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Search Results (2,741)

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Keywords = solid–solid transition

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26 pages, 2191 KB  
Article
Active Chitosan Films Enriched with Yerba Mate Kombucha Infusion: Formulation and Characterization
by Celeste Cottet, Pamela A. Kikot, Matías L. Nobile, Marcela F. Almassio, Andrés G. Salvay and Mercedes A. Peltzer
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(12), 5346; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27125346 (registering DOI) - 13 Jun 2026
Abstract
The development of bio-based active packaging materials has gained increasing attention as a sustainable alternative to synthetic plastics. In this study, chitosan-based films incorporating yerba mate kombucha infusion (YMK-I) were developed and fully characterized. Films were prepared using different YMK-I concentrations (25–100% v [...] Read more.
The development of bio-based active packaging materials has gained increasing attention as a sustainable alternative to synthetic plastics. In this study, chitosan-based films incorporating yerba mate kombucha infusion (YMK-I) were developed and fully characterized. Films were prepared using different YMK-I concentrations (25–100% v/v) as solvent, with acetic acid-based chitosan films as controls. The infusion showed pH 2.5, titratable acidity of 3.5%, total solids of 6%, high phenolic content (1085 mg GAE/L), and reducing sugars (18.3 g/L). Acetic and lactic acids were identified by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) values ranged from 0.03 µg/mL for Staphylococcus aureus to 0.3 µg/mL for Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Rheological results indicated that YMK-I performed similarly to acetic acid as a solvent. Fourier Transformed Infrared with Attenuated Total Reflectance (FTIR-ATR) suggested interactions between chitosan and bioactive compounds. Thermal analyses showed that YMK-I acted as a plasticizer and introduced thermolabile components, altering glass transition and degradation behavior. Increasing YMK-I content reduced tensile strength and increased elongation, indicating greater flexibility, while water vapor permeability increased due to hydrophilic compounds. Films enriched with YMK-I exhibited high antioxidant activity (Radical Scavenging Activity > 85%) and strong antimicrobial effects (>98% inhibition) against E. coli and S. aureus. These results highlight the potential of chitosan–kombucha films as multifunctional materials for specialized applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Development and Applications of Biodegradable and Bioactive Materials)
17 pages, 48738 KB  
Article
Experimental Characterization and Finite Element Simulation of the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties in 0.2% Sc-Modified A242 Aluminum Alloy
by Mahmoud A. Alzahrani, Obaidullah Alfahmi, Essam B. Moustafa and Ahmed O. Mosleh
Crystals 2026, 16(6), 388; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst16060388 (registering DOI) - 12 Jun 2026
Viewed by 124
Abstract
Scandium (Sc) is well recognized as a potent grain refiner, yet optimizing its addition amount in the Al-Cu-Mg-Ni-Fe (A242) system remains a longstanding challenge, critically important for material performance in high-temperature automotive and aerospace applications. The present work, therefore, presents a study of [...] Read more.
Scandium (Sc) is well recognized as a potent grain refiner, yet optimizing its addition amount in the Al-Cu-Mg-Ni-Fe (A242) system remains a longstanding challenge, critically important for material performance in high-temperature automotive and aerospace applications. The present work, therefore, presents a study of low-Sc modified A242 alloys, demonstrating that 0.2 wt.% Sc microalloying of the system has a pronounced effect on its solidification-driven microstructural evolution, improving the high-temperature formability of the alloy over a 20–200 °C temperature range. The study demonstrates that this addition triggers a dramatic columnar-to-equiaxed grain transition, reducing the average grain size by 90.8% (from 400 ± 100 μm to 37 ± 10 μm) and fragmenting the brittle, continuous intermetallic network into a highly uniform architecture. Uniaxial compression testing revealed that, while the as-cast solid-solution alloy slightly reduces room-temperature strength due to solute trapping, it delivers an exceptional 142% increase in strain-to-failure at 200 °C (exceeding 0.8 mm) compared to the base alloy. This significant enhancement in ductility is driven by thermally stable Al3Sc dispersoids that exert Zener pinning pressure, halting thermal grain coarsening and activating superplastic deformation mechanisms. These findings support the development of advanced thermoforming applications, with the finite element (FE) model predicting process improvements that enhance manufacturing efficiency. This work presents a validation and simulation-ready material framework that substantiates the viability of low-Sc-modified A242 alloys for such operations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue State of the Art of Crystalline Metals and Alloys)
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25 pages, 2022 KB  
Article
Environmental Drivers of Weed Floristic Diversity in Two Contrasting Sugarcane Agroecosystems
by Mohamed Abdelazeem Mousa, Ahmed K. Osman, Mashail N. Alzain, Oqba Basal, Mohamed Kamel, Sabah A. Hammad, Naglaa Loutfy and Mohamed O. Badry
Plants 2026, 15(12), 1825; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants15121825 (registering DOI) - 12 Jun 2026
Viewed by 67
Abstract
Sugarcane is a high-value crop in Egypt, yet weed communities in the understudied Upper Egypt region have not been systematically characterized. This study provides a comprehensive analysis of weed floristic composition, phytogeographical affinities, and the edaphic and canopy light factors governing vegetation structure [...] Read more.
