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Microplastics and nanoplastics are emerging pollutants, widespread both in marine and in freshwater environments. Cyanobacteria are also ubiquitous in water and play a vital role in natural ecosystems, using photosynthesis to produce oxygen. Using photography, fluorescence microscopy and cryogenic and scanning electron microscopy (cryo-SEM, SEM) we investigated the physicochemical response of one of the most predominant seawater cyanobacteria (Synechococcus elongatus, PCC 7002) and freshwater cyanobacteria (S. elongatus Nageli PCC 7942) when exposed to 10 μm diameter polystyrene (microPS) and 100 nm diameter polystyrene (nanoPS) particles. Marine and freshwater cyanobacteria formed aggregates with the nanoPS, bound together by extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), and these aggregates sedimented. The aggregates were larger, and the sedimentation was more rapid for the marine system. see more Aggregate morphologies were qualitatively different for the microPS samples, with the bacteria linking up a small number of particles, all held together by EPS. There was no sedimentation in these samples. The cyanobacteria remained alive after exposure to the particles. The particle size- and salt concentration-dependent response of cyanobacteria to these anthropogenic stressors is an important factor to consider for a proper understanding of the fate of the particles as well as the bacteria.The correlation between structural order, elasticity, and semiconductivity for butylthio-functionalized polyaniline (PANI-SBu) thin films was investigated using atomic force microscopy (AFM)-based techniques with X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). After different stirring times, the thin films were cast from the solution of PANI-SBu in N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone that was continuously stirred at a constant rate of 150 rpm in an airtight round-bottom flask. According to the XRD and SEM results, the cross-sectional film structure evolved from being generally holey to highly lamellar with an increase in the stirring time. However, some new types of disordered structures began emerging beyond the optimal stirring time, possibly caused by the formation of disordered packing structures as contributed from the overoxidized polyaniline backbones during the additional stirring time. Moreover, according to the investigation results obtained using AFM-based techniques, the out-of-plane elastic moduli and charge mobilities of the PANI-SBu films were consistently smaller for disordered thin films and larger for structurally more ordered ones. The shear force resulting from the mechanical stirring of the PANI-SBu solution may gradually disentangle the polymer chains and thus help transform the individual polyaniline molecule from a coil-like chain conformation to a better extended rodlike chain conformation. Therefore, when cast into a film, the stretched polymer chains facilitate self-organization among the PANI-SBu backbones during the film formation process. Thus, an improved structural order in the film is attained. Our results demonstrate an unambiguous correlation between the structure order, elasticity, and conductivity in PANI-SBu thin films, which may have useful applications in conducting polymer-based flexible electronics.Slippery surfaces, inspired by the functionality of trapping interfaces of specialized leaves of pitcher plants, have been widely used in self-cleaning, anti-icing, anti-frost and self-healing surfaces. They can be fabricated on metallic surfaces as well, presenting a more durable and low-maintenance anti-corrosive surface on metals. However, lack of studies on the durability of these slippery surfaces at high temperature prohibits their practical deployment in real industrial applications where thermal effects are critical and high temperature conditions are inevitable. We present here a unique fabrication technique of copper based oleoplaned slippery surface that has been tested for high temperature durability under repeated thermal cycles. Their slipperiness at high temperatures has also been tested in absence of the Leidenfrost effect. Our findings suggest that these new substrates can be used for fabricating low maintenance surfaces for high temperature applications or even where the surface undergoes repeated thermal cycles like heat exchanger pipes, utensils, engine casings, outdoor metallic structures.The self-assembly of oppositely charged colloidal ellipsoids and spheres under active confinement is first proposed to achieve long-range ordered photonic crystals. Compared with the conventional passive confinement, a characteristic of the active confinement is that boundaries are movable. Our Brownian dynamics simulations show that dynamic steady structures, similar to quasi-2D colloidal crystals, can be obtained under the strong confinement when the two boundaries periodically oscillate together. The in-plane structures can be regulated by changing the charge ratio of the two kinds of particles. These dynamic steady structures are determined by the minimum electrostatic energy with the aid of increased mobility of confined particles, which are not available in equilibrium. Numerical simulations verify that light can be perfectly confined in this dielectric binary photonic slab without any radiation, which corresponds to a typical optical bound state with divergent lifetime and ultrasharp spectral profile. Given the changeable geometry of this photonic slab, the trapped optical field might be applicable to enhanced light-matter interactions. In addition, for thicker layers, layer-by-layer ordered structures occur spontaneously, driven by the active confinement, while no global order occurs in the passive confinement. Our results show that the boundary motion can become an important factor affecting self-assembled structure and function.Zinc sulfide (ZnS) was deposited onto the surface of mesoporous TiO2 film by a typical successive ionic layer adsorption and reaction (SILAR) process. By inducing a spontaneous cation exchange between ZnS and a target cation (Pb2+, Cu2+, Ag+, or Bi3+) dissolved in a chemical bath when they are in contact, it was demonstrated successfully that white translucent ZnS on the substrate could be changed to new brown-colored metal chalcogenides and the amount of ZnS deposited originally by different conditions could be compared in a qualitative way with the degree of color change. By utilizing this simple but effective process, the evolution of a well-known ZnS passivation layer prepared from different chemical baths in quantum dot (QD)-sensitized solar cells could be tracked visually by checking the degree of color change of TiO2/ZnS electrodes after the induced specific cation exchange. When applied to representative CdS QD-sensitized solar cells, it was revealed clearly how the different degrees and rates of ZnS deposition could affect the overall power conversion efficiency while finding an optimized passivation layer over TiO2/CdS electrode.

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