59 results on '"D., Pitea"'
Search Results
2. Combustione della legna: risorsa rinnovabile o fonte di inquinamento atmosferico?
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M. Anzano, G. Barbieri, P. Barbieri, V. Castellani, E. Collina, E. Corsini, S. Cozzutto, C. Ludovico Galli, M. Lasagni, L. Marabini, M. Marinovich, A. Piazzalunga, D. Pitea, CESPI, DANIELE, PASSARINI, FABRIZIO, Anzano, M, Barbieri, G, Barbieri, P, Castellani, V, Cespi, D, Collina, E, Corsini, E, Cozzutto, S, Galli, C, Lasagni, M, Marabini, L, Marinovich, M, Passarini, F, Piazzalunga, A, Pitea, D, M. Anzano, G. Barbieri, P. Barbieri, V. Castellani, D. Cespi, E. Collina, E. Corsini, S. Cozzutto, C. Ludovico Galli, M. Lasagni, L. Marabini, M. Marinovich, F. Passarini, A. Piazzalunga, and D. Pitea
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TOSSICITÀ ,SOSTENIBILITÀ ,BIOMASSA ,combustione della legna - Published
- 2012
3. THEORETICAL INVESTIGATION OF LANTHANIDE COMPLEXES USED AS MRI CONTRAST AGENTS BY MEANS OF MOLECULAR MODELLING METHODOLOGIES
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BARONE, VINCENZO, U. COSENTINO, D. PITEA, G. MORO, A. VILLA, R. MULLER, F. BOTTEMAN, Barone, Vincenzo, U., Cosentino, D., Pitea, G., Moro, A., Villa, R., Muller, and F., Botteman
- Published
- 2002
4. A comparative analysis of molecular electrostatic potentials of chlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins in relation to their biological activity
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E. Fraschini, Laura Bonati, D. Pitea, and M. Lasagni
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Stereochemistry ,Chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Chlorinated Dibenzo-p-dioxins ,Biological activity ,Biochemistry - Published
- 1991
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5. Similarity of molecular electrostatic potential distributions in a series of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. Preliminary results
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D. Pitea, G. Moro, and U. Cosentino
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Series (mathematics) ,Similarity (network science) ,biology ,Computational chemistry ,Chemistry ,HMG-CoA reductase ,biology.protein ,Computational biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 1991
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6. A new method for tourism carrying capacity assessment
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D. Pitea, Serenella Sala, Valentina Castellani, Tiezzi, E, Marques, JC, Brebbia, CA, Jorgensen, SE, Castellani, V, Sala, S, and Pitea, D
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media_common.quotation_subject ,DPSIR ,Carrying capacity ,DPSIR model ,Tourism ,Destination management ,Environmental science ,Resource management ,Quality (business) ,Environmental impact assessment ,Resilience (network) ,Environmental planning ,Waste disposal ,media_common - Abstract
Tourism activities can generate both positive and negative effects on the conditions of the areas where visiting and fruition activities take place; every form of human use of natural environment causes changes to the environment conditions. Evaluation of carrying capacity of a destination has as a purpose the measurement of the threshold over which alteration due to human activities becomes unacceptable. To evaluate the consequences of tourism activities impacts it is necessary to know the characteristics of the environment where they occur and especially its resilience, which is the measure of the disturbance that the natural environment can tolerate without altering its equilibrium state. The carrying capacity concept is linked with resilience and rises from the necessity of measure which is the maximum acceptable level of impact for the environment or for one of its components and the capability of recovery of the previous condition. The purpose of this study is to suggest a model for assessing the physical carrying capacity of tourism destinations, as a tool to evaluate whether the current situation is sustainable or not and to determine if a rise in visitor numbers could affect the quality of the environment, the resources available and the quality of public services. For the assessment, all environmental aspects are separately analysed and the main environmental issues related to the daily life of residents and to tourism activities (air quality, water quality and disposability, waste management, soil use) are considered. The methodology is based on an evaluative procedure inspired by the DPSIR model, useful for underlining which are the drivers of impacts and which is the most relevant dataset to describe current and future scenarios. The innovative aspect of this study is the integration of the physical carrying capacity assessment with the evaluation of the managing capacity of environmental and public services, which can lead to depletion of ecosystem quality.
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- 2007
7. Electrical properties of partially saturated sandstones: Novel computational approach with hydrogeophysical applications
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E. Dalla, Am Binley, D. Pitea, Alessandro Brovelli, G. Cassiani, and F. Bergamini
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Permittivity ,Electrical resistivity and conductivity ,Hydrogeophysics ,Soil science ,Dielectric ,Mechanics ,Conductivity ,Porous medium ,Porosity ,Saturation (chemistry) ,Geology ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
[1] Electric and electromagnetic geophysical tools are suitable methods for investigating moisture content, transport, and storage properties of the subsoil with noninvasive surveys. Interpretation of field data is still based on empirical or semiempirical equations, which must be calibrated with complex, time-consuming laboratory measurements. In this paper we develop pore-scale models suitable for computing the effective electric conductivity and the effective permittivity of partially saturated porous media on the basis of simple structural parameters (grain size distribution and porosity). We compute the electrical conductivity with three approaches that model the conductivity of the shell of coating clay around solid grains of shaly sandstones using different assumptions. We compare the simulated results with experimental data from Sherwood Sandstone (UK) and discuss the effect of these assumptions on the effective conductivity. Simulations performed using a modeling approach that accounts for interaction between volume and surface conduction show an excellent agreement with experimental data. We also model the effective permittivity of the same porous medium at several saturation values and obtain a good match with laboratory measurements.
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- 2005
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8. Electrical conductivity of unsaturated porous media: Pore-scale model and comparison with laboratory data
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Alessandro Brovelli, G. Cassiani, D. Pitea, and E. Dalla
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Geophysics ,Materials science ,Discretization ,Electrical resistivity and conductivity ,Pore scale ,Particle-size distribution ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Mineralogy ,Mechanics ,Porous medium ,Saturation (chemistry) ,Scale model ,Electric charge - Abstract
[1] This paper presents a novel pore-scale approach for the derivation of electrical properties of porous media. In this approach we create a digital porous medium on the basis of experimental grain-size distribution data and apply a drainage simulator based on pore-morphology analysis. Then we simulate via finite difference discretization the electrical charge flow within the two-fluid and solid pore-scale distributions, and derive the effective resistivity of the porous medium. Simulation results have been compared with resistivity data from a UK Permo-Triassic Sandstone (Sherwood S.). Agreement between measured and simulated bulk conductivities at different saturation values is excellent; this confirms the validity of the adopted approach, and its underlying assumptions.