Sugarcane is a high-value crop in Egypt, yet weed communities in the understudied Upper Egypt region have not been systematically characterized. This study provides a comprehensive analysis of weed floristic composition, phytogeographical affinities, and the edaphic and canopy light factors governing vegetation structure across contrasting Nile Valley clay and reclaimed desert lands in Qena Governorate. Fourteen stands were surveyed during the 2024/2025 sugarcane growing season, recording 110 species from 33 families (68 annuals and 42 perennials), which were dominated by Poaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, Euphorbiaceae, and Amaranthaceae (54.6% of the flora recorded). Therophytes were the most abundant life form (60.9%), and 51.8% of species belonged to Neotropical, Palaeotropical, Cosmopolitan, and Pantropical chorotypes. Diversity indices showed high and balanced species diversity, with no dominance by any single species. Seasonal variation showed that species richness peaked in spring, decreased through summer and autumn, and correlated with light intensity under the canopy. TWINSPAN identified four vegetation groups, which were merged into three primary vegetation groups (A, B, and C) via DCA and CCA ordinations and linked to microhabitats shaped by elevation and soil physicochemical properties. CCA revealed that Group C (stands in the Nile Riverbank lands) had the highest diversity, which was associated with organic matter, clay, and field capacity. In contrast, Group A (stands of reclaimed desert land) had low richness linked to high levels of Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), Electrical Conductivity (EC), Na, K, Mg, CaCO3, and sandy soils. Group B (stands of Nile clay lands) was an intermediate transitional community between groups A and C. These findings establish edaphic factors as the primary determinant of weed community structure, with salinity as the critical constraint in reclaimed lands and seasonal light variation as a secondary diversity filter. Full article
30 pages, 10103 KB  
Review
Fresh-State Characteristics of Geopolymer Mortars for 3D Printing: Mix Design, Rheology and Early-Age Performance
by İbrahim Türkmen, Enes Ekinci, Fatih Kantarci, Ergun Ekinci, Abdulrahman Ahmad Alyamani, Mehmet Burhan Karakoc, Ramazan Demirboğa and Yasar Ayaz
Polymers 2026, 18(12), 1479; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18121479 (registering DOI) - 12 Jun 2026
Viewed by 104
Abstract
The successful application of extrusion-based 3D-printed geopolymer mortars largely depends on precursor chemistry, activator composition, mixture proportions, and fresh-state behavior, which is highly sensitive to time-dependent structural build-up. This review examines the relationships among mix design, geopolymerization chemistry, rheological properties, and printability requirements [...] Read more.
