Browsing by Subject "Dehydration"
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Item Enabling the selective conversion of biomass-derived oxygenates to C4-C5 dienes(2021-05) Kumar, GauravThe catalytic conversion of biomass-derived saturated furans over zeotype solid acids affords a potentially renewable route to access conjugated C4-C5 dienes — commodity monomers in tires, plastics, adhesives, and resins. A lack of fundamental understanding of reaction mechanisms and pathways coupled with existing trial-and-error catalyst design approaches have limited diene yields to <60%. Poor catalyst lifetimes, attributed to rapid coking typical for oxygenate conversion reactions, have also remained a challenge. Improving the diene yields and mitigating catalyst deactivation are the first key steps to engender industrial interest in the resulting process technology. In this dissertation,we first highlight the mechanistic details of the tandem-ring opening and dehydration of tetrahydrofuran (THF) to butadiene on the aluminosilicate H-ZSM-5, which enable the formulation of the relative ratio of C-O to C-C scission rates as the diene selectivity descriptor. By considering aluminum-, and boron-substituted zeolites in 2-methyltetrahydrofuran (2-MTHF) dehydration to pentadienes, we demonstrate the weakening of solid acid strength as a strategy to tune this descriptor towards dienes’ production. By exploiting the thermodynamic stability of the desirable C5 conjugated diene (1,3-pentadiene), we further explicate strategies harnessing diffusional hurdles to suppress the production of its non-conjugated isomer (1,4-pentadiene). Combined, these insights lead to ~30% improvement in 1,3-pentadiene yield. Having discovered the utility of mild solid acids, we focus the rest of the dissertation on investigating the broad implications of weak surface binding in dehydration catalysis. Using two distinct classes of solid acid zeotype materials with weak Brønsted acidity (namely, borosilicates, and phosphorous-modified zeosils), we detail how these materials can potentially improve dehydration selectivity and stability, albeit often at a cost of lower overall turnover rates. Tying this discussion back to renewable dienes production on these materials, we conclude this work by underscoring the technological and economic improvements still required to achieve competitive diene prices from this process technology.Item Mechanisms and models of dehydration and slow freezing damage to cell membranes(2010-10) Ragoonanan, VishardCell preservation is accomplished primarily by two methods: cryopreservation and dehydration, with the former being the standard technique used. In order to optimize and develop cell preservation protocols for cells that are difficult to preserve or whose end application is incompatible with current cell preservation protocls and to advance preservation by dehydration, a better understanding of the freeze- and dehydration-induced changes to the cell membrane is required. Despite a large body of literature on the topic, the mechanisms of damage to cells during slow freezing and dehydration are still ambiguous. The objective of this study is to investigate the mechanisms of damage to the cell membrane during slow freezing and dehydration and expand our outlook beyond the cell membrane to its underlying support, the cytoskeleton. In this study, we used several model systems to investigate slow freezing and dehydration. We used a liposome model to gather basic information on changes that can occur to a simple membrane system during freezing. This study revealed that eutectic formation was capable of dehydrating the membrane at low temperatures which may be contribute to alteration of the post-thaw membrane structure. We used a bacteria model to investigate the role of the phase transition and immediate versus slow osmotic stress on post-rehydration viability. This study revealed that going through a lyotropic membrane phase transition was detrimental to post-rehydration viability. This study also demonstrated that a rapidly applied osmotic stress was more detrimental to the structure/ organization of the membrane than gradual osmotic stress. We then subjected a model mammalian cell to both hyperosmotic stress and freeze-thaw and investigated both the membrane and cytoskeletal responses. Osmotic stress experiments suggested that alterations in membrane structure (i.e., surface defects and lipid dissolution) were directly dependent on the change in the chemical potential of water. These experiments also suggest that cell shrinkage and the resulting formation of membrane protrusions negatively affect viability upon return to isotonic conditions. It was found that membrane morphology in the dehydrated state and post-hyperosmotic viability was dependent on the stiffness of the cytoskeleton. Freeze/ thaw experiments suggested that ice-cell interaction decreases post-thaw viability. However, similar to osmotic stress experiments, cell shrinkage and cytoskeletal stiffness negatively impact post-thaw viability. We suggest the resulting membrane morphology due to cell shrinkage is also responsible for damage during freeze/ thaw. The various mechanisms discovered and the models proposed can be used in developing new protocols for cell preservation and for cell destruction (e.g. cryosurgery).