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The heterogeneous reaction of O3 with lauric acid/oleic acid (LA/OA) mixtures and myristic acid/oleic acid (MA/OA) mixtures were studied as a function of composition, physical state, and microstructure at 298 K. Lauric acid and myristic acid are both alkanoic acids, whereas oleic acid is an alkenoic acid. Additionally, we investigated the uptake of O3 by multicomponent mixtures that closely represent the composition of meat-cooking aerosols. These measurements were performed with a rotating-wall flow-tube reactor coupled to a chemical ionization mass spectrometer. The reactive uptake coefficients (gamma) of O3 on liquid LA/OA and MA/OA solutions range from 4 x 10(-4) to 7.2 x 10(-4). The gamma values measured for solid-liquid LA/OA and MA/OA mixtures (which consist of solid LA or solid MA in equilibrium with a liquid) range from 2 x 10(-5) to 1.7 x 10(-4). These experiments show that only 7% solid by mass in the solid-liquid mixture can decrease gamma by an order of magnitude compared to the liquid mixtures. The gamma values for solid-liquid mixtures that closely represent the composition of meat-cooking aerosols range from 1.6 x 10(-5) to 6.9 x 10(-5). We found that gamma of solid-liquid mixtures depends on the microstructure of the mixtures, which in turn depends on the method of preparing the films. Furthermore, experiments employing solid-liquid mixtures show an increase in gamma with increasing film age. This can be explained either by the formation of a nonequilibrium phase followed by its relaxation to the stable phase or by Ostwald's ripening, which refers to a change in the solid microstructure due to a tendency to minimize the total surface free energy of the solid. We used the obtained gamma values to estimate OA lifetimes for polluted atmospheric conditions. For liquid solutions, the lifetimes were on the order of a few minutes. The lifetimes derived for solid-liquid mixtures are up to 75 min, significantly longer than for liquid solutions. Our study emphasizes the effect of the physical state and microstructure of multicomponent mixtures on the heterogeneous chemistry.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp0512513 | DOI Listing |
Nat Protoc
August 2025
Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA.
The surface chemistry of catalyst nanoparticles is crucial for understanding catalytic mechanisms of reactions significant for chemical transformation, energy conversion and environmental sustainability. To enable a high-vacuum X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) system to characterize nanoparticle surfaces in liquid or gas phase using a differentially pumped energy analyzer, major and substantial modifications to the high-vacuum XPS instrumentation are required. In this protocol we describe a membrane-separated cell-based XPS approach that allows characterization of the surface of catalyst nanoparticles dispersed in a flowing liquid or gas (at 2 bar) without any instrumental modification to a high-vacuum X-ray photoelectron spectrometer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood Chem
August 2025
Laboratory of Extraction, Applied Thermodynamics and Equilibrium, Department of Food Engineering and Technology, Faculty of Food Engineering, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, UNICAMP, 13083-862, Campinas, SP, Brazil. Electronic address:
Triacylglycerols (TAGs) can form different structures in their solid phase affecting physical/sensorial properties of lipid-based products. Biocompounds, such as monoterpenes, can act as lipids' crystallization modifiers, modulating these properties, while the solid-liquid equilibrium (SLE) theory can broaden the understanding of the physicochemical mechanisms involved. This work evaluated SLE phase diagrams for binary mixtures composed of TAGs (trilaurin, tripalmitin, trimyristin) and α-pinene, main monoterpene found in several essential oils, unveiling how it influences fats' melting/crystallization characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
July 2025
Department of Environmental Chemistry, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Lodz, 163/165 Pomorska Str., 90-236 Łódź, Poland.
The article presents the first method based on high-performance liquid chromatography and ultraviolet detection (HPLC-UV) for the determination of timonacic (thioproline, 1,3-thiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid, tPro) in pharmaceutical tablets and face care products (creams, sera, foundations, suncreams). Sample preparation primarily involves solid-liquid extraction (SLE) of tPro with 0.2 mol/L phosphate buffer pH 6, derivatization with 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntioxidants (Basel)
June 2025
Faculty of Pharmacy, "Victor Babes" University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 2 Eftimie Murgu Square, 300041 Timisoara, Romania.
We conducted a study to explore the potential of an enriched coumarin extract from for the prevention and treatment of various diseases. The extract was prepared using pressurized cyclic solid-liquid extraction, and its safety profile was thoroughly evaluated using both cellular and embryonic models. Our main goal was to uncover a mixture of bioactive compounds that could offer therapeutic benefits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
December 2025
Institute for Fluid Mechanics and Aerodynamics, Technical University of Darmstadt, Peter-Grünberg-Straße 10, Darmstadt, 64287, Germany. Electronic address:
Hypothesis: Ice accretion on cold solid surfaces, often resulting from the impact and freezing of supercooled water drops (SLD), poses critical challenges in aviation, energy systems, and infrastructure. In practice, some drops freeze with dendritic structures-forming a solid-liquid mixture (mushy region) that may cause refreezing downstream (runback ice)-while others freeze without dendrites. We hypothesize this depends on the relative thicknesses of the propagating ice layer and the supercooled liquid layer.
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