wound parameters, pH and glucose level, to monitor the diabetic wound status. A pH indicator dye (phenol red) and two glucose sensing enzymes, glucose oxidase (GOx) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP), are encapsulated in the anti‐biofouling and biocompatible zwitterionic poly‐carboxybetaine (PCB) hydrogel matrix. The visible images are collected by a smartphone and transformed into RGB signals to quantify the wound parameters. Results show that the activity and stability of both two enzymes are improved within PCB hydrogel, and the Kcat/Km value of PCB‐HRP is ≈5.5 fold of free HRP in artificial wound exudate. This novel wound dressing can successfully monitor the pH range of 4–8 and glucose level of 0.1–10 × 10−3 m. Meanwhile, it also provides a moist healing environment that can promote diabetic wound healing. This multifunctional wound dressing may open vistas in chronic wound management and guide the diabetes treatment in clinical applications.

431 sitasi en Materials Science
S2 Open Access 2019
An assessment of pH-dependent release and mobility of heavy metals from metallurgical slag.

A. Król, K. Mizerna, M. Bożym

The paper presents the results obtained in pHstat leaching test and assesses the influence of pH changes and occurring processes on the release of heavy metals (Cd, Ni, Crtotal, Pb, Cu and Zn) from metallurgical slag in a zinc smelter. Additionally, the analysis of the potential maximum amount of element available for leaching and releasing in the batch leaching test was carried out. All the results of the leaching tests were compared with the total content of heavy metals in the material. In order to evaluate the chemical forms of elements, a sequential extraction study was also carried out. On the basis of test results obtained in pHstat test, a strong dependence of heavy metals leaching on the pH was found. The highest concentrations of the analysed elements were observed in acidic environment. For most metals, except for lead, an increase in the pH of the solution caused a decrease in their concentration. Lead showed an upward trend of release under alkaline conditions. A sharp increase of copper leaching at pH 10.5 was also observed. Based on the results of the study, cadmium can be considered the most mobile element from metallurgical slag. Chromium indicated the lowest degree of release.

373 sitasi en Medicine, Chemistry
S2 Open Access 2020
pH-responsive pectin-based multifunctional films incorporated with curcumin and sulfur nanoparticles.

P. Ezati, J. Rhim

pH-responsive pectin-based functional films have been prepared by incorporating curcumin and sulfur nanoparticles (SNP). FTIR and SEM results indicated that curcumin and SNP were uniformly dispersed in the pectin to form a well-developed composite film. Addition of curcumin and SNP significantly influenced the surface color and UV-blocking properties of the composite films. The composite films showed a higher water contact angle and thermal stability compared with the neat pectin film, however, the mechanical and water vapor barrier properties did not change significantly. The composite film exhibited antibacterial activity against E. coli and L. monocytogenes, and strong antioxidant activity. When applied to shrimp packaging, the film showed a pH-responsive highly distinctive color change from yellow to orange as the quality of the shrimp changed.

281 sitasi en Medicine, Chemistry
S2 Open Access 2020
pH-responsive high stability polymeric nanoparticles for targeted delivery of anticancer therapeutics

L. Palanikumar, Sumaya Al-Hosani, M. Kalmouni et al.

The practical application of nanoparticles (NPs) as chemotherapeutic drug delivery systems is often hampered by issues such as poor circulation stability and targeting inefficiency. Here, we have utilized a simple approach to prepare biocompatible and biodegradable pH-responsive hybrid NPs that overcome these issues. The NPs consist of a drug-loaded polylactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA) core covalently ‘wrapped’ with a crosslinked bovine serum albumin (BSA) shell designed to minimize interactions with serum proteins and macrophages that inhibit target recognition. The shell is functionalized with the acidity-triggered rational membrane (ATRAM) peptide to facilitate internalization specifically into cancer cells within the acidic tumor microenvironment. Following uptake, the unique intracellular conditions of cancer cells degrade the NPs, thereby releasing the chemotherapeutic cargo. The drug-loaded NPs showed potent anticancer activity in vitro and in vivo while exhibiting no toxicity to healthy tissue. Our results demonstrate that the ATRAM-BSA-PLGA NPs are a promising targeted cancer drug delivery platform. Palanikumar et al. prepare pH-responsive nanoparticles with drug-loaded PLGA core, cross-linked BSA corona to avoid opsonisation, and functionalised with ATRAM peptide that binds the cell membrane at low pH such as tumour microenvironment. The nanoparticles display both in vitro and in vivo efficacy while evading recognition by macrophages.

247 sitasi en Medicine, Chemistry
S2 Open Access 2020
A Dual pH-Responsive Hydrogel Actuator for Lipophilic Drug Delivery.

Zilong Han, Peng Wang, G. Mao et al.