The successful application of extrusion-based 3D-printed geopolymer mortars largely depends on precursor chemistry, activator composition, mixture proportions, and fresh-state behavior, which is highly sensitive to time-dependent structural build-up. This review examines the relationships among mix design, geopolymerization chemistry, rheological properties, and printability requirements for 3D-printed geopolymer mortars. Particular emphasis is placed on the effects of precursor type, alkaline activator characteristics, liquid-to-solid ratio, additives, and fibers on flowability, yield stress, viscosity, extrudability, buildability, shape retention, and interlayer bonding. The review further discusses how geopolymerization kinetics influence the evolution of fresh-state properties, the printable time window, and the transition from extrusion to structural stability. In addition, early-age performance is evaluated in terms of setting behavior, green strength development, and layer-interface integrity. Current challenges, including the lack of standardized test methods, limited comparability among published studies, and the complex coupling between material design and process parameters, are also highlighted. Finally, the review identifies key research gaps and proposes future directions for developing robust, printable, and sustainable geopolymer mortar systems for additive manufacturing in construction. Full article
37 pages, 41471 KB  
Article
PH/Ionic Pre-Conditioning-Assisted CO2 Mineralization of Cemented Tailings Backfill: Early Strength and Interfacial Mechanism
by Weiliang Pan, Duiming Guo, Hongtu Xu and Qixuan Huang
Processes 2026, 14(12), 1907; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14121907 - 11 Jun 2026
Viewed by 170
Abstract
Early-age strength development and carbon emissions represent specific operational constraints in underground cemented tailings backfill (CTB) operations. A pH and ionic pre-conditioning-assisted CO2 mineralization process was evaluated for carbonate-rich cemented tailings backfill designed to improve early UCS while retaining measurable CO2 [...] Read more.
Early-age strength development and carbon emissions represent specific operational constraints in underground cemented tailings backfill (CTB) operations. A pH and ionic pre-conditioning-assisted CO2 mineralization process was evaluated for carbonate-rich cemented tailings backfill designed to improve early UCS while retaining measurable CO2 uptake through systematic process control and optimization. Skarn-type tailings (CaO 16.74 wt%, total carbonates 34.7 wt%) were subjected to screening under nominal pH and ionic pre-conditioning treatments (4.0–11.5), CO2 pressure (0–0.5 MPa), cement-to-tailings ratio (1:3–1:12), and slurry concentration (66–78%). Strength evolution (1–28 d), mineralization products were characterized using TGA as the primary CO2-uptake method, with XRD used for semi-quantitative phase-trend assessment, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) with selected-area electron diffraction (SAED), X-ray computed tomography (CT), and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Under optimal conditions (pH 8.5, 0.3 MPa CO2 pressure, 48 h mineralization, 72–74% solids), mineralized specimens achieved 2-day uniaxial compressive strength equivalent to 1.47-times the 3-day control strength (p < 0.01), with peak net CO2 sequestration of 37.1 g/kg. EBSD analysis of 347 grain boundaries and TEM-SAED examination of multiple foil sections supported the occurrence of syntaxial calcite overgrowth on primary carbonate debris as a major interfacial transition zone strengthening mechanism. Interconnected pore cluster volume decreased by 70.6%; Zn2+ and Pb2+ leaching decreased by 67.2% and 71.8%, respectively. A shrinking-core kinetics-Ryshkewitch model with pH-dependent correction functions predicted 3-day strength with acceptable accuracy for TW-A and TW-B, whereas TW-C showed a −27.3% deviation, identifying acidic and sulfate-rich wastewater as a boundary condition outside the reliable model domain. Field coring at −500 m depth provided pilot-scale evidence that a 23 mm mineralized shell was consistent with localized reduction of shallow exposed-face instability risk during the early free-standing period. Overall, the pH and ionic pre-conditioning-assisted CO2 mineralization process is proposed as a laboratory-supported and field-informed screening framework for simultaneous early-strength enhancement and partial carbon sequestration in carbonate-rich cemented tailings systems. The resulting models and parameter guidance should be interpreted as preliminary design tools requiring further factorial optimization and long-term field validation before full site-specific deployment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Chemical Processes and Systems)
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22 pages, 5068 KB  
Article
Fusion of Clinical and Deep Learning Features for Predicting Pembrolizumab Monotherapy Response in Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
by Liton Devnath, Ian Janzen, Cheryl Ho, Barbara Melosky, Stephen Lam, Calum MacAulay and Ren Yuan
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(12), 4536; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15124536 - 11 Jun 2026
Viewed by 87
Abstract
Objective: Pembrolizumab monotherapy is an anti-PD-1 immunotherapy that is approved as a first-line treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with high PD-L1 expression (≥50%). However, approximately 55% of these patients do not respond. Early identification of likely non-responders is critical to [...] Read more.