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- 2004
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9. Pore-scale modeling of electrical conductivity in unsaturated sandstones
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Alessandro Brovelli, D. Pitea, G. Cassiani, and E. Dalla
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Surface conductivity ,Materials science ,Electrical resistivity and conductivity ,Pore scale ,Particle-size distribution ,Vadose zone ,Mineralogy ,Geotechnical engineering ,Saturation (chemistry) ,Porous medium ,Water content - Abstract
Non-invasive techniques are becoming common tools for site characterization. These techniques include electrical and electromagnetic methods, and are generally referred to as hydro-geophysical techniques. This approach relies upon the corret translation of geophysical properties into hydrological ones, and particularly moisture content (in the vadose zone) and solute concentration (in both the vadose and saturated zones). In this note, we present a pore-scale approach for the investigation of the relationships that link electrical properties of porous media with water content and the solid interfacial areas responsible for surface conductivity. In this approach we create a digital porous medium on the basis of experimental grain size distribution data and apply a previously developed drainage simulator based on pore-morphology analysis. Then we simulate electrical flow within the pore-scale distributions of the phases and derive the bulk resistivity of the porous medium. Simulation results are compared with resistivity data from a UK Permo-Triassic Sandstone (Sherwood S.); resistivity of the solid phase, or alternatively surface conductivity, has been derived from calibration against measured bulk resistivity. The agreement between measured and simulated bulk conductivities, at different saturation values, is very good.
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- 2004
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10. A model for recognition of polychlorinated dibenzo-p -dioxins by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor
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M, Procopio, A, Lahm, A, Tramontano, L, Bonati, and D, Pitea
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Models, Molecular ,Binding Sites ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Receptors, Aryl Hydrocarbon ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Protein Structure, Secondary - Abstract
Ligand binding by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), a member of the bHLH-PAS family of transcriptional regulatory proteins, has been mapped to a region within the second 'PAS' domain, a conserved sequence motif first discovered in the Per-ARNT-Sim family of proteins. In addition to the bacterial photoactive yellow protein (PYP), which had been proposed as a structural prototype for the three dimensional fold of PAS domains, two crystal structures of the PAS domain have recently been determined: the human potassium channel HERG and the heme binding domain of the bacterial O(2) sensing FixL protein. The three structures reveal a highly conserved structural framework in evolutionary rather distant PAS domains, provide a more general view of how these domains can recognize their ligands and suggest a structure-function relationship that we exploited to build a three-dimensional model of the ligand binding domain (LBD) of the mouse aryl hydrocarbon receptor (mAhR). The model allowed us to putatively identify the residues responsible for the recognition of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) by AhR receptors and to formulate an hypothesis on the signal transduction mechanism.
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- 2002
11. Similarity of molecular electrostatic potential distributions in a series of HMG-CoA inhibitors
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D. Pitea, U. Cosentino, Laura Bonati, M. Lasagni, and G. Moro
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Series (mathematics) ,Molecular model ,Stereochemistry ,Chemometrics ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Similarity (network science) ,Biosynthesis ,Biochemistry ,HMG-CoA reductase ,biology.protein ,Pharmacophore - Abstract
A methodology based on molecular modeling and chemometrics [1] has been applied for the identification of the geometrical pharmacophore in a series of inhibitors of HMG‐CoA, an enzyme involved in cholesterol biosynthesis.
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- 1991
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12. Electrostatic descriptors in relation to biological activity of some chlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins
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E. Fraschini, M. Lasagni, U. Cosentino, G. Moro, D. Pitea, and Laura Bonati
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Molecular interactions ,Hydrocarbon ,Chemistry ,Aryl ,Chlorinated Dibenzo-p-dioxins ,Organic chemistry ,Membrane protein interactions ,heterocyclic compounds ,Biological activity - Abstract
Biological activities of halogenated dibenzo‐p‐dioxins include toxicity and aryl hydrocarbon hydroxilase (AHH) induction. The available evidences1 indicate that both types of activity are receptor‐mediated via an initial ‘‘recognition’’ step.
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- 1991
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13. Trends in Ecological Physical Chemistry
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J. A. Raven, M. Lasagni, Laura Bonati, G. Moro, D. Pitea, V. Cosentino, and A. Schiraldi
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Ecology ,Environmental science - Published
- 1994
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14. A perturbational molecular orbital analysis of the cycloaddition of 2-carbomethoxy-1,4-benzoquinone to vinylcyclohexene
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D. Pitea
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Organic Chemistry ,Intermolecular force ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Photochemistry ,Biochemistry ,Benzoquinone ,Cycloaddition ,Analytical Chemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,1,4-Benzoquinone ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Non-bonding orbital ,Computational chemistry ,Molecular orbital ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
The application of the intermolecular orbital method to the orientation phenomena in the Diels-Alder reaction of vinylcyclohexene with carbomethoxy- p benzoquinone is discussed in relation to the frontier orbital approximation and to the limits of the adopted method.
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- 1983
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15. Molecular conformation and electronic structure of azomethines
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G. Favini, D. Pitea, and Domenico Grasso
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Absorption spectroscopy ,Cyclohexane ,Organic Chemistry ,Solvatochromism ,Substituent ,Electronic structure ,Ring (chemistry) ,Photochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Crystallography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Aniline ,chemistry ,Methanol ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
The absorption spectra in the vapour phase, in cyclohexane and methanol solutions of para -substituted benzylidenemethylamines have been measured and discussed in terms of solvatochromic and substituent effects. A comparison with the absorption spectra of benzylideneanilines of the p -R. · C 6 H 4 · CH : N · C 6 H 5 type confirms that these compounds have a non-planar conformation with the aniline ring twisted out of the C 6 H 5 · CH : N · plane.
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- 1971
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16. Molecular conformation of benzylideneaniline in the vapour phase studied by electronic absorption spectra
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Domenico Grasso and D. Pitea
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Crystallography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Aniline ,Absorption spectroscopy ,Chemistry ,Phase (matter) ,Phase spectrum ,General Engineering ,Ring (chemistry) ,Photochemistry ,Molecular conformation - Abstract
The electronic vapour phase spectrum of benzylideneaniline suggests a molecular conformation with the aniline ring more twisted around the “single” N-C 6 H 5 bond, compared with that in the fluid or rigid solution and in the crystalline state.
