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photograph by kmichiels

 
Issue no. 24, 2010
Published: Jul 16, 2010

Alternative nuclear fuel is surprisingly reactive
Artificial lung 'breathes' in rats: study
Graphene soaks up arsenic
Smoke-detector isotope to power space probes
Scientists create cloth that can listen
Old blue jeans recycled as solar panels?
Reconstructed: Archimedes's flaming steam cannon

Alternative nuclear fuel is surprisingly reactive
The threat of climate change and uncertain fossil fuel prices have made nuclear power a tempting option for meeting some of the world's future energy needs. The nuclear industry uses oxides of uranium and plutonium, but some chemists think they could one day be replaced with uranium nitrides. Uranium nitrides are denser and more stable, and conduct heat better than mixed uranium-plutonium oxide fuels – properties that suggest the fuels could run cooler in reactors to generate more energy.

But few uranium nitrides have been produced, and those that have are large and complex, containing many uranium-nitride bonds. Understanding how each bond reacts is critical to predicting its behaviour, both as a nuclear fuel and later as nuclear waste. Now researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory have synthesised a molecule complex that is the first known to contain just a single, isolated uranium-nitride bond.

The team created the uranium nitride unit by firing photons at a complex containing uranium azide, molecules of which are made of one uranium atom joined to a chain of three nitrogen atoms. The light excited the electrons in the complex and caused the release of two nitrogen atoms, leaving a triple-bonded uranium nitride molecule.

The team was surprised to find that the uranium nitride molecules subsequently reacted with carbon-hydrogen bonds elsewhere within the molecule complex. Such bonds are strong, and normally almost entirely inert. Understanding the molecule's reactivity could have implications for how nuclear fuels composed of uranium nitride are stored before and after use.
New Scientist / Nature Chemistry    Jul 13, 2010 back to top

Artificial lung 'breathes' in rats: study
US researchers have created a primitive artificial lung that rats used to breathe for several hours and said on Tuesday it may be a step in the development of new organs grown from a patient's own cells. The finding is the second in a month from researchers seeking ways to regenerate lungs from ordinary cells.

Researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston removed the cells from rat lungs to leave a scaffolding or matrix. They soaked these in a bioreactor along with several types of human lung cells, creating pressures to simulate the pressure inside a body to make the lung workable and flexible. The cells took up residence and grew into different tissue types seen in a lung. When transplanted into rats, they worked for about six hours, although imperfectly.

The researchers said it may be possible to try the experiment with more immature stem cells, the body's master cells. These could include embryonic stem cells, which can mature into any cell type in the body, or induced pluripotent stem cells - ordinary cells with genes added to make them behave like flexible stem cells.

Last month, a team at Yale University implanted engineered lung tissue into rats that helped the animals breathe for two hours.
Reuters / Nature Medicine    Jul 13, 2010 back to top

Graphene soaks up arsenic
Researchers have found yet another use for the wonder material graphene. A composite material made from reduced graphene oxide and magnetite could effectively remove arsenic from drinking water. Arsenic is one of the most carcinogenic elements known and is toxic above 10 ppb.

Graphene is a sheet of carbon just one atom thick that also exists as an oxide. Reduced graphene oxide (RGO) is a chemical state of the material that has gained electrons. The purification process works by dispersing a magnetite-RGO composite in water, where it soaks up arsenic. The composite is then quickly and efficiently removed from the water using a permanent magnet.

Arsenic can be removed from drinking water by using activated carbon or precipitating it out with iron minerals, such as iron oxides – for example, magnetite (Fe3O4) nanocrystals. However, such particles cannot be used in rivers, or other environments where water flows, because of their small size and the fact that magnetite rapidly oxidizes when exposed to the atmosphere. Researchers have recently overcome the latter problem by combining iron oxides with carbon and carbon nanotubes, and graphene-based materials such as graphene oxide.

Building on this work, researchers at Pohang University of Science and Technology in South Korea have created a new type of magnetite composite based on RGO. The hybrid material, which is superparamagnetic at room temperature, can remove over 99.9% of arsenic in a sample and reduce its concentration to below 1 ppb.
PhysicsWorld / ACS Nano    Jul 12, 2010 back to top

Smoke-detector isotope to power space probes
What do spacecraft and smoke alarms have in common? A material commonly used to detect smoke on Earth could soon power robotic missions to other planets.