Objective: Pembrolizumab monotherapy is an anti-PD-1 immunotherapy that is approved as a first-line treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with high PD-L1 expression (≥50%). However, approximately 55% of these patients do not respond. Early identification of likely non-responders is critical to enable timely transition to alternative treatments. Materials: This study analyzed a retrospective cohort of NSCLC patients treated with first-line PD-L1 monotherapy, divided into a discovery training set (n: 97; 27 non-responders) and a preliminary test set (n: 17; 9 non-responders). Treatment response was assessed using baseline and follow-up CT scans in accordance with the response evaluation criteria in solid tumors (RECIST v1.1). Methods: Our objective was to extract deep learning (DL) features from the two groups of patients and apply transfer learning techniques to identify patients at risk of progression on pembrolizumab monotherapy. A nonparametric statistical test (Mann–Whitney U) was employed to rank the discriminative power of the 128 features from these training groups. Two types of support vector machine (SVM-RBF and SVM-Polynomial) classifiers were employed to investigate the discriminating power of the highest-ranked features as measured by F1 score and AUC values over ROC curves at the three levels of the data (slice, lesion, and patient) with and without clinical descriptors. Results: SVM-RBF performed best when trained on the 10 highest-ranked DL features and five clinical descriptors, achieving AUC of 0.742 (CI 95% 0.47–1.00), SN of 88.9%, SP of 75% and F1 score of 84.2% on preliminary test set patients, whereas an AUC of 0.902 ± 0.031, SN of 81.5%, SP of 81.4% and F1 score of 71% were observed for the discovery training set. Conclusions: Integrating CT-based DL features with clinical descriptors demonstrated balanced performance, offering a promising tool to identify patients at risk of progression on pembrolizumab monotherapy to support first-line treatment decisions in PD-L1-high NSCLC. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Oncology)
22 pages, 1527 KB  
Article
Numerical Investigation of Dynamics and Particle Transport in Gas–Liquid–Solid Three-Phase Multi-Source Converging Flows
by Lei Wang, Zhiqiang Hu, Lilin Li, Zhenxiang Zhang and Liang Tao
Fluids 2026, 11(6), 146; https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids11060146 - 10 Jun 2026
Viewed by 85
Abstract
This study utilizes a large-scale numerical simulation model to investigate the hydrodynamic behavior and particle transport characteristics of gas–liquid–solid three-phase flow in vertical wellbores featuring multi-source confluence and curved geometries. Simulation results indicate that increasing flow velocity shifts the dominant control mechanism from [...] Read more.
This study utilizes a large-scale numerical simulation model to investigate the hydrodynamic behavior and particle transport characteristics of gas–liquid–solid three-phase flow in vertical wellbores featuring multi-source confluence and curved geometries. Simulation results indicate that increasing flow velocity shifts the dominant control mechanism from surface tension to inertial forces, transitioning the flow pattern from slug flow to churn flow. In curved pipe sections, centrifugal phase separation and geometric shielding effects cause significant flow asymmetry and maintain large bubble stability at the inner wall. Additionally, the multi-inlet structure induces shear rate gradients that result in the spatial coexistence of two distinct bubble scales. Furthermore, localized gas concentrations exceeding 70% at the upper inlet can trigger severe gas-locking phenomena and intense pressure pulsations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Computational Fluid Dynamics Applied to Transport Phenomena)
14 pages, 12386 KB  
Communication
Effect of SiC Content on Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of CoCrFeNi High-Entropy Alloy Composites
by Ning Li, Xinlong Hu, Chengbo Wu, Mengyuan Jiang, Huiying Li, Jinlong Zhang and Fuyuan Dong
Materials 2026, 19(12), 2501; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19122501 - 10 Jun 2026
Viewed by 135
Abstract
In this work, to address the limitation of low strength and hardness of single-phase CoCrFeNi high-entropy alloy, SiC particles were introduced as a reinforcing phase to prepare CoCrFeNi matrix composites with SiC contents of 0 wt%, 1 wt%, 2.5 wt% and 5 wt% [...] Read more.