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- 1971
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17. ChemInform Abstract: 2-CHLOROMETHYLENECYCLOHEPTAN- AND -OCTANONES- A CONFORMATIONAL STUDY BY DIPOLE MOMENTS, SPECTROSCOPY, AND NUCLEOPHILIC REACTIVITY
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D. PITEA, P. L. BELTRAME, and G. FAVINI
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General Medicine - Published
- 1977
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18. ChemInform Abstract: MOLECULAR CONFORMATION AND ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE OF AZOMETHINES. PART 5. DETERMINATION OF THE CONFORMATION OF SOME N-METHYLIMINE DERIVATIVES OF ALDEHYDES AND KETONES FROM DIPOLE MOMENT DATA
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D. PITEA, G. FAVINI, and G. CAPIETTI
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General Medicine - Published
- 1978
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19. ChemInform Abstract: DIELS-ALDER REACTION BETWEEN VINYLCYCLOHEXENE AND BENZOQUINONES. A SHORTCOMING OF THE FMO APPROACH
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D. PITEA, M. GASTALDI, F. ORSINI, F. PELIZZONI, A. MUGNOLI, and E. ABBONDANTI
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General Medicine - Published
- 1985
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20. ChemInform Abstract: KERR EFFECT STUDIES OF THE CONFORMATIONS OF MONO- AND DICARBOXYLIC ALIPHATIC ESTERS
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D. PITEA, F. GATTI, and B. MARCANDALLI
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General Medicine - Published
- 1984
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21. ChemInform Abstract: MOLECULAR CONFORMATION AND ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE OF AZOMETHINES. PART 6. ELECTRONIC SPECTRA OF N-BENZYLIDENEMETHYLAMINES
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D. PITEA and G. FAVINI
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General Medicine - Published
- 1980
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22. ChemInform Abstract: NUCLEOPHILE SUBSTITUTIONSRK. VON 3-HALOGEN-CYCLOHEXEN-(2)-ONEN-(1) MIT PIPERIDIN
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D. Pitea and G. Favini
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Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Medicinal chemistry - Published
- 1972
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23. ChemInform Abstract: BERECHNUNG DER MOLEKUELGEOMETRIEN VON HALOGEN- UND PIPERIDINO-CYCLOHEXENONEN MITTELS DIPOLMOMENTANALYSE
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D. Pitea and G. Favini
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Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Medicinal chemistry - Published
- 1972
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24. Nucleophilic substitution by piperidine in some 3-halogenocyclohex-2-enones
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D. Pitea and G. Favini
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ethanol ,chemistry ,Nucleophilic substitution ,Organic chemistry ,Dimethylformamide ,Piperidine ,Coplanarity ,Solvent effects ,Medicinal chemistry - Abstract
Reactions of 3-chlorocyclohex-2-enone, 3-chloro- and 3-bromo-5,5-dimethylcyclohex-2-enone, and 3-chloro-2-methylcyclohex-2-enone with piperidine in ethanol and dimethylformamide were studied kinetically at 30–90 °C. Substitutions are free from side reactions. Solvent effects are rather small. Measured rate coefficients for 3-chloro-cyclohexenone are larger than those of 3-chloro-5,5-dimethylcyclohexenone showing a different degree of coplanarity in the vinyl-carbonyl skeleton. The chloro- and bromo-5,5-dimethylcyclohexenones react at similar rates. Owing to the α-methyl group, rate-coefficient ratios between 3-chloro- and 3-chloro-2-methyl-cyclo-hexenone have values of 2–2·6 × 102.
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- 1972
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25. Molecular conformation and electronic structure of azomethines. Part IV. The electric dipole moments of para-substituted N-benzylidenemethylamines
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G. Favini, D. Pitea, and D. Grasso
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Bond dipole moment ,Dipole ,Crystallography ,Polarization density ,Electric dipole moment ,Chemistry ,Computational chemistry ,Chemical polarity ,Organic Chemistry ,Transition dipole moment ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Electric dipole transition ,Magnetic dipole - Abstract
The dipole moments of a number of N-benzylidenemethylamines have been measured. Present results compared with those for substituted N-benzylideneanilines give further evidence for the twist of the aniline ring out of the molecular plane.
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- 1971
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26. Kinetic study of the reactions of 1,1-diphenylallene in ethanol in the presence of sodium ethoxide
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P. Beltrame, D. Pitea, M. Simonetta, and A. Marzo
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,Reaction rate constant ,Ethanol ,Sodium ethoxide ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Inorganic chemistry ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Kinetic energy ,Ion - Abstract
The rates of dimerisation and of ethoxide-ion addition of 1,1-diphenylallene in ethanol at temperatures from 70 to 100° have been measured by gas-chromatographic analysis. Second-order rate constants for the concurrent reactions (of type A + A and A + B, respectively) have been derived. It has been confirmed that 2-chloro- and 2-bromo-1,1-diphenylpropene react with ethoxide ion with diphenylallene as an intermediate. The rate constants, separately determined for the stages of the system of consecutive-competitive reactions, account well for the experimental concentration–time results of the complete system.
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- 1967
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27. Nucleophilic substitution by thiolate ions in some 1,1-diaryl-2-halogenoethylenes
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P. Beltrame, D. Pitea, and M. Simonetta
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Aryl ,Sodium ,Organic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Photochemistry ,Medicinal chemistry ,Chloride ,Ion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Bromide ,Nucleophilic substitution ,medicine ,Dimethylformamide ,Reactivity (chemistry) ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Six 1,1-diaryl-2-arylthioethylenes were obtained by displacement of chloride or bromide ion from diaryl-halogeno ethylenes by aryl thiolate ions in amidic solvents.The reaction of compounds (p-R-C6H4)2C:CHCl (R = H, Me, and OMe) with sodium toluene-p-thiolate in dimethylformamide was studied kinetically in the range 30–90°. The order of reactivity is H > Me > OMe, with a high value of the Hammett ρ constant. The reaction appears a case of direct nucleophilic substitution at a non-activated vinylic carbon atom.
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- 1967
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28. Calculation of molecular geometries of some halogeno- and piperidino-cyclohexenones by dipole moment analysis
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D. Pitea and G. Favini
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Steric effects ,Dipole ,Bond dipole moment ,Molecular geometry ,Computational chemistry ,Chemistry ,Yield (chemistry) ,Moment (physics) ,Transition dipole moment ,Physical chemistry ,Electric dipole transition - Abstract
The electric dipole moments of some halogeno- and piperidino-cyclohexenones are reported and discussed in comparison with the corresponding αβ-unsaturated ketones. The dipole moment values support the view that in the cyclohex-2-enone series the vinyl-carbonyl system is coplanar, whereas in the 5,5-dimethyl derivatives steric interaction betwee the 5(ax)-methyl and the carbon atoms of the –CC–CO system may occur. They yield no definite evidence regarding the structures of the 2-methyl derivatives.