Previous spacecraft travelling to the outer solar system have been powered by the decay of plutonium-238. The isotope is running out, though and this could mean that there will not be enough plutonium-238 for a joint NASA and European Space Agency mission to Jupiter and its icy moon, Europa, which is planned for launch around 2020.

ESA now plans to build up an alternative supply of americium-241. In smoke detectors, the material's decay helps to make ions that trigger an alarm when smoke particles attach to them. Americium-241 decays more slowly than plutonium-238, potentially allowing for longer missions, says Ralph McNutt of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, who co-authored a report on the plutonium-238 shortage in the US.

On the downside, it takes more of the material to supply one unit of power, which could be a drawback for space missions, in which weight must be kept at a minimum.
New Scientist    Jul 14, 2010 back to top

Scientists create cloth that can listen
Scientists at MIT have created a cloth that gives a whole new meaning to the phrase power dressing. The team has created a type of functional fibre that can detect and produce sound.

According to the researchers, applications could include clothes that are themselves sensitive microphones, for capturing speech or monitoring bodily functions, and tiny filaments that could measure blood flow in capillaries or pressure in the brain. The decade-old research project aims to develop fibres with ever more sophisticated properties, to enable fabrics that can interact with their environment, they say.

The new fibres are based on a similar plastic used in microphones. Researchers manipulated the fluorine content to ensure its molecules stayed lopsided. That imbalance makes the plastic piezoelectric, meaning it changes shape when an electric field is applied.

In addition to wearable microphones and biological sensors, applications of the fibres could include loose nets that monitor the flow of water in the ocean and large-area sonar imaging systems with much higher resolutions, the researchers say. A fabric woven from acoustic fibres would provide the equivalent of millions of tiny acoustic sensors.
ABCnet / AFP / Nature Materials    Jul 13, 2010 back to top

Old blue jeans recycled as solar panels?
Researchers at Cornell University have discovered a way to use the molecules typically found in blue jean dyes to make an organic, flexible framework that researchers hope to translate to better solar cells.

Today's solar cells are mostly made from silicon, but they can be heavy, inflexible and inefficient. The researchers organised the dye molecules into a covalent organic framework (COF), a bonded material that is very light, porous and strong.

The process used an acid catalyst to reorder the molecules into a two-dimensional sheet. The sheets were then stacked on top of each other to make a crosshatched framework pathway to conduct the electrical charge. The scientists used phthalocyanine, a molecule used to make blue and green dyes in plastics and jeans.

The structure by itself is not a solar cell, but it is a model that will significantly broaden the scope of materials that can be used in COFs, according to the researchers. The next step is to begin testing ways of filling the crosshatched framework with other organic molecules that could lead to a flexible, lightweight material for solar cells.
MSNBC / Nature Chemistry    Jul 07, 2010 back to top

Reconstructed: Archimedes's flaming steam cannon
The ancient Greek inventor Archimedes is said to have built fantastic machines of war, ranging from catapults to giant claws, that were used against the Romans during their siege of Syracuse, Sicily, in the third century BC. One of the most controversial stories is that Archimedes set fire to Roman ships by focusing the sun's rays onto them with concave mirrors. Sceptics say it would be impossible to use mirrors to keep the sun's rays focused on a moving ship. What's more, they say, the fires would start slowly and could easily be put out by those on board.

Now Cesare Rossi of the University of Naples Federico II suggests an alternative scenario. He points out that several scholars, including Petrarch and Da Vinci, wrote that Archimedes invented a cannon which used pressurised steam to force a projectile out of the barrel at high speed. In 2006 a team at the MIT constructed such a cannon to their own design and successfully tested it. Rossi reckons that steam cannon could explain the mirror legend. He suggests that such a cannon could have been heated by sun-focusing mirrors, while the projectiles would have been hollow and filled with an incendiary fluid – perhaps a mixture of sulphur, bitumen, pitch and calcium oxide.

Although using mirrors in this way might seem impractical, Rossi says it would have made sense for the Syracusans to avoid using open fires as the cannons would have been positioned on the city walls, on platforms made of wood. Rossi calculates that a cannonball measuring 20 centimetres across would have weighed around 6 kilograms and could have been fired from the gun at 60 metres per second. A gun positioned 10 metres above sea level and firing at an angle of 10 degrees to the horizontal would have had a range of around 150 metres.
New Scientist    Jul 13, 2010 back to top
 
         
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