In this work, to address the limitation of low strength and hardness of single-phase CoCrFeNi high-entropy alloy, SiC particles were introduced as a reinforcing phase to prepare CoCrFeNi matrix composites with SiC contents of 0 wt%, 1 wt%, 2.5 wt% and 5 wt% via spark plasma sintering (SPS). It was preliminarily predicted that SiC particles would be uniformly distributed along grain boundaries of the CoCrFeNi matrix. During sintering, partial SiC decomposes at high-temperature, high-activity interfaces, regulating carbide precipitation and phase structural evolution, while residual undecomposed SiC remains at grain boundaries to pin boundaries and refine grains, thereby synergistically enhancing mechanical properties and wear resistance. Microstructural characterization reveals that all samples maintain a face-centered cubic (FCC) solid-solution matrix, and samples with non-zero SiC addition contain Cr7C3 carbides, which are mostly distributed at grain boundaries. With the increase in SiC content, mechanical performance is remarkably improved compared with the unreinforced CoCrFeNi matrix: the hardness rises from 198.8 HV to 321.7 HV, the yield strength is greatly enhanced from 242.5 MPa to 673.4 MPa, and the tensile strength increases from 557.9 MPa to 755.7 MPa. The improved yield strength originates synergistically from grain refinement, solid-solution strengthening, grain-boundary strengthening and dislocation strengthening. By clarifying the influence of microstructural defects on critical shear stress (τ0) and normal fracture stress (σ0), the intrinsic mechanism governing tensile mechanical performance and ductile–brittle fracture transition was revealed. This optimized CoCrFeNi/SiC composite exhibits excellent strength–hardness comprehensive performance, showing promising application potential for high-load, wear-resistant and structural service components under severe tribological and pressure conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Low-Carbon and Zero-Carbon Metallurgical Technologies)
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43 pages, 9146 KB  
Review
Antibody-Drug Conjugates in Solid Tumor Oncology and the Frontier of Precision Immunosuppression: A Mechanistic, Translational, and Clinical Review
by Ibraheem Masoud, Nada Saed Homod Al Shaer, Ahmad Masoud, Ahmad Al Jandali, Abdulrahman Aldahash, Abdullah Jabri, Mohamed Alsharif, Fareeha Arshad, Itika Arora, Mohammed Imran Khan and Ahmed Yaqinuddin
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(12), 5196; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27125196 - 9 Jun 2026
Viewed by 193
Abstract
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) have transitioned from clinically marginal agents into a defining therapeutic class for solid tumor oncology. In DESTINY-Breast03, trastuzumab deruxtecan achieved a four-fold progression-free survival advantage over trastuzumab emtansine, attributable not to antibody engineering but to the linker-payload axis: a cleavable [...] Read more.
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) have transitioned from clinically marginal agents into a defining therapeutic class for solid tumor oncology. In DESTINY-Breast03, trastuzumab deruxtecan achieved a four-fold progression-free survival advantage over trastuzumab emtansine, attributable not to antibody engineering but to the linker-payload axis: a cleavable peptide linker and a topoisomerase I payload with bystander activity. Sacituzumab govitecan extends the same logic to Trop-2-positive disease via extracellular payload release, and the framework now spans breast, urothelial, gynecologic, lung, gastric, and colorectal cancers, with enfortumab vedotin plus pembrolizumab displacing platinum chemotherapy as first-line therapy for urothelial cancer in EV-302 (median overall survival 31.5 versus 16.1 months). This review synthesizes ADC biology along three analytical axes. The mechanistic axis links each linker-payload-DAR configuration to a specific tumor-biology barrier: vascular limitation, which delivers approximately 0.1% of the administered dose to tumor tissue; the binding-site barrier, which concentrates exposure at the perivascular margin; and antigen mosaicism, which defeats internalization-dependent killing. The translational axis examines resistance as a coordinated failure across antigen modulation, trafficking, efflux, apoptotic execution, and lysosomal processing. The clinical axis traces the platform’s migration toward earlier-line and curative-intent settings. We close by examining whether the ADC delivery architecture translates to precision immunosuppression in autoimmune disease, where the glucocorticoid receptor modulator ADC ABBV-154 met placebo-controlled efficacy endpoints in rheumatoid arthritis but was discontinued because its benefit-risk profile did not differentiate it from existing biologic therapies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Antibody-Based Therapeutics for Autoimmune Diseases)
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19 pages, 9733 KB  
Article
Liquid Evolution Behavior in Soft Tribo-Contacts Featuring Bionic Surface Textures and Its Influence on Friction Under Wet Conditions
by Lirong Huang, Zhaoxiang Wang, Kunpeng Zhang and Binbin Su
Lubricants 2026, 14(6), 232; https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants14060232 - 8 Jun 2026
Viewed by 148
Abstract
To elucidate the mechanisms responsible for high friction in micro-pillared soft tribo-contacts under wet conditions, this study investigates the liquid migration behavior across elasticity interfaces featuring bionic surface textures and examines the influence of this migration on interfacial friction properties. Micro-pillar bionic surface [...] Read more.
