Jay R. Werber
Yale University
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Featured researches published by Jay R. Werber.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Xinglin Lu; Xunda Feng; Jay R. Werber; Chiheng Chu; Ines Zucker; Jaehong Kim; Chinedum O. Osuji; Menachem Elimelech
Significance In biomedical and environmental applications, as well as manufacture and disposal, the interaction of graphene-based nanomaterials (GBNs) with living cells is inevitable and sometimes crucial. While the cytotoxic properties of GBNs are well established, the mechanisms behind the cytotoxicity remain controversial. In this study, we first utilize a magnetic field to form films with aligned graphene oxide (GO), showing that the alignment of sharp GO edges plays a crucial role in the antibacterial activity. We then demonstrate using model systems that GO unequivocally induces physical disruption of lipid bilayers and that oxidation stems from a direct electron transfer mechanism. Altogether, our results elucidate the physicochemical, edge-based cytotoxicity of GBNs, while providing guidance for the design of engineered surfaces using GBNs. The cytotoxicity of 2D graphene-based nanomaterials (GBNs) is highly important for engineered applications and environmental health. However, the isotropic orientation of GBNs, most notably graphene oxide (GO), in previous experimental studies obscured the interpretation of cytotoxic contributions of nanosheet edges. Here, we investigate the orientation-dependent interaction of GBNs with bacteria using GO composite films. To produce the films, GO nanosheets are aligned in a magnetic field, immobilized by cross-linking of the surrounding matrix, and exposed on the surface through oxidative etching. Characterization by small-angle X-ray scattering and atomic force microscopy confirms that GO nanosheets align progressively well with increasing magnetic field strength and that the alignment is effectively preserved by cross-linking. When contacted with the model bacterium Escherichia coli, GO nanosheets with vertical orientation exhibit enhanced antibacterial activity compared with random and horizontal orientations. Further characterization is performed to explain the enhanced antibacterial activity of the film with vertically aligned GO. Using phospholipid vesicles as a model system, we observe that GO nanosheets induce physical disruption of the lipid bilayer. Additionally, we find substantial GO-induced oxidation of glutathione, a model intracellular antioxidant, paired with limited generation of reactive oxygen species, suggesting that oxidation occurs through a direct electron-transfer mechanism. These physical and chemical mechanisms both require nanosheet penetration of the cell membrane, suggesting that the enhanced antibacterial activity of the film with vertically aligned GO stems from an increased density of edges with a preferential orientation for membrane disruption. The importance of nanosheet penetration for cytotoxicity has direct implications for the design of engineering surfaces using GBNs.
Nature Sustainability | 2018
Meagan S. Mauter; Ines Zucker; François Perreault; Jay R. Werber; Jae-Hong Kim; Menachem Elimelech
Sustainable provision of safe, clean and adequate water supply is a global challenge. Water treatment and desalination technologies remain chemically and energy intensive, ineffective in removing key trace contaminants, and poorly suited to deployment in decentralized (distributed) water treatment systems globally. Several recent efforts have sought to leverage the reactive and tunable properties of nanomaterials to address these technological shortcomings. This Review assesses the potential applications of nanomaterials in advancing sustainable water treatment systems and proposes ways to evaluate the environmental risks and social acceptance of nanotechnology-enabled water treatment processes. Future areas of research necessary to realize safe deployment of promising nanomaterial applications are also identified.Despite recent technological progress, providing safe, clean and sufficient water sustainably for all remains challenging. This Review assesses the potential applications of nanomaterials in advancing the sustainability of water treatment systems, and their associated barriers.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2018
Jay R. Werber; Cassandra J. Porter; Menachem Elimelech
Reverse osmosis (RO) has become a premier technology for desalination and water purification. The need for increased selectivity has incentivized research into novel membranes, such as biomimetic membranes that incorporate the perfectly selective biological water channel aquaporin or synthetic water channels like carbon nanotubes. In this study, we consider the performance of composite biomimetic membranes by projecting water permeability, salt rejection, and neutral-solute retention based on the permeabilities of the individual components, particularly the water channel, the amphiphilic bilayer matrix, and potential support layers that include polymeric RO, nanofiltration (NF), and porous ultrafiltration membranes. We find that the support layer will be crucial in the overall performance. Selective, relatively low-permeability supports minimize the negative impact of defects in the biomimetic layer, which are currently the main performance-limiting factor for biomimetic membranes. In particular, RO membranes as support layers would enable >99.85% salt rejection at ∼10000-fold greater biomimetic-layer defect area than for porous supports. By fundamentally characterizing neutral-solute permeation through RO and NF membranes, we show that RO membranes as support layers would enable high rejection of organic pollutants based on molecular size, overcoming the rapid permeation of hydrophobic solutes through the biomimetic layer. A biomimetic membrane could also achieve exceptionally high boron rejections of ∼99.7%, even with 1% defect area in the biomimetic layer. We conclude by discussing the implications of our findings for biomimetic membrane design.
Science Advances | 2018
Jay R. Werber; Menachem Elimelech
Biomimetic desalination membranes could achieve ultraselectivity for water over ions, but not over neutral solutes. Water scarcity and inadequate membrane selectivity have spurred interest in biomimetic desalination membranes, in which biological or synthetic water channels are incorporated in an amphiphilic bilayer. As low channel densities (0.1 to 10%) are required for sufficient water permeability, the amphiphilic bilayer matrix will play a critical role in separation performance. We determine selectivity limits for biomimetic membranes by studying the transport behavior of water, neutral solutes, and ions through the bilayers of lipid and block-copolymer vesicles and projecting performance for varying water channel densities. We report that defect-free biomimetic membranes would have water/salt permselectivities ~108-fold greater than current desalination membranes. In contrast, the solubility-based permeability of lipid and block-copolymer bilayers (extending Overton’s rule) will result in poor rejection of hydrophobic solutes. Defect-free biomimetic membranes thus offer great potential for seawater desalination and ultrapure water production, but would perform poorly in wastewater reuse. Potential strategies to limit neutral solute permeation are discussed.
Nature Reviews Materials | 2016
Jay R. Werber; Chinedum O. Osuji; Menachem Elimelech
Desalination | 2015
Devin L. Shaffer; Jay R. Werber; Humberto Jaramillo; Shihong Lin; Menachem Elimelech
Environmental Science and Technology Letters | 2016
Jay R. Werber; Akshay Deshmukh; Menachem Elimelech
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2011
Jay R. Werber; Y. John Wang; Michael Milligan; Xiaohua Li; Junyan A. Ji
Algal Research-Biomass Biofuels and Bioproducts | 2015
Weiwei Mo; Lindsay Soh; Jay R. Werber; Menachem Elimelech; Julie B. Zimmerman
Desalination | 2017
Jay R. Werber; Akshay Deshmukh; Menachem Elimelech