As one of the most promising drug delivery carriers, hydrogels have received considerable attention in recent years. Many previous efforts focused on diffusion-controlled release which allows hydrogels to load and release drugs in vitro and/or in vivo. However, it hardly applies to lipophilic drug delivery due to their poor compatibility with hydrogels. Herein, we propose a novel method for lipophilic drug release based on a dual pH-responsive hydrogel actuator. Specifically, the drug is encapsulated and can be released by a dual pH-controlled capsule switch. Inspired by the deformation mechanism of Drosera leaves, we fabricate the capsule switch with a double-layer structure that is made of two kinds of pH-responsive hydrogel. Two layers are covalently bonded together through silane coupling agents. They can bend collaboratively in basic or acidic environment to achieve "turn on" motion of capsule switch. By incorporating an array of parallel elastomer-stripes on one side of the hydrogel bilayer, various motions (e.g., bending, twisting, and rolling) of the hydrogel bilayer actuator were achieved. We conducted in vitro lipophilic drug release test. The feasibility of this new drug release method is verified. We believe this dual pH-responsive actuator-controlled drug release method may enlighten the possibilities for various drug delivery systems.

243 sitasi en Medicine, Materials Science
S2 Open Access 2019
Impact of pH on the stability, dissolution and aggregation kinetics of silver nanoparticles.

I. Fernando, Yan Zhou

Widespread usage of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) in consumer products has resulted in their presence in the aquatic environment. The evolution of the properties of AgNPs with changes in pH and time in terms of colloidal stability, dissolution and aggregation were investigated in a series of short and long-term experiments using freshly synthesized uncoated AgNPs. The solution pH modifies the surface charge and the oxidative dissolution of AgNPs. As a result, the particle behavior varied in acidic and alkaline conditions. The particle size decreased with the increasing pH at a given time frame resulting in lower aggregation in the higher pH regime and increased particle stability. These results have been further proved with the direct evidence obtained using time resolved in situ imaging acquired through Liquid cell transmission electron microscopy (LCTEM). Furthermore, the magnitude of the impact of the pH on the particle properties is higher than the impact of the dissolved oxygen concentration. The derived empirical formulae reflect that the AgNP oxidation depends on both dissolved oxygen and protons while the AgNP dissolution increasing with the increase of either of these. Overall, our results highlight the impact of the solution pH on the evolution of the properties of AgNPs over the time and provide an insight to confidently extend the results to predict the environmental transformation of AgNPs from ideal systems to the real.

260 sitasi en Medicine, Chemistry
S2 Open Access 2019
Recent Progress in Electrochemical pH-Sensing Materials and Configurations for Biomedical Applications.

M. Ghoneim, A. Nguyen, N. Dereje et al.

pH-sensing materials and configurations are rapidly evolving toward exciting new applications, especially those in biomedical applications. In this review, we highlight rapid progress in electrochemical pH sensors over the past decade (2008-2018) with an emphasis on key considerations, such as materials selection, system configurations, and testing protocols. In addition to recent progress in optical pH sensors, our main focus in this review is on electromechanical pH sensors due to their significant advances, especially in biomedical applications. We summarize developments of electrochemical pH sensors that by virtue of their optimized material chemistries (from metal oxides to polymers) and geometrical features (from thin films to quantum dots) enable their adoption in biomedical applications. We further present an overview of necessary sensing standards and protocols. Standards ensure the establishment of consistent protocols, facilitating collective understanding of results and building on the current state. Furthermore, they enable objective benchmarking of various pH-sensing reports, materials, and systems, which is critical for the overall progression and development of the field. Additionally, we list critical issues in recent literary reporting and suggest various methods for objective benchmarking. pH regulation in the human body and state-of-the-art pH sensors (from ex vivo to in vivo) are compared for suitability in biomedical applications. We conclude our review by (i) identifying challenges that need to be overcome in electrochemical pH sensing and (ii) providing an outlook on future research along with insights, in which the integration of various pH sensors with advanced electronics can provide a new platform for the development of novel technologies for disease diagnostics and prevention.

238 sitasi en Medicine, Chemistry
arXiv Open Access 2026
Ground Effects of the 2024 Mother's Day Superstorm: A Multi-source Observational Analysis

Yue Chen, Kyoung Ho Kim, Steven K. Morley et al.

This report presents a brief review of the 2024 Mother's Day superstorm and its impacts on the near-Earth space environment and the ground-level effects, with emphasis on the latter. Drawing upon observations from multiple sources. we qualitatively illustrate how intense space weather disturbances can generate strong geoelectric fields and drive pronounced geomagnetically induced currents, as reported at numerous locations, particularly within the New Zealand power grids.

en physics.space-ph, physics.geo-ph

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