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index.feed.received.today — 13 mars 2025
index.feed.received.yesterday — 12 mars 2025

Trump officials to reconsider whether greenhouse gases cause harm amid climate rollbacks

12 mars 2025 à 21:55

Activists horrified as EPA reverses pollution laws and reviews landmark finding that gases harm public health

Donald Trump’s administration is to reconsider the official finding that greenhouse gases are harmful to public health, a move that threatens to rip apart the foundation of the US’s climate laws, amid a stunning barrage of actions to weaken or repeal a host of pollution limits upon power plants, cars and waterways.

Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued an extraordinary cavalcade of pollution rule rollbacks on Wednesday, led by the announcement it would potentially scrap a landmark 2009 finding by the US government that planet-heating gases, such carbon dioxide, pose a threat to human health.

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© Photograph: Gary Hershorn/Getty Images

© Photograph: Gary Hershorn/Getty Images

Plastic pollution leaves seabirds with brain damage similar to Alzheimer’s, study shows

12 mars 2025 à 19:00

Blood tests on migratory chicks fed plastics by their parents show neurodegeneration, as well as cell rupture and stomach lining decay

Ingesting plastic is leaving seabird chicks with brain damage “akin to Alzheimer’s disease”, according to a new study – adding to growing evidence of the devastating impact of plastic pollution on marine wildlife.

Analysis of young sable shearwaters, a migratory bird that travels between Australia’s Lord Howe Island and Japan, has found that plastic waste is causing damage to seabird chicks not apparent to the naked eye, including decay of the stomach lining, cell rupture and neurodegeneration.

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© Photograph: Southern Lightscapes-Australia/Getty Images

© Photograph: Southern Lightscapes-Australia/Getty Images

Trump’s ‘drill, baby, drill’ agenda could keep the world hooked on oil and gas

12 mars 2025 à 12:00

The US president is making energy deals with Japan and Ukraine, and in Africa has even touted resurrecting coal

Donald Trump’s repeated mantra of “drill, baby, drill” demands that more oil and gas be extracted in the United States, but the president has set his sights on an even broader goal: keeping the world hooked on planet-heating fossil fuels for as long as possible.

In deals being formulated with countries such as Japan and Ukraine, Trump is using US leverage in tariffs and military aid to bolster the flow of oil and gas around the world. In Africa, his administration has even touted the resurrection of coal, the dirtiest of all fossil fuels, to bring energy to the continent.

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© Composite: The Washington Post, Getty Images

© Composite: The Washington Post, Getty Images

index.feed.received.before_yesterday

Controlled-release fertilizers can spread microplastics on US cropland – study

11 mars 2025 à 13:00

Tiny bits of plastic can end up in water and soil at alarming levels, said lead author of University of Missouri paper

Fertilizers that shed microplastics are increasingly spreading on America’s cropland, research shows, raising new worry about the soil contamination and safety of the US food supply.

A peer-reviewed University of Missouri paper found common types of controlled-release fertilizers are often encapsulated with plastic and can be so small that they could be considered microplastics. Those are designed to break down into even smaller pieces of plastic once spread in fields.

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© Photograph: UCG/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

© Photograph: UCG/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Cyanure de sodium : quels sont les dangers ?

11 mars 2025 à 14:48
Un cargo transportant du cyanure de sodium et un pétrolier affrété par l'armée américaine sont entrés en collision le 10 mars 2025 en mer du Nord au large de l'Angleterre, entraînant un énorme incendie et une fuite de kérosène. Qu'est-ce que le cyanure de sodium ? Quels sont les dangers ? Sciences et Avenir fait le point.

Cyanure de sodium : quels sont les dangers ?

11 mars 2025 à 14:48
Un cargo transportant du cyanure de sodium et un pétrolier affrété par l'armée américaine sont entrés en collision le 10 mars 2025 en mer du Nord au large de l'Angleterre, entraînant un énorme incendie et une fuite de kérosène. Qu'est-ce que le cyanure de sodium ? Quels sont les dangers ? Sciences et Avenir fait le point.

Ce que l'on sait sur la collision entre un pétrolier et un cargo en mer du Nord

Un cargo transportant du cyanure de sodium et un pétrolier affrété par l'armée américaine sont entrés en collision lundi en mer du Nord au large de l'Angleterre, entraînant un énorme incendie et une fuite de kérosène. Un membre d'équipage est porté disparu et une trentaine d'autres ont été secourus.