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- 1972
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29. Report: Combustion Byproducts and Their Health Effects: Summary of the 10th International Congress
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JoAnn S. Lighty, Antonio D'Alessio, Kirk R. Smith, Tobias Stoeger, William A. Suk, Brian K. Gullett, Donald Lucas, Adel F. Sarofim, Mel Keener, Anna Ciajolo, Slawomir M. Lomnicki, Demetrio Pitea, Paige E. Tolbert, Andrea D’Anna, Günter Oberdörster, Ralf Zimmermann, Heather F Henry, Barry Dellinger, Ron Wyzga, Dellinger, B, D’Alessio, A, D’Anna, A, Ciajolo, A, Gullett, B, Henry, H, Keener, M, Lighty, J, Lomnicki, S, Lucas, D, Öberdorster, G, Pitea, D, Suk, W, Sarofim, A, Smith, K, Stöger, T, Tolbert, P, Wyzga, R, Zimmermann, R, B., Dellinger, D'Alessio, Antonio, D'Anna, Andrea, A., Ciajolo, B., Gullett, H., Henry, M., Keener, J. A., Lighty, S., Lomnicki, D., Luca, G., Öberdorster, D., Pitea, W., Suk, A., Sarofim, K. R., Smith, T., Stöger, P., Tolbert, R., Wyzga, and R., Zimmermann
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mercury ,Products of incomplete combustion Biomass combustion Particulate matter Dioxins ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Combustion ,medicine.disease_cause ,soot ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Indoor air quality ,dioxins ,Ultrafine particle ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,biomass combustion ,Sulfate ,NOC ,Waste Management and Disposal ,persistent free radicals ,particulate matter ,Waste management ,Chemistry ,PICs ,PIC ,Particulates ,Original Papers ,Pollution ,Soot ,ultrafine particles ,Incineration ,Mercury (element) ,products of incomplete combustion ,nanoparticles ,tobacco smoke - Abstract
The 10th International Congress on Combustion Byproducts and their Health Effects was held in Ischia, Italy, from June 17-20, 2007. It is sponsored by the US NIEHS, NSF, Coalition for Responsible Waste Incineration (CRWI), and Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). The congress focused on: the origin, characterization, and health impacts of combustion-generated fine and ultrafine particles; emissions of mercury and dioxins, and the development/application of novel analytical/diagnostic tools. The consensus of the discussion was that particle-associated organics, metals, and persistent free radicals (PFRs) produced by combustion sources are the likely source of the observed health impacts of airborne PM rather than simple physical irritation of the particles. Ultrafine particle-induced oxidative stress is a likely progenitor of the observed health impacts, but important biological and chemical details and possible catalytic cycles remain unresolved. Other key conclusions were: (1) In urban settings, 70% of airborne fine particles are a result of combustion emissions and 50% are due to primary emissions from combustion sources, (2) In addition to soot, combustion produces one, possibly two, classes of nanoparticles with mean diameters of ∼10 nm and ∼1 nm. (3) The most common metrics used to describe particle toxicity, viz. surface area, sulfate concentration, total carbon, and organic carbon, cannot fully explain observed health impacts, (4) Metals contained in combustion-generated ultrafine and fine particles mediate formation of toxic air pollutants such as PCDD/F and PFRs. (5) The combination of metal-containing nanoparticles, organic carbon compounds, and PFRs can lead to a cycle generating oxidative stress in exposed organisms. © Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. 2008.
- Published
- 2008
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30. Theoretical investigation into the influence of conformational equilibria on the water-exchange process in magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents
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François Botteman, Alessandra Villa, Vincenzo Barone, Robert N. Muller, Demetrio Pitea, Ugo Cosentino, Giorgio Moro, Molecular Dynamics, Cosentino, U, Pitea, D, Moro, G, Barone, V, Villa, A, Muller, R, Botteman, F, U., Cosentino, D., Pitea, G., Moro, Barone, Vincenzo, A., Villa, R. N., Muller, and F., Botteman
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lanthanide complexes ,DYNAMICS ,IONS ,ENERGIES ,Population ,Ab initio ,Polarizable continuum model ,AQUEOUS-SOLUTION ,Ab initio quantum chemistry methods ,Computational chemistry ,Molecule ,magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,education ,Alkyl ,Coordination geometry ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,education.field_of_study ,SOLVENT ,Aqueous solution ,Chemistry ,ab initio calculations ,conformational analysis ,Crystallography ,CHIM/02 - CHIMICA FISICA ,POLARIZABLE CONTINUUM MODEL ,DIETHYLENETRIAMINEPENTAACETIC ACID ,magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents, lanthanide complexes, ab initio calculations, polarizable continuum model, conformational analysis ,COORDINATED WATER ,COMPLEXES - Abstract
The conformational behavior in aqueous solution of four complexes of the Eu(III) ion with bis (R-amide) derivatives (R = H, methyl, ethyl, butyl) of diethylentriamine pentacetate ligands has been characterized at the ab initio level to rationalize the experimentally observed influence of alkyl substituents on the rate of the exchange process of the water molecule coordinated to the ion with the bulk water. Calculations were performed in vacuo and for aqueous solution, the latter by using the polarizable continuum model. Geometry optimizations provide, for each system, four isomers as stable conformations, all presenting a distorted tricapped trigonal prism coordination geometry around the ion. No significant influence of the alkyl substitution on the coordination geometry, nor on the europium-water distance, was observed. Moreover, increasing the length of the alkyl chain had no significant effect on the relative isomer population in solution. Thus, these results lead us to suppose that other effects, like those deriving from lateral chain folding in solution, should be considered to explain the increased rate of the water-exchange process with alkyl chain lengthening. © Springer-Verlag 2003.
- Published
- 2004
31. Role of the carbon defects in the catalytic oxygen reduction by graphite nanoparticles: a spectromagnetic, electrochemical and computational integrated approach.
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Greco C, Cosentino U, Pitea D, Moro G, Santangelo S, Patanè S, D'Arienzo M, Fiore M, Morazzoni F, and Ruffo R
- Abstract
The chemical groups present at the surface of graphite have been thought for a long time to be mainly responsible for its catalytic activity in the oxygen reduction reaction. Recently, it was proposed that the surface defects of graphite also significantly contribute to promote this reaction. Although the behaviour of surface defects has been reported, only few comments have been dedicated to their involvement in the mechanism and the possible intermediate species in the oxygen reduction reaction. Herein, we aim to present a more detailed explanation of the catalytic activity of graphite particles based on the structure of their defects and their size. Structural, spectroscopic and magnetic investigation (X-ray diffraction, Raman and electron spin resonance) and electrochemical measurements were performed to describe the nature of the defects and their aptitude to transfer electrons. Computational description supplied precise details of the energy of the different defects and their ability to promote the reduction, also suggesting the structure of the intermediate adduct in the oxygen reduction. The results indicated that molecular oxygen preferentially interacts with graphite defects, which involve the π-electron system and accumulation of the spin density on the edges of the grains, in particular, on the zig-zag edges present on ball-milled graphite. This promotes the reactivity of this nanomaterial. Furthermore, the activation increases by decreasing the particle size.
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- 2019
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32. PCDD/F and dioxin-like PCB minimization: A 13-year experimental study along the flue gas cleaning system of a secondary aluminium refining plant.
