研究目的
Investigating the biological synthesis of titania integrated into the silica-based cell walls of a titanium-resistant diatom, Fistulifera solaris, and the enhancement of titania deposition through genetic engineering.
研究成果
F. solaris showed high titanium tolerance, enabling high content titania deposition on its silica cell walls. Genetic engineering further increased titanium content. Thermal annealing converted amorphous titania to nanocrystalline anatase TiO2, suggesting potential for scalable synthesis of TiO2 and applications in energy conversion and environmental remediation.
研究不足
The biological mechanism of titanium-resistance of F. solaris remains elusive. The heterogeneous distribution of titania on the diatom cell walls at the submicron scale was not further investigated.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
Cultivation of F. solaris in the presence of TiBALDH for titania deposition on silica cell walls. Genetic engineering of the diatom to display a titanium-associated peptide for enhanced titania deposition.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Marine diatoms, F. solaris JPCC DA0580, Phaeodactylum tricornutum, and Thalassiosira pseudonana were used.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Titanium(IV) bis(ammonium lactato)dihydroxide (TiBALDH), f/2 medium, inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES), scanning electron microscope VE-9800, transmission electron microscope JEM-1400, high-resolution transmission electron microscope T-12 TEM, X-ray diffractometer SmartLab.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
Cultivation of diatoms in TiBALDH-containing medium, extraction of silica cell walls, ICP-AES analysis, SEM and TEM observation, thermal annealing of samples.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
ICP-AES for titanium quantification, SEM and TEM for structural analysis, XRD for crystallinity analysis.
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