Ce que l'on sait sur la collision entre un pétrolier et un cargo en mer du Nord

Un cargo transportant du cyanure de sodium et un pétrolier affrété par l'armée américaine sont entrés en collision lundi en mer du Nord au large de l'Angleterre, entraînant un énorme incendie et une fuite de kérosène. Un membre d'équipage est porté disparu et une trentaine d'autres ont été secourus.

Only seven countries worldwide meet WHO dirty air guidelines, study shows

Annual survey by IQAir based on toxic PM2.5 particles reveals some progress in pollution levels in India and China

Nearly every country on Earth has dirtier air than doctors recommend breathing, a report has found.

Only seven countries met the World Health Organization’s guidelines for tiny toxic particles known as PM2.5 last year, according to analysis from the Swiss air quality technology company IQAir.

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© Photograph: Idrees Mohammed/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Idrees Mohammed/AFP/Getty Images

Filter inspired by deep-sea sponge cleans up oil spills

30 janvier 2025 à 14:00

Oil spills can pollute large volumes of surrounding water – thousands of times greater than the spill itself – causing long-term economic, environmental, social and ecological damage. Effective methods for in situ capture of spilled oil are thus essential to minimize contamination from such disasters.

Many oil spill cleanup technologies, however, exhibit poor hydrodynamic stability under complex flow conditions, which leads to poor oil-capture efficiency. To address this shortfall, researchers from Harbin Institute of Technology in China have come up with a new approach to oil cleanup using a vortex-anchored filter (VAF).

“Since the 1979 Atlantic Empress disaster, interception and adsorption have been the primary methods for oil spill recovery, but these are sensitive to water-flow fluctuation,” explains lead author Shijie You. Oil-in-water emulsions from leaking pipelines and offshore industrial discharge are particularly challenging, says You, adding that “these problems inspire us to consider how we can address hydrodynamic stability of oil-capture devices under turbulent conditions”.

Inspired by the natural world

You and colleagues believe that the answers to oil spill challenges could come from nature – arguably the world’s greatest scientist. They found that the deep-sea glass sponge E. aspergillum, which lives at depths of up to 1000 m in the Pacific Ocean, has an excellent ability to filter feed with a high effectiveness, selectivity and robustness, and that its food particles share similarities with oil droplets.

The anatomical structure of E. aspergillum – also known as Venus’ flower basket – provided inspiration for the researchers to design their VAF. By mimicking the skeletal architecture and filter feeding patterns of the sponge, they created a filter that exhibited a high mass transfer and hydrodynamic stability in cleaning up oil spills under turbulent flow.

“The E. aspergillum has a multilayered skeleton–flagellum architecture, which creates 3D streamlines with frequent collision, deflection, convergence and separation,” explains You. “This can dissipate macro-scale turbulent flows into small-scale swirling flow patterns called low-speed vortical flows within the body cavity, which reduces hydrodynamic load and enhances interfacial mass transfer.”

For the sponges, this allows them to maintain a high mechanical stability while absorbing nutrients from the water. The same principles can be applied to synthetic materials for cleaning up oil spills.

Design of the vortex-anchored filter
VAF design Skeletal motif of E. aspergillum and (right column) front and top views of the VAF with a bio-inspired hollow cylinder skeleton and flagellum adsorbent. (Courtesy: Y Yu et al. Nat. Commun. 10.1038/s41467-024-55587-y)

The VAF is a synthetic form of the sponge’s architecture and, according to You, “is capable of transferring kinematic energy from an external water flow into multiple small-scale low-speed vortical flows within the body cavity to enhance hydrodynamic stability and oil capture efficiency”.

The tubular outer skeleton of the VAF comprises a helical ridge and chequerboard lattice. It is this skeleton that creates a slow vortex field inside the cavity and enables mass transfer of oil during the filtering process. Once the oil has been forced into the filter, the internal area – composed of flagellum-shaped adsorbent materials – provides a large interfacial area for oil adsorption.