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Collina E, Bortolami M, Franzoni F, Lasagni M, Piccinelli E, and Pitea D
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- Chemical Industry standards, Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated analysis, Environmental Pollutants analysis, Environmental Restoration and Remediation methods, Gases, Polychlorinated Biphenyls analysis, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins analysis, Aluminum, Chemical Industry methods, Dioxins and Dioxin-like Compounds analysis, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons analysis
- Abstract
A 13-years study shows that a careful design of the flue gas cleaning system of a full scale secondary aluminium refining plant results in a minimized and very stable emission of Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-Dioxins (PCDD), Polychlorinated Dibenzo Furans (PCDF) and dioxin-like Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCB). The value of equivalent toxicity of PCDD/F in the emission was definitely of an order of magnitude less than the regulation limit. In the initial flue gas cleaning system, the PCB mean fingerprint after the slow cooling of the flue gas was typical of de novo synthesis. Instead, in the presence of quenching, there was evidence that the fast cooling of flue gas prevented the PCB de novo synthesis. In fact, the PCB profile was similar to that in the air collected from the aspiration hoods for the quenching. The gas-phase and solid-phase partitioning of PCBs, before and after the fabric filters, highlights the predominant role of the vapor phase with respect to the total removal efficiency. The polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons breakdown could be an additional de novo formation pathway even in industrial plants., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The rate-determining step in a low temperature PCDD/F formation from oxidative breakdown of native carbon in MSWI fly ash.
- Author
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Collina E, Lasagni M, Piccinelli E, Anzano MN, and Pitea D
- Subjects
- Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated chemistry, Hot Temperature, Kinetics, Oxidation-Reduction, Particulate Matter, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins chemistry, Solid Waste analysis, Carbon chemistry, Coal Ash chemistry, Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated analysis, Incineration methods, Models, Theoretical, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins analysis
- Abstract
We developed a phenomenological approach to explain the kinetic experimental data of PCDD/F formation/destruction based on a reaction mechanism model at the congener group level. In the present work, we investigated the formation and destruction of PCDD/F on fly ash as a function of time at 280 °C, chlorine mass balance, evolution of the total equivalent toxicity and kinetic modelling. We determined that the volatilization process is negligible and that the reactive processes at short reaction times only become important above 300 °C. The results provide a substantial improvement on existing studies. We experimentally demonstrated, for the first time, that there is a correlation between the oxidative breakdown of native carbon and PCDD/F de novo synthesis. Data processing by our kinetic model showed that the formation of oxygen complexes C(O) was the determining step for de novo synthesis of PCDD/F. Indeed, the calculated reaction time at which the PCDD/F concentration was at a maximum (850 min) was greater than that calculated for the oxygen complexes C(O) (435 min). Moreover, the experimental carbon conversion efficiency for PCDD/F production (0.0032% at 600 min maximum) was in a very good agreement with the theoretical conversion (0.0041%)., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Comparison of wood smoke PM2.5 obtained from the combustion of FIR and beech pellets on inflammation and DNA damage in A549 and THP-1 human cell lines.
- Author
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Corsini E, Budello S, Marabini L, Galbiati V, Piazzalunga A, Barbieri P, Cozzutto S, Marinovich M, Pitea D, and Galli CL
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Cell Survival, Chemokines biosynthesis, Comet Assay, Humans, Inflammation pathology, Interleukin-8 metabolism, Micronucleus Tests, Mutagenicity Tests, Particle Size, Reactive Oxygen Species chemistry, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Signal Transduction drug effects, Abies, Air Pollutants toxicity, DNA Damage, Fagus, Inflammation chemically induced, Particulate Matter toxicity, Smoke adverse effects, Wood
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect on the induction of interleukin-8 of particulate matter (PM) from fir and beech pellets burnt in domestic appliances on two human cells lines, namely the lung epithelial cell line A549 and the promyelocytic cell line THP-1. The effects of PM2.5 obtained from combustion of beech and fir pellets were compared to reference diesel exhaust particulates (DEP). In parallel, wood smoke PM-induced genotoxicity and oxidative stress were also investigated in A549 cells. Cells were treated for different times (3-72 h) with increasing concentrations of PM2.5 obtained from sequential combustions of fir and beech pellets or reference DEP. Cell viability was assessed by lactate dehydrogenase leakage, and the release of interleukin-8 or CXCL8 (IL-8) was measured to evaluate the pro-inflammatory effect. Oxidative stress was evaluated by the 5(6)-carboxy-2',7'dichlorofluorescein diacetate (DCFH-DA) assay and DNA damage by the alkaline comet assay and micronucleus frequency by flow cytometry. Both A549 and THP-1 cells responded in a dose- and time-related manner to wood smoke PM2.5 with IL-8 release, particles obtained from late combustions being the most active. THP-1 cells were more sensitive than A549 cells. On a mass base, similar effects were observed for both fir and beech PM2.5. However, the combustion of beech pellets generated approximately three times more PM2.5 than fir pellets. Regarding the mechanism of PM2.5 uptake, in both THP-1 and A549 cells, cytochalasin D prevented PM2.5-induced IL-8 mRNA expression and cytokine release, indicating a key role for actin polymerization in particles uptake and that the production of IL-8 correlated with particle phagocytosis. As signal transduction pathway involvement, in both THP-1 and A549 cells, PM2.5-induced IL-8 release could be completely blocked by the selective inhibitor SB203580, indicating a role of p38 MAPK activation. PM2.5 from both fir and beech pellets also induced modest DNA lesions dose related, measured as strand breaks, whereas no increase in the number of micronucleus was observed. Similar effects were observed with DEP, arguing against less dangerous effects of wood smoke particles than other categories of combustion-derived particles in the same size range. Overall, results suggest that combustion conditions can significantly affect the characteristics of particles and the consequent toxicity, and that different woods can generate different amounts of PM2.5.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Kinetic modeling of the formation and destruction of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin and dibenzofuran from fly ash native carbon at 300 °C.
- Author
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Lasagni M, Collina E, Piccinelli E, Anzano MN, Piazzalunga A, and Pitea D
- Subjects
- Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated, Kinetics, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins chemistry, Benzofurans chemistry, Carbon chemistry, Coal Ash, Models, Chemical, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
The kinetics for the oxidative breakdown of native carbon in raw fly ash samples (RFA) and for the formation and destruction of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDD) and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDF), abbreviated PCDD/F, were investigated using a flow-over solid system in which the RFA samples were thermally treated at 300 °C under synthetic air. This study investigated the correlation between the disappearance of the reagent and the formation of the products to gain insight into the underlying mechanisms that govern these reactions at congener groups level. The detailed analyses of the experimental concentration-time data revealed significant differences in the behavior between the 2,3,7,8-substituted PCDD and the 2,3,7,8-substituted PCDF, non-2,3,7,8-substituted PCDD and PCDF. The chlorine balance for the former was always negative, that is, chlorine was released regardless of reaction time and primarily resulted from the dechlorination of the hepta- and octa-homologues. However, for the others, the balance was substantially positive up to approximately 240 min and became negative at longer intervals when the dechlorination reactions took over. The processes involving PCDD and PCDF in which the thermal destruction was only partial were found to increase the total equivalent toxicity (TEQ) levels rather than reduce them.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Antimicrobial activity of thin metallic silver flakes, waste products of a manufacturing process.