To elucidate the mechanisms responsible for high friction in micro-pillared soft tribo-contacts under wet conditions, this study investigates the liquid migration behavior across elasticity interfaces featuring bionic surface textures and examines the influence of this migration on interfacial friction properties. Micro-pillar bionic surface textures were fabricated on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) substrates. In situ observation of liquid migration and corresponding friction tests were systematically conducted using custom-built experimental setups on soft interfaces textured with micro-pillars of varying area densities. The results demonstrate that both geometrical shape and area density of surface textures play a critical role in regulating liquid migration behavior. Surface textures with circular and hexagonal geometries exhibit optimal migration rates, attributed to their smooth structural profiles, which reduce flow resistance within the microchannels. Liquid migration efficiency is effectively improved with increasing area density of the bionic surface texture owing to strengthened capillary forces. Correspondingly, bionic surface textures exhibiting superior liquid migration characteristics show the smallest relative reduction in friction force during transitions from dry to wet frictional states. This behavior is primarily attributed to the surface’s exceptionally rapid drainage capability, which effectively mitigates the adverse effects of interfacial liquid films on friction. Specifically, rapid liquid removal increases the effective solid–solid contact area and enhances mechanical interlocking at the interface. Consequently, these surfaces maintain outstanding frictional performance even under humid or wet conditions. These findings provide important theoretical support for the rational design of surface microstructures and the optimized regulation of friction and liquid film in wet contact conditions. Full article
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15 pages, 6089 KB  
Article
Dielectric Anomalies and High-Temperature Dielectric Relaxation Dependence on B-Site Ordering of Li-Substituted Pb(Yb1/2Nb1/2)O3
by Kaiyuan Chen, Danning Huang, Xiande Zheng, Jinwei Qu, Xiuyun Lei, Senentxu Lanceros-Méndez, Liang Fang, Feifei Han, Liaoting Pan, Qi Zhang and Laijun Liu
Inorganics 2026, 14(6), 156; https://doi.org/10.3390/inorganics14060156 - 8 Jun 2026
Viewed by 196
Abstract
B-site ordering of Li-modified Pb0.95Li0.05(Yb1/2Nb1/2)O3 (PLYN) ceramics can be changed by duration during sintering. In this paper, the conventional solid-state reaction method was employed to prepare antiferroelectric perovskite Li-substituted PLYN ceramics. Crystal structure evolution [...] Read more.
