The effect of acid and alkaline activation of complex natural aluminosilicate sorbent on its chemical composition, surface properties, and adsorption capacity towards ammonium ions was studied. An increase in specific surface area of the sorbent by 1.3 times after acid treatment and by 1.5 times after alkaline activation was shown. The change of ion-exchange complex of sorbent as a result of activation was observed. Sorption isotherms of ammonium ions on natural and activated samples were obtained and were satisfactorily described by the Langmuir equation. The evaluation and comparison of desorbed cations of alkali and alkaline earth metals were carried out. It was confirmed that ion-exchange processes primarily contributed to sorption of ammonium ions by natural and acid-activated silica-alumina, in contrast to alkali-activated one, for which absorption of nonexchangeable ammonium ions increased adsorption capacity of ammonium ions by 1.5 times.
The Advanced Radiographic Capability (ARC) laser system at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) is designed to ultimately provide eight beamlets with a pulse duration adjustable from 1 to 30 ps, and energies up to 1.5 kJ per beamlet. Currently, four beamlets have been commissioned. In the first set of 6 commissioning target experiments, the individual beamlets were fired onto gold foil targets with energy up to 1 kJ per beamlet at 20–30 ps pulse length. The x-ray energy distribution and pulse duration were measured, yielding energy conversion efficiencies of 4–9 × 10−4 for x-rays with energies greater than 70 keV. With greater than 3 J of such x-rays, ARC provides a high-precision x-ray backlighting capability for upcoming inertial confinement fusion and high-energy-density physics experiments on NIF.
We studied the properties of various fused combinations of the components of the mitochondrial cholesterol side-chain cleavage system including cytochrome P450scc, adrenodoxin (Adx), and adrenodoxin reductase (AdR). When recombinant DNAs encoding these constructs were expressed in Escherichia coli, both cholesterol side-chain cleavage activity and sensitivity to intracellular proteolysis of the three-component fusions depended on the species of origin and the arrangement of the constituents. To understand the assembly of the catalytic domains in the fused molecules, we analyzed the catalytic properties of three two-component fusions: P450scc-Adx, Adx-P450scc, and AdR-Adx. We examined the ability of each fusion to carry out the side-chain cleavage reaction in the presence of the corresponding missing component of the whole system and examined the dependence of this reaction on the presence of exogenously added individual components of the double fusions. This analysis indicated that the active centers in the double fusions are either unable to interact or are misfolded; in some cases they were inaccessible to exogenous partners. Our data suggest that when fusion proteins containing P450scc, Adx, and AdR undergo protein folding, the corresponding catalytic domains are not formed independently of each other. Thus, the correct folding and catalytic activity of each domain is determined interactively and not independently.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.