- Author
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Anzano M, Tosti A, Lasagni M, Campiglio A, Pitea D, and Collina E
- Subjects
- Cell Proliferation drug effects, Escherichia coli cytology, Escherichia coli drug effects, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Water chemistry, Anti-Infective Agents chemistry, Anti-Infective Agents pharmacology, Industrial Waste, Silver chemistry, Silver pharmacology
- Abstract
The aim of the research was to develop new products and processes from a manufacturing waste from an Italian metallurgic company. The company produced thin silver metallic films and the production scraps were silver flakes. The possibility to use the silver flakes in water disinfection processes was studied. The antimicrobial activity of the flakes was investigated in batch using Escherichia coli as Gram-negative microorganism model. The flakes did not show any antimicrobial activity, so they were activated with two different processes: thermal activation in reducing atmosphere and chemical activation, obtaining, respectively, reduced flakes (RF) and chemical flakes (CF). The flakes, activated with either treatment, showed antimicrobial activity against E. coli. The kill rate was dependent on the type of activated flakes. The chemical flakes were more efficient than reduced flakes. The kill rate determined for 1 g of CF, 1.0 +/- 0.2 min(-1), was greater than the kill rate determined for 1 g of RF, 0.069 +/- 0.004 min(-1). This was confirmed also by the minimum inhibitory concentration values. It was demonstrated that the antimicrobial capability was dependent on flakes amount and on the type of aqueous medium. Furthermore, the flakes maintained their properties also when used a second time. Finally, the antimicrobial activities of flakes were tested in an effluent of a wastewater treatment plant where a variety of heterotrophic bacteria were present.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Conformational behaviour determines the low-relaxivity state of a conditional MRI contrast agent.
- Author
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Cosentino U, Pitea D, Moro G, Saracino GA, and Villa A
- Subjects
- Heterocyclic Compounds chemistry, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Models, Molecular, Molecular Conformation, Organometallic Compounds chemistry, Quantum Theory, Thermodynamics, Contrast Media chemistry
- Abstract
The conformational behaviour in aqueous solution of the EgadMe complex, a conditional gadolinium-based contrast agent sensitive to beta-galactosidase enzymatic activity, is investigated by means of ab initio calculations and classical molecular dynamics simulations. Furthermore, force field parameterization of gadolinium-ligand interactions is performed, and its reliability is tested on the bench mark [Gd(DOTA)](-) system by MD simulations. Both computational methods highlight the presence in EgadMe of two main conformational isomers. The lowest energy conformation is a "close" form, corresponding to a state of low-relaxivity (MRI "inactive"), in which the ninth coordination site of the gadolinium ion is occupied by one oxygen atom of the galactopyranose residue. The second isomer, which is 2.9 (at ab initio level) and 4.2 (at MD level) kcal mol(-1) above the global minimum, presents an "open" form, corresponding to a state of high-relaxivity (MRI "active") in which one water molecule coordinates the ion. These results are consistent with experimental findings reported for EgadMe, and show that competition at the ninth coordination site of gadolinium ion, between the intra (the galactopyranose residue) and inter (water molecules) molecular interactions, affects the relaxivity of this system.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Kinetics of carbon degradation and PCDD/PCDF formation on MSWI fly ash.
- Author
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Lasagni M, Collina E, Grandesso E, Piccinelli E, and Pitea D
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants chemistry, Benzofurans chemistry, Cities, Coal Ash, Kinetics, Oxidation-Reduction, Particulate Matter chemistry, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins analysis, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins chemistry, Polymers chemistry, Temperature, Air Pollutants analysis, Benzofurans analysis, Carbon analysis, Carbon chemistry, Incineration, Industrial Waste, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins analogs & derivatives, Polymers analysis
- Abstract
The native carbon oxidation and PolyChloroDibenzo-p-Dioxins and PolyChloroDibenzoFurans, PCDD/F, formation were simultaneously studied at different temperatures (230-350 degrees C) and times (0-1440 min) in order to establish a direct correlation between the disappearance of the reagent and the formation of the products. The kinetic runs were conducted in an experimental set up where conditions were chosen to gain information on the role of fly ash deposits in cold zones of municipal solid waste incinerators in PCDD/F formation reaction. The carbon oxidation measured as the decrease of total organic carbon of fly ash was in agreement with the carbon evolved as sum of CO and CO(2). The carbon mass balance indicated an increase in the efficiency of carbon conversion in CO and CO(2) with temperature. The CO and CO(2) formation was the result of two parallel pseudo first order reactions thus giving significant information about the reaction mechanism. PCDD/F formation as a function of temperature showed that the maximum formation was achieved in a narrow range around 280 degrees C; the time effect at 280 degrees C was a progressive formation increase at least up to 900 min. The PCDF:PCDD molar ratio increased with temperature and time, and the most abundant homologues were HxCDD, HpCDD, OCDD for PCDD, and HxCDF, HpCDF within PCDF. These experimental results supported the hypothesis that the formation mechanism was the de novo synthesis.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The anti-fibrillogenic activity of tetracyclines on PrP 106-126: a 3D-QSAR study.
- Author
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Cosentino U, Pitea D, Moro G, Saracino GA, Caria P, Varì RM, Colombo L, Forloni G, Tagliavini F, and Salmona M
- Subjects
- Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship, Tetracyclines chemistry, Neurofibrillary Tangles drug effects, Peptide Fragments drug effects, Prions drug effects, Tetracyclines pharmacology
- Abstract
There is evidence that Tetracyclines are potentially useful drugs to treat prion disease, the fatal neurodegenerative disease in which cellular prion proteins change in conformation to become a disease-specific species (PrP(Sc)). Based on an in vitro anti-fibrillogenesis test, and using the peptide PrP106-126 in the presence of tetracycline and 14 derivatives, we carried out a three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationship (3D-QSAR) study to investigate the stereoelectronic features required for anti-fibrillogenic activity. A preliminary variable reduction technique was used to search for grid points where statistical indexes of interaction potential distributions present local maximum (or minimum) values. Variable selection genetic algorithms were then used to search for the best 3D-QSAR models. A 6-variable model showed the best predictability of the anti-fibrillogenic activity that highlighted the best tetracycline substitution patterns: hydroxyl group presence in positions 5 and 6, electrodonor substituents on the aromatic D-ring, alkylamine substituent at the amidic group in position 2 and non-epi configuration of the NMe2 group.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Prevention of PCDD/F formation and minimization of their emission at the stack of a secondary aluminum casting plant.