B-site ordering of Li-modified Pb0.95Li0.05(Yb1/2Nb1/2)O3 (PLYN) ceramics can be changed by duration during sintering. In this paper, the conventional solid-state reaction method was employed to prepare antiferroelectric perovskite Li-substituted PLYN ceramics. Crystal structure evolution dependence of sintering time was investigated using X-ray diffraction (XRD), Raman spectroscopy, and dielectric response. Two dielectric anomalies responses, attributed to the transition from B-site order to disorder and antiferroelectric-paraelectric phase transition depend on B-site ordering. The high-temperature dielectric relaxation associated with charged carries (oxygen-vacancy hopping) was characterized by isothermal electric modulus and universal dielectric response. Impedance spectroscopy was used to uncover the relationship between defect type and the oxygen partial pressure (pO2) dependence on sintering time in PLYN systems. These findings provide new insights into the interplay among B-site ordered phase structure, dielectric response, and defect types. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Inorganic Materials)
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21 pages, 1948 KB  
Article
Green Approach to Enhance Dissolution of Gliclazide: Thermoresponsive Solid Dispersion Based on Poloxamer 188/Propylene Glycol/Labrasol Ternary System
by Abdelrahman Y. Sherif and Mohamed A. Ibrahim
Pharmaceutics 2026, 18(6), 702; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics18060702 - 8 Jun 2026
Viewed by 247
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Gliclazide’s limited water solubility restricts its absorption across the gastrointestinal tract and compromises its therapeutic performance. This study developed a thermoresponsive solid dispersion based on the inverted thermoresponsive behavior of poloxamer 188 in propylene glycol. Methods: A solubility study was conducted to [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Gliclazide’s limited water solubility restricts its absorption across the gastrointestinal tract and compromises its therapeutic performance. This study developed a thermoresponsive solid dispersion based on the inverted thermoresponsive behavior of poloxamer 188 in propylene glycol. Methods: A solubility study was conducted to select components for the thermoresponsive solid dispersion. An I-optimal mixture design was used to optimize the concentrations of the thermoresponsive solid dispersion components (poloxamer 188, propylene glycol, and labrasol). FTIR and XRD were used to investigate the mechanism underlying the inverted thermoresponsive behavior. Finally, the influence of the thermoresponsive solid dispersion on gliclazide dissolution was evaluated through in vitro dissolution testing. Results: Surfactant screening identified labrasol as the optimal surfactant owing to a superior increase in gliclazide solubility compared to propylene glycol alone (2.29-fold). The optimized thermoresponsive solid dispersion (poloxamer 188, propylene glycol, and labrasol at 13.89, 21.43, and 64.68% w/w, respectively) achieved a drug solubility of 10.68 mg/g and a phase transition temperature of 36 °C. XRD and FTIR confirmed that hydrogen bonding is responsible for the system’s conversion between the solid and liquid states. Compared with raw gliclazide, the optimized formulation demonstrated an 8.4-fold increase in the initial dissolution rate and significantly improved dissolution efficiency from 21.77 ± 4.74% to 74.85 ± 2.33%. Conclusions: The present thermoresponsive solid dispersion provides a green alternative to conventional solid dispersion techniques. It avoids reliance on organic solvents, processing that demands high energy input, and additional post-processing operations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Pharmaceutical Technology, Manufacturing and Devices)
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17 pages, 1585 KB  
Article
Probability-Based Droplet Modeling for In-Flight Icing Problems
by Giulio Croce and Nicola Suzzi
Fluids 2026, 11(6), 143; https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids11060143 - 7 Jun 2026
Viewed by 185
Abstract
A probability-based model (PBM) is developed to predict the evolution of a population of impinging droplets on a solid substrate and the eventual transition between dropwise and filmwise regimes. A dedicated heat transfer model is designed, in order to estimate the evaporating mass [...] Read more.
A probability-based model (PBM) is developed to predict the evolution of a population of impinging droplets on a solid substrate and the eventual transition between dropwise and filmwise regimes. A dedicated heat transfer model is designed, in order to estimate the evaporating mass flux when the solid substrate is heated. Statistical information such as the droplet size distribution and the influence of surface wettability, required by the PBM, are derived using a previously developed high-fidelity individual-based model (IBM). The PBM is verified with the high-fidelity model for a small patch of solid substrate. Then, validation with experimental evidence from the literature is carried out in the case of in-flight ice on the NACA0012 airfoil. Results show that the present PBM is capable of investigating in-flight ice problems and can be integrated with a CFD analysis of the air flow past an airfoil flying through a cloud of supercooled droplets to predict the possible onset of ice accretion on the airfoil surface. Compared to Messinger-like models, the influence of surface morphology on runback water flow is incorporated in the PBM through the modeling of a discontinuous wetting layer, contributing to the design of passive and active anti-icing systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Heat and Mass Transfer)
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26 pages, 6078 KB  
Review
Biotechnological Routes for Microplastic Mitigation: Current Challenges and Future Opportunities in the Enzymatic Degradation of Synthetic Textile Waste
by Aqsa Majeed, Diana Cayuela, Gabriela Mijas, Mauro Comes Franchini and Marta Riba-Moliner
Polymers 2026, 18(12), 1419; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18121419 - 6 Jun 2026
Viewed by 430
Abstract
The exponential growth of the global textile industry, largely driven by the demand for synthetic polymers such as poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET), polyamides, and polyurethanes, has led to severe environmental consequences, notably the accumulation of persistent microplastics and solid waste. While conventional mechanical and [...] Read more.
