Shashi B. Atla
National Chung Cheng University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Shashi B. Atla.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2011
Hau-Ren Chen; Chien-Cheng Chen; A. Satyanarayana Reddy; Chien-Yen Chen; Wun Rong Li; Min-Jen Tseng; Hung-Tsan Liu; Wei Pan; Jyoti Prakash Maity; Shashi B. Atla
The separation of mercury ions from artificially contaminated water by the foam fractionation process using a biosurfactant (surfactin) and chemical surfactants (SDS and Tween-80) was investigated in this study. Parameters such as surfactant and mercury concentration, pH, foam volume, and digestion time were varied and their effects on the efficiency of mercury removal were investigated. The recovery efficiency of mercury ions was highly sensitive to the concentration of the surfactant. The highest mercury ion recovery by surfactin was obtained using a surfactin concentration of 10 × CMC, while recovery using SDS required < 10 × CMC and Tween-80 >10 × CMC. However, the enrichment of mercury ions in the foam was superior with surfactin, the mercury enrichment value corresponding to the highest metal recovery (10.4%) by surfactin being 1.53. Dilute solutions (2-mg L−1 Hg2+) resulted in better separation (36.4%), while concentrated solutions (100 mg L−1) enabled only a 2.3% recovery using surfactin. An increase in the digestion time of the metal solution with surfactin yielded better separation as compared with a freshly-prepared solution, and an increase in the airflow rate increased bubble production, resulting in higher metal recovery but low enrichment. Basic solutions yielded higher mercury separation as compared with acidic solutions due to the precipitation of surfactin under acidic conditions.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2011
Jyoti Prakash Maity; Tz-Jiun Lin; Henry Pai-Heng Cheng; Chien-Yen Chen; A. Satyanarayana Reddy; Shashi B. Atla; Young-Fo Chang; Hau-Ren Chen; Chien-Cheng Chen
In this study the “green chemistry” use of the biosurfactant surfactin for the synthesis of calcium phosphate using the reverse microemulsion technique was demonstrated. Calcium phosphates are bioactive materials that are a major constituent of human teeth and bone tissue. A reverse microemulsion technique with surfactin was used to produce nanocrystalline brushite particles. Structural diversity (analyzed by SEM and TEM) resulted from different water to surfactin ratios (W/S; 250, 500, 1000 and 40,000). The particle sizes were found to be in the 16–200 nm range. Morphological variety was observed in the as-synthesized microemulsions, which consisted of nanospheres (~16 nm in diameter) and needle-like (8–14 nm in diameter and 80–100 nm in length) noncalcinated particles. However, the calcinated products included nanospheres (50–200 nm in diameter), oval (~300 nm in diameter) and nanorod (200–400 nm in length) particles. FTIR and XRD analysis confirmed the formation of brushite nanoparticles in the as-synthesized products, while calcium pyrophosphate was produced after calcination. These results indicate that the reverse microemulsion technique using surfactin is a green process suitable for the synthesis of nanoparticles.
Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part A-toxic\/hazardous Substances & Environmental Engineering | 2011
Jyoti Prakash Maity; Chia Chuan Liu; Bibhash Nath; Jochen Bundschuh; Sandeep Kar; Jiin-Shuh Jean; Prosun Bhattacharya; Jiann-Hong Liu; Shashi B. Atla; Chien-Yen Chen
Hot springs are the important natural sources of geothermally heated groundwater from the Earths crust. Kuan-Tzu-Ling (KTL), Chung-Lun (CL) and Bao-Lai (BL) are well-known hot springs in southern Taiwan. Fluid and mud (sediments) samples were collected from the eruption points of three hot springs for detailed biogeochemical characterization. The fluid sample displays relatively high concentrations of Na(+) and Cl(-) compared with K(+), Mg(2+), Ca(2+), NO(2) (-), and SO(4) (2-), suggesting a possible marine origin. The concentrations of Fe, Cr, Mn, Ni, V and Zn were significantly higher in the mud sediments compared with fluids, whereas high concentrations of As, Ba, Cu, Se, Sr and Rb were observed in the fluids. This suggests that electronegative elements were released during sediment-water interactions. High As concentration in the fluids was observed to be associated with low redox (Eh) conditions. The FTIR spectra of the humic acid fractions of the sediments showed the presence of possible functional groups of secondary amines, ureas, urethanesm (amide), and silicon. The sulfate-reducing deltaproteobacterium 99% similar to Desulfovibrio psychrotolerans (GU329907) were rich in the CL hot spring while mesophilic, proteolytic, thiosulfate- and sulfur-reducing bacterium that 99% similar to Clostridium sulfidigenes (GU329908) were rich in the BL hot spring.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology A-chemistry | 2012
Shashi B. Atla; Chien-Cheng Chen; Chien-Yen Chen; Pin-Yun Lin; Wei Pan; Kai Chien Cheng; Yuh Ming Huang; Young-Fo Chang; Jiin-Shuh Jean
Materials Characterization | 2014
Shashi B. Atla; Min-Nan Wu; Wei Pan; Yu Tang Hsiao; An-Cheng Sun; Min-Jen Tseng; Yen-Ju Chen; Chien-Yen Chen
Materials Letters | 2016
Shashi B. Atla; Yen-Ju Chen; Hao-Wei Chiu; Chien-Cheng Chen; Jwu-Ching Shu; Chien-Yen Chen
MRS Communications | 2014
Shashi B. Atla; Chien-Yen Chen; Ching-Wen Fu; Ting-Che Chien; An-Cheng Sun; Chuan-Fa Huang; Chien-Jung Lo; Tsui-Chu Yang
Chemical Engineering Journal | 2012
Shashi B. Atla; Chien-Yen Chen; James Yang; Chien-Cheng Chen; An-Cheng Sun; Kao-Hung Lin; Jyoti Prakash Maity; Wei Pan; Kai Chien Cheng
Materials Chemistry and Physics | 2018
Shashi B. Atla; Wun-Rong Lin; Ting-Che Chien; Min-Jen Tseng; Jwu-Ching Shu; Chien-Cheng Chen; Chien-Yen Chen
Crystals | 2017
Shashi B. Atla; Yi-Hsun Huang; James Yang; How-Ji Chen; Yi-Hao Kuo; Chun-Mei Hsu; Wen-Chien Lee; Chien-Cheng Chen; Duen-Wei Hsu; Chien-Yen Chen