色一区二区-色一色在线观看视频网站-色一级-色一涩-日韩欧美一区二区三区四区-日韩欧美一区二区三区在线观看

新聞動(dòng)態(tài)
NEWS
Location:Chinese Academy of Sciences > NEWS  > News in field Carbon Nanotubes

Car’s Catalytic Converter Produces Carbon Nanotubes

Come: Chinese Academy of Sciences    Date: 2015-10-28 09:27:00


Cars appear to produce carbon nanotubes, and some of the evidence has been found in human lungs.

Carbon nanotubes (the long rods) and nanoparticles (the black clumps) appear in vehicle exhaust taken from the tailpipes of cars in Paris. The image is part of a study by scientists in Paris and at Rice University to analyze carbonaceous material in the lungs of asthma patients. They found that cars are a likely source of nanotubes found in the patients. (Courtesy of Fathi Moussa/Paris-Saclay University)

 

Rice University scientists working with colleagues in France have detected the presence of man-made carbon nanotubes in cells extracted from the airways of Parisian children under routine treatment for asthma. Further investigation found similar nanotubes in samples from the exhaust pipes of Paris vehicles and in dust gathered from various places around the city.

The researchers reported in the journal EBioMedicine this month that these samples align with what has been found elsewhere, including Rices home city of Houston, in spider webs in India and in ice cores.

The research in no way ascribes the childrens conditions to the nanotubes, said Rice chemist Lon Wilson, a corresponding author of the new paper. But the nanotubes apparent ubiquity should be the focus of further investigation, he said.

“We know that carbon nanoparticles are found in nature,” Wilson said, noting that round fullerene molecules like those discovered at Rice are commonly produced by volcanoes, forest fires and other combustion of carbon materials. “All you need is a little catalysis to make carbon nanotubes instead of fullerenes.”

A cars catalytic converter, which turns toxic carbon monoxide into safer emissions, bears at least a passing resemblance to the Rice-invented high-pressure carbon monoxide, or HiPco, process to make carbon nanotubes, he said. “So it is not a big surprise, when you think about it,” Wilson said.

The team led by Wilson, Fathi Moussa of Paris-Saclay University and lead author Jelena Kolosnjaj-Tabi, a graduate student at Paris-Saclay, analyzed particulate matter found in the alveolar macrophage cells (also known as dust cells) that help stop foreign materials like particles and bacteria from entering the lungs.

The researchers wrote that their results “suggest humans are routinely exposed” to carbon nanotubes. They also suggested previous studies that link the carbon content of airway macrophages and the decline of lung function should be reconsidered in light of the new findings. Moussa confirmed his lab will continue to study the impact of man-made nanotubes on health.

The cells were taken from 69 randomly selected asthma patients aged 2 to 17 who underwent routine fiber-optic bronchoscopies as part of their treatment. For ethical reasons, no cells from healthy patients were analyzed, but because nanotubes were found in all of the samples, the study led the researchers to conclude that carbon nanotubes are likely to be found in everybody.

The study notes but does not make definitive conclusions about the controversial proposition that carbon nanotube fibers may act like asbestos, a proven carcinogen. But the authors reminded that “long carbon nanotubes and large aggregates of short ones can induce a granulomatous (inflammation) reaction.”

The study partially answers the question of what makes up the black material inside alveolar macrophages, the original focus of the study. The researchers found single-walled and multiwalled carbon nanotubes and amorphous carbon among the cells, as well as in samples swabbed from the tailpipes of cars in Paris and dust from various buildings in and around the city.

“The concentrations of nanotubes are so low in these samples that its hard to believe they would cause asthma, but you never know,” Wilson said. “What surprised me the most was that carbon nanotubes were the major component of the carbonaceous pollution we found in the samples.”

The nanotube aggregates in the cells ranged in size from 10 to 60 nanometers in diameter and up to several hundred nanometers in length, small enough that optical microscopes would not have been able to identify them in samples from former patients. The new study used more sophisticated tools, including high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, X-ray spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy and near-infrared fluorescence microscopy to definitively identify them in the cells and in the environmental samples.

“We collected samples from the exhaust pipes of cars in Paris as well as from busy and non-busy intersections there and found the same type of structures as in the human samples,” Wilson said.

“It’s kind of ironic. In our laboratory, working with carbon nanotubes, we wear facemasks to prevent exactly what we are seeing in these samples, yet everyone walking around out there in the world probably has at least a small concentration of carbon nanotubes in their lungs,” he said.

The researchers also suggested that the large surface areas of nanotubes and their ability to adhere to substances may make them effective carriers for other pollutants.

The study followed one released by Rice and Baylor College of Medicine earlier this month with the similar goal of analyzing the black substance found in the lungs of smokers who died of emphysema. That study found carbon black nanoparticles that were the product of the incomplete combustion of such organic material as tobacco.

Wilson, a professor of chemistry at Rice, and Moussa, a professor of analytical chemistry at Paris-Saclay University and a clinical biologist at the Department of Biochemistry at the Hôpitaux de Paris, are co-principal investigators of the study.

Co-authors are Henri Szwarc of Paris-Saclay University; Jocelyne Just, Yacine Laoudi and Sabah Boudjemaa, physicians at the Paediatric Pulmonology and Allergy Center and the Department of Anatomo-Pathology of the Groupe hospitalier La Roche-Guyon – A. Trousseau (Hôpitaux de Paris); Rice alumnus Keith Hartman, a former graduate student in the Wilson group; and Damien Alloyeau of Paris Diderot University.

< Previous New Report on the Global Market for C...IBM Breakthrough Could Accelerate Car... Next >

?
Tel:+86-28-85241016,+86-28-85236765    Fax:+86-28-85215069,+86-28-85223978    E-mail:[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]
QQ:800069832    Technical Support ac57.com
Copyright © Chengdu Organic Chemicals Co. Ltd., Chinese Academy of Sciences 2003-2025. manage 蜀ICP備05020035號(hào)-3
主站蜘蛛池模板: 在线观看二区三区午夜 | 911国产自产精选 | 国产午夜毛片一区二区三区 | 精品在线观看免费 | 全部免费a级毛片 | 久久99国产乱子伦精品免费 | 国内自拍tv在线 | 毛片手机在线观看 | 最新三级网址 | 91最新地址永久入口 | 国产三级精品久久三级国专区 | 久草网视频在线观看 | 一级黑人| 综合精品在线 | 高清在线观看自拍视频 | 国产精品美女久久久久网站 | 欧美成人观看视频在线 | 国产精品亚洲第一区二区三区 | 在线免费观看国产视频 | 美国一级大黄香蕉片 | 国产成人高清亚洲一区久久 | 黄色在线视频网 | 在线观看日本免费视频大片一区 | 午夜三级理论在线观看视频 | 呦女精品视频 | 国产v精品成人免费视频400条 | 中文字幕日韩精品有码视频 | 亚洲不卡在线观看 | 亚洲九九夜夜 | 午夜免费理论片a级 | 日韩黄色片在线观看 | 国产精品久久久久久福利漫画 | 伊人一级| 日本免费视频观看在线播放 | 成人精品亚洲人成在线 | 久草在在线视频 | 久久久精品影院 | 国产精品视_精品国产免费 国产精品视频久 | aaa级精品久久久国产片 | 手机免费黄色网址 | 美一级片|