- Author
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Pitea D, Bortolami M, Collina E, Cortili G, Franzoni F, Lasagni M, and Piccinelli E
- Subjects
- Carbon chemistry, Filtration, Gases chemistry, Industry, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins chemical synthesis, Temperature, Aluminum chemistry, Benzofurans chemical synthesis, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Results of an extensive 5 year study on a full-scale plant with the specific aim to investigate polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin (PCDD) and polychlorinated dibenzo furan (PCDF) formation and release in a secondary aluminum casting plant are reported. PCDD and PCDF concentrations were evaluated for all the gaseous and solid streams (no liquid stream was present) as well as for the flue gas upstream and downstream of every single unit of the flue gas cleaning system. The study highlights PCDD and PCDF formation particularly in the narrow 320-360 degrees C range. To prevent formation reactions and/or minimize PCDD and PCDF concentration at the stack, effects of the fabric filter substitution, a quenching chamber and a postcombustor installation together with working conditions are investigated. The flue gas cleaning system results in PCDD and PCDF emission at stack of 0.1-0.2 ng I-TEQ/N m3 and in a mass flow of 250-550 nmol/h. The total PCDD and PCDF release into the environment is 0.06 g I-TEQ/yr and the corresponding emission factor, 0.35 microg I-TEQ/ton. It is shown that the global effects of the technological innovation on the reaction mechanisms are the prevention of PCDD/F formation by de novo synthesis and the minimization of their emission.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Kinetic modeling of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin and dibenzofuran formation based on carbon degradation reactions.
- Author
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Grandesso E, Ryan S, Gullett B, Touati A, Collina E, Lasagni M, and Pitea D
- Subjects
- Kinetics, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins chemistry, Temperature, Thermodynamics, Time Factors, Benzofurans chemistry, Carbon chemistry, Models, Chemical, Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Combustion experiments in a laboratory-scale fixed bed reactor were performed to determine the role of temperature and time in polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin (PCDD) and polychlorinated dibenzofuran (PCDF) formation, allowing a global kinetic expression to be written for PCDD/F formation due to soot oxidation in fly ash deposits. Rate constants were calculated for the reactions of carbon degradation, PCDD/F formation, desorption, and degradation. For the first time, values for activation and thermodynamic parameters for the overall reactions have been calculated for PCDD/F formation, desorption, and destruction reactions. Good agreement was found between the calculated rate constants for carbon degradation and for PCDD/F formation, indicating that the two processes have a common rate-determining step. Moreover, PCDD/F formation was found to be still active after long reaction times (24 h). These results points out the importance of carbon deposits in the postcombustion stages that can account for emissions long after their formation (memory effects). The calculated formation rates were 7-15 times higher than those reported in the literature from fly ash-only experiments, indicating the importance of both soot and a continuous source of chlorine. A comparison between full-scale incinerator rates and model calculated rates indicates that our model based on carbon degradation kinetic can be a tool to estimate emissions.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Selection of surfactants for enhancing diesel hydrocarbons-contaminated media bioremediation.
- Author
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Franzetti A, Di Gennaro P, Bestetti G, Lasagni M, Pitea D, and Collina E
- Subjects
- Environmental Restoration and Remediation methods, Gasoline, Hydrocarbons metabolism, Soil Microbiology, Soil Pollutants metabolism, Surface-Active Agents chemistry
- Abstract
The use of surfactants represents a valuable method to enhance the access of the microorganisms to low-soluble and recalcitrant compounds in bioremediation techniques. The choice of surfactants is the first step of feasibility studies for this application. So far, no defined procedures are present in literature to select the most suitable surfactant for the treatment of a specific contaminated site. Furthermore, the characterisation of physico-chemical parameters is important to understand the reason of successes and failures. In this paper a step procedure to select and characterise a commercial surfactant to be used in bioremediation enhancement of hydrocarbon-contaminated media was developed. Among the commercial surfactants, the procedure was applied to alkyl polyethoxylates (Brij family) and sorbitan derivates (Tween family). The selection resulted in the application of Brij 56 and Tween 80 as biodegradation-enhancer in different lab scale systems for remediation of diesel contamination. In liquid systems, Tween 80 greatly increased biodegradation of highly branched and high-molecular weight hydrocarbons, while Brij 56 enhanced degradation of highly branched hydrocarbons. Based on these results, the potential applications and the limitations of these surfactants at full scale level were estimated.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Slurry phase bioremediation of PAHs in industrial landfill samples at laboratory scale.
- Author
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Di Gennaro P, Franzetti A, Bestetti G, Lasagni M, Pitea D, and Collina E
- Subjects
- Hydrolysis, Kinetics, Molecular Weight, Phenanthrenes analysis, Polysorbates analysis, Pyrenes analysis, Soil, Solubility, Biodegradation, Environmental, Bioreactors, Hydrocarbons analysis, Polycyclic Compounds analysis, Refuse Disposal methods, Soil Pollutants metabolism
- Abstract
The effect of Tween 80 and selected bacteria additions on the bioremediation of PAH contaminated landfill soil (70.38mgkg(-1)) was evaluated in a slurry phase bioreactor. A phenanthrene-degrading consortium was selected by enrichment cultures and used as autochthonous inoculum. The Tween 80 addition increased the aqueous concentration of both high and low molecular weight PAHs. In the experiment with Tween 80 and inoculum addition, added microorganisms improved (>90%) the biodegradation of two- and three-ring PAHs as well as of the four-ring PAHs pyrene and fluoranthene. Biodegradation of the higher molecular weight PAHs was about 30% in experiments with Tween 80 addition, with and without inoculum addition.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Bioremediation of diesel fuel contaminated soil: effect of non ionic surfactants and selected bacteria addition.
- Author
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Collina E, Lasagni M, Pitea D, Franzetti A, Di Gennaro P, and Bestetti G
- Subjects
- Bacteria metabolism, Environmental Restoration and Remediation methods, Gasoline, Soil Microbiology, Soil Pollutants metabolism, Surface-Active Agents chemistry
- Abstract
Aim of this work was to evaluate influence of two commercial surfactants and inoculum of selected bacteria on biodegradation of diesel fuel in different systems. Among alkyl polyethossilates (Brij family) and sorbitan derivates (Tween family) a first selection of surfactants was performed by estimation of Koc and Dafnia magna EC50 with molecular descriptor and QSAR model. Further experiments were conducted to evaluate soil sorption, biodegradability and toxicity. In the second part of the research, the effect of Brij 56, Tween 80 and selected bacteria addition on biodegradation of diesel fuel was studied in liquid cultures and in slurry and solid phase systems. The latter experiments were performed with diesel contaminated soil in bench scale slurry phase bioreactor and solid phase columns. Tween 80 addition increased the biodegradation rate of hydrocarbons both in liquid and in slurry phase systems. Regarding the effect of inoculum, no enhancement of biodegradation rate was observed neither in surfactant added nor in experiments without addition. On the contrary, in solid phase experiments, inoculum addition resulted in enhanced biodegradation compared to surfactant addition.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Computational approaches to shed light on molecular mechanisms in biological processes.
