Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle
Rice University
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Featured researches published by Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2013
Michael V. Liga; Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Huma R. Jafry; Andrew R. Barron; Qilin Li
A new method of modifying TiO2 photocatalysts with SiO2 is developed in which SiO2 nanoparticles are simply mixed with TiO2 in water under ambient conditions. This method does not require the use of toxic solvents or significant energy input. Although the SiO2 modification slightly reduces hydroxyl free radical production, the composite SiO2-TiO2 nanomaterials have markedly higher photocatalytic inactivation rates for a common surrogate virus, bacteriophage MS2 (up to 270% compared to the unmodified TiO2), due to the greatly improved adsorptive density and dark inactivation of MS2. The Langmuir isotherm describes the adsorption data well and shows that the TiO2 modified with 5% SiO2 has a maximum adsorption density qmax 37 times that of the unmodified TiO2. The Langmuir-Hinshelwood model fits the photocatalytic inactivation kinetic data well. The SiO2-TiO2 material produces a greater maximum initial inactivation rate yet a lower intrinsic surface reaction rate constant, consistent with the reduced hydroxyl radical production and enhanced adsorption. These results suggest that modifying photocatalyst surface to increase contaminant adsorption is an important strategy to improve photocatalytic reaction efficiency. Simple and cheap synthesis methods such as that used in this study bring photocatalysis closer to being a viable water treatment option.
Nanoscale | 2012
Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Michael V. Liga; Qilin Li; Andrew R. Barron
A bi-functional nano-composite coating has been created on a porous Nomex® fabric support as a trap for aspirated virus contaminated water. Nomex® fabric was successively dip-coated in solutions containing cysteic acid functionalized alumina (alumoxane) nanoparticles and cysteic acid functionalized iron oxide (ferroxane) nanoparticles to form a nanoparticle coated Nomex® (NPN) fabric. From SEM and EDX the nanoparticle coating of the Nomex® fibers is uniform, continuous, and conformal. The NPN was used as a filter for aspirated bacteriophage MS2 viruses using end-on filtration. All measurements were repeated to give statistical reliability. The NPN fabrics show a large decrease as compared to Nomex® alone or alumoxane coated Nomex®. An increase in the ferroxane content results in an equivalent increase in virus retention. This suggests that it is the ferroxane that has an active role in deactivating and/or binding the virus. Heating the NPN to 160 °C results in the loss of cysteic acid functional groups (without loss of the iron nanoparticles core structure) and the resulting fabric behaves similar to that of untreated Nomex®, showing that the surface functionalization of the nanoparticles is vital for the surface collapse of aspirated water droplets and the absorption and immobilization of the MS2 viruses. Thus, for virus immobilization, it is not sufficient to have iron oxide nanoparticles per se, but the surface functionality of a nanoparticle is vitally important in ensuring efficacy.
Journal of Experimental Nanoscience | 2015
Alvin W. Orbaek; Lauren Morrow; Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Andrew R. Barron
Binary (M1 − M2 − O) and ternary (M1 − M2 − M3 − O) metal-oxide nanoparticles (NPs) have been prepared by thermal decomposition in benzyl ether of the appropriate M(acac)n (M = Fe, Mn, Pd, Cu, Al, Gd) compounds in the presence of a mixture of oleic acid and oleylamine templating (surface capping) ligands, and 1,2-hexadecanediol as an accelerating agent. The metal percentage and the particle size were investigated as a function of the starting composition. The NP composition is controlled by the relative reaction rates of the particular precursors, such that prediction of NP composition from reagent ratios is not straightforward. However, understanding reaction rate limitations allows for alternative synthesis to be developed. In some cases, ligand exchange reaction and subsequent decomposition are possibly more important than thermal decomposition.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Joseph E. Huseman; Thomas J. Ainscough; Darren L. Oatley-Radcliffe; Abdullah Alabdulkarem; Sattam Fahad Al-Mojil; Andrew R. Barron
The environmental impact of shale oil and gas production by hydraulic fracturing (fracking) is of increasing concern. The biggest potential source of environmental contamination is flowback and produced water, which is highly contaminated with hydrocarbons, bacteria and particulates, meaning that traditional membranes are readily fouled. We show the chemical functionalisation of alumina ceramic microfiltration membranes (0.22 μm pore size) with cysteic acid creates a superhydrophilic surface, allowing for separation of hydrocarbons from frac and produced waters without fouling. The single pass rejection coefficients was >90% for all samples. The separation of hydrocarbons from water when the former have hydrodynamic diameters smaller than the pore size of the membrane is due to the zwitter ionically charged superhydrophilic pore surface. Membrane fouling is essentially eliminated, while a specific flux is obtained at a lower pressure (<2 bar) than that required achieving the same flux for the untreated membrane (4–8 bar).
Journal of Experimental Nanoscience | 2018
Lauren Morrow; Brendan Snow; Arfan Ali; Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Zeyad Almutairi; David K. Potter; Andrew R. Barron
ABSTRACT The mass susceptibility (χmass) and mass magnetization (Mmass) were determined for a series of ternary manganese and zinc ferrite nanoparticles (Mn–Zn ferrite NPs, MnxZn1−xFe2O4) with different Mn:Zn ratios (0.08 ≤ x ≤ 4.67), prepared by the thermal decomposition reaction of the appropriate metal acetylacetonate complexes, and for the binary homologs (MxFe3−xO4, where M = Mn or Zn). Alteration of the Mn:Zn ratio in Mn–Zn ferrite NPs does not significantly affect the particle size. At room temperature and low applied field strength the mass susceptibility increases sharply as the Mn:Zn ratio increases, but above a ratio of 0.4 further increase in the amount of manganese results in the mass susceptibility decreasing slightly, reaching a plateau above Mn:Zn ≈ 2. The compositional dependence of the mass magnetization shows less of a variation at room temperature and high applied fields. The temperature dependence of the mass magnetization of Mn–Zn ferrite NPs is significantly less for Mn-rich compositions making them more suitable for downhole imaging at higher temperatures (>100 °C). For non-shale reservoirs, replacement of nMag by Mn-rich Mn–Zn ferrites will allow for significant signal-to-noise enhancement of 6.5× over NP magnetite.
Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts | 2014
Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Andrew R. Barron
Fuel and Energy Abstracts | 2011
Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Andrew R. Barron
Archive | 2011
David K. Potter; Andrew Ross Barron; Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Alvin W. Orbaek; Arfan Ali; Lauren Harrison
Materials Science in Semiconductor Processing | 2014
Hannah Rutledge; Brittany L. Oliva-Chatelain; Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; Dennis L. Flood; Andrew R. Barron
Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts | 2014
Samuel J. Maguire-Boyle; David J. Garner; Jessica Heimann; Lucy Gao; Alvin W. Orbaek; Andrew R. Barron