Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles


Book Description

In recent years, the fabrication of nanoparticles and exploration of their properties have attracted the attention of physicists, chemists, biologists and engineers. Interest in nanoparticles arise from the fact that the mechanical, chemical, electrical, optical, magnetic, electro-optical and magneto-optical properties of these particles are different from their bulk properties and depend on the particle size. There are numerous areas where nanoparticulate systems are of scientific and technological interest. This book reviews research on the various components of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles.










Engineering Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles for Environmental Applications


Book Description

Engineered, superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) have drawn considerable research attention for a broad range of applications based on tunable size and shape, surface chemistries, and magnetic properties. For successful aqueous-based, environmental applications, it is necessary to overcome two, fundamental, yet interconnected challenges: 1) Design and synthesize material which provides information about or effectively induces a relevant reactive pathway at/to the targeted regimes/species, while 2.) Simultaneously, controlling particle stability in/at relevant environmental matrixes/interfaces. In this work, highly monodispersed, single domain, superparamagnetic IONPs, were developed via high temperature decomposition of iron carboxylate salts in an organic phase, with material size (8-40 nm) and morphology precisely controlled through the ratio of precursors, heating rates, reaction times, and addition of cosurfactants (additives). For aqueous evaluation and application, materials were rendered water stable through the development of 13 unique surface bilayer strategies, which were focused on a tunable series of ionic surfactants, varying in chain length, functional group, hydrophobicity, and surface charge. For each bilayer strategy, 8 nm, spherical IONP suspensions were fully characterized with regard to transfer efficiency (into the aqueous phase), aggregation kinetics (varying ionic types/strengths), and long-term aqueous stabilities. Further, for IONPs with oleic acid bilayer coatings, before and after surface (oxidative) aging, extensive evaluation of surface/collector deposition and release behaviors and processes over a range of water chemistries and surface types (hydrophilic vs. hydrophobic) are described using quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) based techniques, among others, highlighting critical aspects of interfacial dynamics for these systems. Finally, IONPs are demonstrated as a platform material for uranyl sorption and separation from water. Specifically, (bilayer) surface optimized, 8-30 nm monodisperse IONPs demonstrate ultra-high uranyl sorption capacities (>50% by wt/wt in some cases). Synchrotron-based X-ray absorption spectroscopic (EXAFS and XANES) analyses indicate that particle size and stabilizing surface functional group(s) significantly affect binding mechanism(s) (e.g. redox based reactions).







Iron Oxide Nanoparticles and Their Applications


Book Description

Iron oxide nanoparticles demonstrate a number of unique properties, including superparamagnetism, biocompatibility, and non-toxicity, which make them an ideal candidate for a variety of applications, as described in this book. Chapter One deals with the recent advances in various synthetic procedures of iron oxide-based nanocomposites, their characterization methods, and their potential applications in energy storage devices, supercapacitors, fuel cells, and more. Chapter Two summarizes current applications of immobilized enzymes based on iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles and discusses future growth prospects. Chapter Three reviews the properties and applications of enzymatic sensors in exploiting tyrosinase, glucose oxidase, and other enzymes for sensing a broad range of biomedical species. Chapter Four discusses magnetic magnetite and maghemite iron oxide nanoparticles from a variety of perspectives. Chapter Five describes how nano iron oxides could be used to remove pollutants from the environment. Chapter Six provides a comprehensive review of the catalytic applications of iron oxide nanoparticles in organic synthesis, high temperature reactions, gas-phase processes, wastewater treatment and supercritical upgradation of heavy petroleum oils. Chapter Seven details the photocatalytic degradation of a class of toxic, aromatic pollutants, namely, phenols and substituted phenols using different types of photocatalysts in the nano size range for effective removal these compounds from water bodies. Lastly, Chapter Eight elucidates various magnetic nanomaterials-based adsorbents used in adsorption techniques for wastewater treatment.




Bio-inspired Information and Communication Technologies


Book Description

This book constitutes the refereed conference proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Bio-inspired Information and Communications Technologies, held in Shanghai, China, in July 2020. Due to the safety concerns and travel restrictions caused by COVID-19, BICT 2020 took place online in a live stream. BICT 2020 aims to provide a world-leading and multidisciplinary venue for researchers and practitioners in diverse disciplines that seek the understanding of key principles, processes and mechanisms in biological systems and leverage those understandings to develop novel information and communications technologies (ICT). The 20 full and 8 short papers were carefully revied and selected from 56 submissions. In addition to the main track targeting broad and mainstream research topics, BICT 2020 includes four special tracks with focused research topics on internet of everything, intelligent internet of things and network applications, intelligent sensor network, and data-driven intelligent modeling, application and optimization.