- Author
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Moro G, Bonati L, Bruschi M, Cosentino U, De Gioia L, Fantucci PC, Pandini A, Papaleo E, Pitea D, Saracino GA, and Zampella G
- Abstract
Computational approaches based on Molecular Dynamics simulations, Quantum Mechanical methods and 3D Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationships were employed by computational chemistry groups at the University of Milano-Bicocca to study biological processes at the molecular level. The paper reports the methodologies adopted and the results obtained on Aryl hydrocarbon Receptor and homologous PAS proteins mechanisms, the properties of prion protein peptides, the reaction pathway of hydrogenase and peroxidase enzymes and the defibrillogenic activity of tetracyclines.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Conformational polymorphism of the PrP106-126 peptide in different environments: a molecular dynamics study.
- Author
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Villa A, Mark AE, Saracino GA, Cosentino U, Pitea D, Moro G, and Salmona M
- Subjects
- Humans, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy standards, Models, Chemical, Protein Conformation, Protein Structure, Secondary, Reference Standards, Sensitivity and Specificity, Time Factors, Water chemistry, Computer Simulation, Dimethyl Sulfoxide chemistry, Hexanes chemistry, Peptide Fragments chemistry, Prions chemistry, Trifluoroethanol chemistry
- Abstract
Extensive molecular dynamic simulations (approximately 240 ns) have been used to investigate the conformational behavior of PrP106-126 prion peptide in four different environments (water, dimethyl sulfoxide, hexane, and trifluoroethanol) and under both neutral and acidic conditions. The conformational polymorphism of PrP106-126 in solution observed in the simulations supports the role of this fragment in the structural transition of the native to the abnormal form of prion protein in response to changes in the local environmental conditions. The peptide in solution is primarily unstructured. The simulations show an increased presence of helical structure in an apolar solvent, in agreement with the results from circular dichroism spectroscopy. In water solution, beta-sheet elements were observed between residues 108-112 and either residues 115-121 or 121-126. An alpha-beta transition was observed under neutral conditions. In DMSO, the peptide adopted an extended conformation, in agreement with nuclear magnetic resonance experiments.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Naphthalene biodegradation kinetics in an aerobic slurry-phase bioreactor.
- Author
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Collina E, Bestetti G, Di Gennaro P, Franzetti A, Gugliersi F, Lasagni M, and Pitea D
- Subjects
- Biodegradation, Environmental, Bioreactors, Kinetics, Pseudomonas putida physiology, Bacteria, Aerobic physiology, Naphthalenes metabolism, Soil Pollutants metabolism
- Abstract
The research was focused on the slurry-phase biodegradation of naphthalene in soil. Among ex situ techniques, the slurry phase offers the advantage of increased availability of contaminants to bacteria. From naphthalene contaminated soil, a Pseudomonas putida M8 strain capable to degrade naphthalene was selected. Experiments were performed in a stirred and oxygenated reactor. In this study, the influence of air flow rate and agitation rate on volatilisation and biodegradation of naphthalene was investigated. The hydrocarbon disappearance, the carbon dioxide production, and the ratio of total heterotrophic and naphthalene-degrading bacteria was monitored. The results obtained confirm that the selected bioremediation technology is successful in the treatment of contaminated soils.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Tetracycline and its analogues as inhibitors of amyloid fibrils: searching for a geometrical pharmacophore by theoretical investigation of their conformational behavior in aqueous solution.
- Author
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Cosentino U, Varí MR, Saracino AA, Pitea D, Moro G, and Salmona M
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Models, Molecular, Molecular Conformation, Solutions, Tetracycline pharmacology, Tetracyclines pharmacology, Amyloid antagonists & inhibitors, Tetracycline chemistry, Tetracyclines chemistry
- Abstract
Tetracycline (TC) and its derivatives have recently been proposed as a new class of antagonists in prion diseases as they prevent the aggregation of prion protein peptides and their acquisition of protease resistance in vitro and in vivo. Looking for relationships between conformational flexibility and biological activity, we searched for a geometrical pharmacophore by investigating, in aqueous solution, the conformational behavior of 15 TCs in both the zwitterionic and the anionic forms. For TC similar conformational flexibility was found for the two forms and two main conformational families were detected, an extended and a folded conformation characterized by different intramolecular hydrogen-bond networks. On comparing the Molecular Mechanics results with the ab initio ones and the experimental evidence, it can be seen that the conformational behavior of TC is reasonably well predicted by the MM2 force field, whereas the conformational energies provided by the Amber force field are unreliable. The conformational analysis of the other TC derivatives was then performed by the MM2 force field. As a result, their conformational behavior was similar to that observed for TC itself. Despite the hydronaphthacene moiety's conformational flexibility, no geometrical pharmacophore was found among the TCs, i.e. properties other than geometrical ones should play a crucial role in determining their anti-fibrillogenic ability.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Bioremediation of diethylhexyl phthalate contaminated soil: a feasibility study in slurry- and solid-phase reactors.
- Author
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Di Gennaro P, Collina E, Franzetti A, Lasagni M, Luridiana A, Pitea D, and Bestetti G
- Subjects
- Biodegradation, Environmental, Chemical Industry, Gases, Kinetics, Soil Microbiology, Diethylhexyl Phthalate isolation & purification, Diethylhexyl Phthalate metabolism, Models, Theoretical, Soil Pollutants isolation & purification, Soil Pollutants metabolism
- Abstract
The aim of the research was to verify the possibility of applying bioremediation as a treatment strategy on a poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) manufacturing site in the north of Italy contaminated by diethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP) at a concentration of 5.51 mg/g of dry soil. Biodegradation kinetic experiments with DEHP contaminated soil samples were performed in both slurry- and solid-phase systems. The slurry-phase results showed that the cultural conditions, such as N and P concentrations and the addition of a selected DEHP degrading strain, increased the natural DEHP degradation rate. On the basis of these data, experiments to simulate bioventing on contaminated soil columns were performed. The DEHP concentration reached 0.63 mg/g of dry soil in 76 days (89% of degradation). A kinetic equation was developed to fit the experimental data and to predict the concentration of contaminant after treatment. The data obtained are encouraging for a future in situ application of the bioventing technology.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. MSWI fly ash particle analysis by scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy.
- Author
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Gilardoni S, Fermo P, Cariati F, Gianelle V, Pitea D, Collina E, and Lasagni M
- Subjects
- Coal Ash, Copper analysis, Copper chemistry, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Particle Size, Particulate Matter, Carbon chemistry, Incineration, Metals, Heavy analysis
- Abstract
Municipal solid waste incinerator (MSWI) fly ash was investigated to study metal distribution on the particle surface. A detailed investigation into the distribution of chlorine, copper, iron, and zinc was carried out by electron microscopy coupled with X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy. Compositional and leaching test data were used to identify the correlation of significant variables and to formulate a hypothesis about metals speciation. The presence of copper chloride, iron, and zinc oxides was inferred. The iron and zinc accumulation in the submicron nuclei indicates that these metals came from the condensation of volatile species. As far as concerns copper, morphological data together with the element correlation study suggest that this element accumulates on particles involved in heterogeneous condensation processes. Furthermore, during such processes, particles of small size containing copper are formed.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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