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D
Sulim, O., R. Ribeiro, I. Esteves, C. Antunes, A. Garate, P. Duarte, I. Ferreira, J. Mota, and M. Plaza, Design of structured adsorbents for aplications in gas adsorption processes - Conventional shaping vs 3D-Printed formulation, , 5-10 March, 2017. Abstract

Microporous materials highly activated and with potential to be used as adsorbents in many applications for gas
separation/purification are usually available as powders. These solids usually have a great and reversible gas
uptake, high gas selectivity, good chemical and thermal stability, but are unsuitable to be used in gas adsorption
processes, such as Pressure Swing Adsorption (PSA) or Simulated Moving Bed (SMB).
Zeolites, carbons and more recently metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are examples of those materials. Their
use in adsorption-based processes are dependent of their upgrading from powders (micrometer scale) to
particles (pellets, spheres or granules at millimeter scale). This would overcome large pressure drops and
consequent energy consumptions when packing adsorbent columns in those processes. Thus, shaping
adsorbents is an important step to use them in industry, although it greatly affects their capacity and selectivity
towards a specific gas separation.
In this work, we explore techniques to shape powdered adsorbents, followed by their textural and mechanical
characterizations, and the study of their adsorption properties towards the main components of post-combustion
flues gases (CO2 and N2). Materials densification is proposed by employing two approaches:
- Conventional shaping through binderless mechanical compression and binder-containing extrusion; and
- Formulation by 3D printing (or additive manufacturing) to produce packed bed morphologies that
precisely replicate computer aided design (CAD) models.
Porous separation media are important for fluid-solid contacting in many unit operations, including adsorption.
Due to practical limitations, media particles are typically packed randomly into a column in a shaped form,
allowing fluid to flow through the interstitial voids. Key to the effectiveness of packed columns are the flowrelated properties of mass transfer, fluid distribution and dispersion, and back pressure, which in turn depend
upon packing geometry. Until now, no alternative was found to overcome this limitation and have optimal
ordered packing arrangements at the micron scale. 3D-Printing (or additive manufacturing) brings a wide range
of benefits that traditional methods of manufacturing or prototyping simply cannot. With this approach, complex
ordered geometries, that are not possible by conventional extrusion, can be designed and printed for a porous
media, being the equipment resolution the only limiting step to overcome.
The effect of parameters like compression force, particle sieving, binder nature, binder/adsorbent ratio were
firstly studied using conventional shaping techniques, as a basis for the consequent development of 3D-printed
formulations. The structured samples are then characterized and adsorption equilibria studies are performed on
them to evaluate their performance as media for gas adsorption separation processes. A volumetric/manometric
adsorption unit built in-house was used for this purpose. Relevant experimental data is obtained, which allows to
conclude that 3D-printed media can be an alternative porous media for application in gas adsorption processes.

E
Esteves, C., G. M. C. Santos, C. Alves, S. I. C. J. Palma, A. R. Porteira, H. M. A. Costa, V. D. Alves, B. M. M. Faustino, I. Ferreira, and H. Gamboa, "Effect of film thickness in gelatine hybrid gels for artificial olfaction", Materials Today Bio, vol. 1, pp. 100002, 2019.
L
Esperança Garcia, D. M., A. S. Taborda Martins Pereira, A. C. Almeida, U. Santana Roma, A. Ben Aissa Soler, P. D. Lacharmoise, I. M. M. das Ferreira, and C. C. D. Simao, "Large-Area Paper Batteries with Ag and Zn/Ag Screen-Printed Electrodes", ACS Omega, vol. 4, pp. 16781−16788, 2019. acsomega.9b01545.pdf
O
Echeverria, C., P. Soares, A. Robalo, L. Pereira, C. M. M. Novo, I. Ferreira, and J. P. Borges, "One-pot synthesis of dual-stimuli responsive hybrid PNIPAAm-chitosan microgels", Mater. Des, vol. 86, pp. 745-751, 2015. AbstractDOI

The incorporation of magnetic nanoparticles into poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm) and chitosan microgels gives rise to hybrid systems that combine the microgels swelling capacity with the interesting features presented in magnetic nanoparticles. The presence of chitosan that act as surfactant for magnetic nanoparticles provides a simplistic approach which allows the encapsulation of magnetic nanoparticles without any previous surface modification. Spherical and highly monodisperse microgels with diameters in the range of 200 to 500 nm were obtained. The encapsulation of magnetic nanoparticles in the polymer matrix was confirmed by high resolution Scanning Electron Microscopy in transmission mode. Volume phase transition of the microgels was accessed by Dynamic Light Scattering measurements. It was observed that the thermosensitivity of the PNIPAM microgels still persists in the hybrid microgels; however, the swelling ability is compromised in the microgels with highest chitosan content. The heating performance of the hybrid magnetic microgels, when submitted to an alternating magnetic field, was also evaluated demonstrating the potential of these systems for hyperthermia treatments.

T
Soares, P. I. P., F. Lochte, C. Echeverria, L. C. J. Pereira, J. T. Coutinho, I. M. M. Ferreira, C. M. M. Novo, and J. P. M. R. Borges, "Thermal and magnetic properties of iron oxide colloids: influence of surfactants", Nanotechnology, vol. 26, issue 42, pp. 425704, 2015. AbstractDOI

Iron oxide nanoparticles (NPs) have been extensively studied in the last few decades for several biomedical applications such as magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic drug delivery and hyperthermia. Hyperthermia is a technique used for cancer treatment which consists in inducing a temperature of about 41–45 °C in cancerous cells through magnetic NPs and an external magnetic field. Chemical precipitation was used to produce iron oxide NPs 9 nm in size coated with oleic acid and trisodium citrate. The influence of both stabilizers on the heating ability and in vitro cytotoxicity of the produced iron oxide NPs was assessed. Physicochemical characterization of the samples confirmed that the used surfactants do not change the particles' average size and that the presence of the surfactants has a strong effect on both the magnetic properties and the heating ability. The heating ability of Fe3O4 NPs shows a proportional increase with the increase of iron concentration, although when coated with trisodium citrate or oleic acid the heating ability decreases. Cytotoxicity assays demonstrated that both pristine and trisodium citrate Fe3O4 samples do not reduce cell viability. However, oleic acid Fe3O4 strongly reduces cell viability, more drastically in the SaOs-2 cell line. The produced iron oxide NPs are suitable for cancer hyperthermia treatment and the use of a surfactant brings great advantages concerning the dispersion of NPs, also allowing better control of the hyperthermia temperature.