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Identification of Organic Matter Dispersions Based on Light Scattering Matrices Focusing on Soil Organic Matter Management

[Image: see text] The origin of organic matter, its spread, scattering, and functioning are influenced by the physical structure of liquid or dispersed media of organic matter. Refractive indices of fodder yeast grown on paraffin oil (paprin) and natural gas (gaprin) as well as Lycoperdon spore and...

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Autores principales: Bunkin, Nikolai F., Glinushkin, Alexey P., Shkirin, Alexey V., Ignatenko, Dmitriy N., Chirikov, Sergey N., Savchenko, Ivan V., Meshalkin, Valery P., Samarin, Gennady N., Maleki, Alireza, Kalinitchenko, Valery P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2020
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7774274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33403283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c04906
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author Bunkin, Nikolai F.
Glinushkin, Alexey P.
Shkirin, Alexey V.
Ignatenko, Dmitriy N.
Chirikov, Sergey N.
Savchenko, Ivan V.
Meshalkin, Valery P.
Samarin, Gennady N.
Maleki, Alireza
Kalinitchenko, Valery P.
author_facet Bunkin, Nikolai F.
Glinushkin, Alexey P.
Shkirin, Alexey V.
Ignatenko, Dmitriy N.
Chirikov, Sergey N.
Savchenko, Ivan V.
Meshalkin, Valery P.
Samarin, Gennady N.
Maleki, Alireza
Kalinitchenko, Valery P.
author_sort Bunkin, Nikolai F.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The origin of organic matter, its spread, scattering, and functioning are influenced by the physical structure of liquid or dispersed media of organic matter. Refractive indices of fodder yeast grown on paraffin oil (paprin) and natural gas (gaprin) as well as Lycoperdon spore and organelles were measured by laser phase microscopy. The scattering matrices of aqueous suspensions of paprin, gaprin, and Lycoperdon spores were measured using a laser polarimeter with the scattering angle ranging from 20 to 150°. The experimentally measured scattering matrices have been approximated by the weighted sum of theoretically calculated scattering matrices using the T-matrix code developed by Mishchenko. Most of the particle radii in the filtered fraction of paprin and gaprin were within the range of about 0.05–0.12 μm. Particle radii of the Lycoperdon spore suspension were within the range of 0.4–2.4 μm, which corresponded to both whole spores and their separate organelles. A possibility of identifying a suspension by its scattering matrices was shown for a small difference in the real parts of the refractive index in the example of paprin and gaprin. The measurements of the light scattering matrix showed that for a small size parameter of about 1, the identification of paprin and gaprin can be based only on a difference in the particle shape. Refractive index difference is manifested for the size parameter values higher than 3. An example of a suspension consisting of micron-sized spores and their submicron organelles shows high sensitivity of the scattering matrix to the composition of the dispersed material. The presented data and models help to extrapolate the results of the light scattering matrix study to a vast spectrum of media of organic matter origin and functioning. This study focused on the Biogeosystem Technique (BGT*) transcendental methodology to manage soil as an arena of biodegradation and organic synthesis. A BGT*-based robotic system for intra-soil pulse continuous–discrete water and matter supply directly into the dispersed–aggregated physical structure of the soil media was developed. The system enables transformation of soil into a stable highly productive organic chemical bioreactor for better controlled nanoparticle biomolecular interactions and adsorption by biological and mineral media. The scattering matrix measurement unit is supposed to be used in the robotic system as a diagnostic tool for the dispersion composition of soil organic components.
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spelling pubmed-77742742021-01-04 Identification of Organic Matter Dispersions Based on Light Scattering Matrices Focusing on Soil Organic Matter Management Bunkin, Nikolai F. Glinushkin, Alexey P. Shkirin, Alexey V. Ignatenko, Dmitriy N. Chirikov, Sergey N. Savchenko, Ivan V. Meshalkin, Valery P. Samarin, Gennady N. Maleki, Alireza Kalinitchenko, Valery P. ACS Omega [Image: see text] The origin of organic matter, its spread, scattering, and functioning are influenced by the physical structure of liquid or dispersed media of organic matter. Refractive indices of fodder yeast grown on paraffin oil (paprin) and natural gas (gaprin) as well as Lycoperdon spore and organelles were measured by laser phase microscopy. The scattering matrices of aqueous suspensions of paprin, gaprin, and Lycoperdon spores were measured using a laser polarimeter with the scattering angle ranging from 20 to 150°. The experimentally measured scattering matrices have been approximated by the weighted sum of theoretically calculated scattering matrices using the T-matrix code developed by Mishchenko. Most of the particle radii in the filtered fraction of paprin and gaprin were within the range of about 0.05–0.12 μm. Particle radii of the Lycoperdon spore suspension were within the range of 0.4–2.4 μm, which corresponded to both whole spores and their separate organelles. A possibility of identifying a suspension by its scattering matrices was shown for a small difference in the real parts of the refractive index in the example of paprin and gaprin. The measurements of the light scattering matrix showed that for a small size parameter of about 1, the identification of paprin and gaprin can be based only on a difference in the particle shape. Refractive index difference is manifested for the size parameter values higher than 3. An example of a suspension consisting of micron-sized spores and their submicron organelles shows high sensitivity of the scattering matrix to the composition of the dispersed material. The presented data and models help to extrapolate the results of the light scattering matrix study to a vast spectrum of media of organic matter origin and functioning. This study focused on the Biogeosystem Technique (BGT*) transcendental methodology to manage soil as an arena of biodegradation and organic synthesis. A BGT*-based robotic system for intra-soil pulse continuous–discrete water and matter supply directly into the dispersed–aggregated physical structure of the soil media was developed. The system enables transformation of soil into a stable highly productive organic chemical bioreactor for better controlled nanoparticle biomolecular interactions and adsorption by biological and mineral media. The scattering matrix measurement unit is supposed to be used in the robotic system as a diagnostic tool for the dispersion composition of soil organic components. American Chemical Society 2020-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC7774274/ /pubmed/33403283 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c04906 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Non-Commercial No Derivative Works (CC-BY-NC-ND) Attribution License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_ccbyncnd_termsofuse.html) , which permits copying and redistribution of the article, and creation of adaptations, all for non-commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Bunkin, Nikolai F.
Glinushkin, Alexey P.
Shkirin, Alexey V.
Ignatenko, Dmitriy N.
Chirikov, Sergey N.
Savchenko, Ivan V.
Meshalkin, Valery P.
Samarin, Gennady N.
Maleki, Alireza
Kalinitchenko, Valery P.
Identification of Organic Matter Dispersions Based on Light Scattering Matrices Focusing on Soil Organic Matter Management
title Identification of Organic Matter Dispersions Based on Light Scattering Matrices Focusing on Soil Organic Matter Management
title_full Identification of Organic Matter Dispersions Based on Light Scattering Matrices Focusing on Soil Organic Matter Management
title_fullStr Identification of Organic Matter Dispersions Based on Light Scattering Matrices Focusing on Soil Organic Matter Management
title_full_unstemmed Identification of Organic Matter Dispersions Based on Light Scattering Matrices Focusing on Soil Organic Matter Management
title_short Identification of Organic Matter Dispersions Based on Light Scattering Matrices Focusing on Soil Organic Matter Management
title_sort identification of organic matter dispersions based on light scattering matrices focusing on soil organic matter management
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7774274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33403283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c04906
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