The exponential growth of the global textile industry, largely driven by the demand for synthetic polymers such as poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET), polyamides, and polyurethanes, has led to severe environmental consequences, notably the accumulation of persistent microplastics and solid waste. While conventional mechanical and chemical recycling methods are widely employed, they are often hindered by harsh processing conditions and the deterioration of material properties. Consequently, there is a critical need for sustainable end-of-life management strategies. This review provides a comprehensive analysis of the biodegradability of synthetic textile fibres, with a primary focus on emerging biotechnological and enzymatic recycling approaches. It systematically examines the intrinsic polymer characteristics that govern biodegradation—including molecular orientation, crystallinity, functional groups, and fibre chemistry—as well as extrinsic factors such as textile finishings, yarn twist, polymer blends, and chemical additives. Furthermore, the current landscape of microbial and enzymatic degradation routes is critically assessed, highlighting the specific mechanisms of biocatalysts (e.g., lipases, cutinases, PETase, and MHETase) in depolymerising complex synthetic matrices into recoverable monomers. Finally, this review identifies the existing literature gap between bulk plastic and textile-specific biodegradation, discussing future perspectives. By bridging polymer science and textile engineering, this work underscores the potential of enzymatic recycling to close the loop in synthetic fibre production and advance the transition toward a circular economy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Modification of Natural Biodegradable Polymers)
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23 pages, 23283 KB  
Article
Multi-Scale Investigation of Carbonation Evolution and Microstructural Changes in Concrete Containing Fly Ash and Silica Fume
by Jianghuai Zhan, Lepeng Huang, Tiansheng Shang, Xuanyi Xue, Jing Li, Shuai Li, Jianmin Hua and Jilin Song
Materials 2026, 19(11), 2426; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19112426 - 5 Jun 2026
Viewed by 149
Abstract
This study systematically investigated the durability of low-carbon concrete under severe service conditions using industrial solid wastes. The mechanical properties and carbonation resistance (including carbonation depth, compressive strength after carbonation, and splitting tensile strength after carbonation) were tested. Multi-scale characterization techniques, including XRD, [...] Read more.
This study systematically investigated the durability of low-carbon concrete under severe service conditions using industrial solid wastes. The mechanical properties and carbonation resistance (including carbonation depth, compressive strength after carbonation, and splitting tensile strength after carbonation) were tested. Multi-scale characterization techniques, including XRD, SEM-EDS, and nanoindentation, were employed to investigate the microstructure. This approach revealed a synergistic mechanism linking microstructural evolution to the concrete’s macroscopic mechanical and durability performance. Results showed that incorporating 25% fly ash (FA) reduced compressive strength by 11.30% and 11.39% in CF-25 and BF-25 mixes, respectively, and increased carbonation depth by 58.46% in CF-25. In contrast, the addition of 5% silica fume (SF) produced different effects. It significantly enhanced the compressive strength of the CS-5 and BS-5 mixes by 18.92% and 9.94%, respectively. Furthermore, it improved the micromechanical properties of the interfacial transition zone (ITZ) and reduced its thickness. Micro-mechanistic analysis revealed that the low pozzolanic activity of FA at early ages led to insufficient hydration products, higher porosity, and a weaker ITZ. Conversely, SF, through its high pozzolanic reactivity and nano-filling effect, promoted a dense, highly polymerized gel structure and optimized pore size distribution. The distinct chemical characteristics of high-calcium and low-calcium cementitious systems further amplified the differential effects of these supplementary materials. Full article
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