Using the VAF to clean up oil spills

The researchers used their nature-inspired VAF to clean up oil spills under complex hydrodynamic conditions. You states that “the VAF can retain the external turbulent-flow kinetic energy in the low-speed vortical flows – with a small Kolmogorov microscale (85 µm) [the size of the smallest eddy in a turbulent flow] – inside the cavity of the skeleton, leading to enhanced interfacial mass transfer and residence time”.

“This led to an improvement in the hydrodynamic stability of the filter compared to other approaches by reducing the Reynolds stresses in nearly quiescent wake flows,” You explains. The filter was also highly resistant to bending stresses caused at the boundary of the filter when trying separate viscous fluids. When put into practice, the VAF was able to capture more than 97% of floating, underwater and emulsified oils, even under strong turbulent flow.

When asked how the researchers plan to improve the filter further, You tells Physics World that they “will integrate the VAF with photothermal, electrothermal and electrochemical modules for environmental remediation and resource recovery”.

“We look forward to applying VAF-based technologies to solve sea pollution problems with a filter that has an outstanding flexibility and adaptability, easy-to-handle operability and scalability, environmental compatibility and life-cycle sustainability,” says You.

The research is published in Nature Communications.

The post Filter inspired by deep-sea sponge cleans up oil spills appeared first on Physics World.

Supramolecular biomass foam removes microplastics from water

23 décembre 2024 à 15:00

A reusable and biodegradable fibrous foam developed by researchers at Wuhan University in China can remove up to 99.8% of microplastics from polluted water. The foam, which is made from a self-assembled network of chitin and cellulose obtained from biomass wastes, has been successfully field-tested in four natural aquatic environments.

The amount of plastic waste in the environment has reached staggering levels and is now estimated at several billion metric tons. This plastic degrades extremely slowly and poses a hazard for ecosystems throughout its lifetime. Aquatic life is particularly vulnerable, as micron-sized plastic particles can combine with other pollutants in water and be ingested by a wide range of organisms. Removing these microplastic particles would help limit the damage, but standard filtration technologies are ineffective as the particles are so small.

A highly porous interconnected structure

The new adsorbent developed by Wuhan’s Hongbing Deng and colleagues consists of intertwined beta-chitin nanofibre sheets (obtained from squid bone) with protonated amines and suspended cellulose fibres (obtained from cotton). This structure contains a number of functional groups, including -OH, -NH3+ and -NHCO- that allow the structure to self-assemble into a highly porous interconnected network.

This self-assembly is important, Deng explains, because it means the foam does not require “complex processing (no cross-linking and minimal use of chemical reagents) or adulteration with toxic or expensive substances,” he tells Physics World.

The functional groups make the surface of the foam rough and positively charged, providing numerous sites that can interact and adsorb plastic particles ranging in size from less than 100 nm to over 1000 microns. Deng explains that multiple mechanisms are at work during this process, including physical interception, electrostatic attraction and intermolecular interactions. The latter group includes interactions that involv hydrogen bonding, van der Waals forces and weak hydrogen bonding interactions (between OH and CH groups, for example).

The researchers tested their foam in lake water, coastal water, still water (a small pond) and water used for agricultural irrigation. They also combined these systematic adsorption experiments with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and Hirshfeld partition (IGMH) calculations to better understand how the foam was working.

They found that the foam can adsorb a variety of nanoplastics and microplastics, including the polystyrene, polymethyl methacrylate, polypropylene and polyethylene terephthalate found in everyday objects such as electronic components, food packaging and textiles. Importantly, the foam can adsorb these plastics even in water bodies polluted with toxic metals such as lead and chemical dyes. It adsorbed nearly 100% of the particles in its first cycle and around 96-98% of the particles over the following five cycles.

“The great potential of biomass”

Because the raw materials needed to make the foam are readily available, and the fabrication process is straightforward, Deng thinks it could be produced on a large scale. “Other microplastic removal materials made from biomass feedstocks have been reported in recent years, but some of these needed to be functionalized with other chemicals,” he says. “Such treatments can increase costs or hinder their large-scale production.”

 Deng and his team have applied for a patent on the material and are now looking for industrial partners to help them produce it. In the meantime, he hopes the work will help draw attention to the microplastic problem and convince more scientists to work on it. “We believe that the great potential of biomass will be recognized and that the use of biomass resources will become more diverse and thorough,” he says.

The present work is described in Science Advances.

The post Supramolecular biomass foam removes microplastics from water appeared first on Physics World.

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