Analytical Methods and Devices for Bioenergy and Global Change Science

Human activity is driving global change. Carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel combustion results in global effects including increases in temperatures as well as ocean acidification. Further, human-induced global change extends beyond carbon dioxide to pollution including microplastics. It is i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nguyen, Brian
Other Authors: Sinton, David, Mechanical and Industrial Engineering
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/91999
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spelling ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/91999 2023-05-15T17:52:07+02:00 Analytical Methods and Devices for Bioenergy and Global Change Science Nguyen, Brian Sinton, David Mechanical and Industrial Engineering 2018-11-19T18:03:02Z http://hdl.handle.net/1807/91999 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/1807/91999 0548 Thesis 2018 ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T12:21:51Z Human activity is driving global change. Carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel combustion results in global effects including increases in temperatures as well as ocean acidification. Further, human-induced global change extends beyond carbon dioxide to pollution including microplastics. It is important to understand the impacts of global change and to optimize ways to mitigate it via technologies like biofuels. This thesis details devices and methods developed with the overall goal to enable experiments to increase this understanding. Specifically, this thesis presents devices and methods to (1) increase experimental throughput, enabling larger, multi-parameter experimental designs; (2) measure endpoints previously impractical to measure; and (3) inform laboratory experiments by improving the methods for obtaining data from environmental samples to set appropriate dosing levels. First, I developed a device which maps microalgae growth as a function of light and nutrients using a hydrogel-based concentration gradient generator to address experimental throughput in the biofuel context. Second, I developed a platform, incorporating a long-range aerogel-based gradient generator, a projector, and well plate compatibility to screen the effect of multiple environmental parameters on biota to further address experimental throughput. The third contribution is a digestible fluorescent coating for plastic particles that is stripped from the plastic upon ingestion by an organism; this can be used to determine if a plastic particle has been ingested in laboratory exposure experiments – providing the ability to measure cumulative plastic ingestion – a new endpoint. The last contribution is a method to bind iron nanoparticles to plastic in environmental samples enabling magnetic recovery, suited to recovering the smallest size fractions of microplastics from environmental samples for analysis– providing the ability to inform laboratory experiments. Overall, the four Chapters that make up the primary contributions of this thesis are technologies that allow experimenters to answer research questions in bioenergy and environmental science more efficiently. The methods and devices described in this thesis make technological progress but have limitations that prescribe caution when applying to new kinds of experiments. Nevertheless, with some adaptation, these technologies could further be applied to help answer several questions inside and outside of environmental science and bioenergy. Ph.D. Thesis Ocean acidification University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
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collection University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
op_collection_id ftunivtoronto
language unknown
topic 0548
spellingShingle 0548
Nguyen, Brian
Analytical Methods and Devices for Bioenergy and Global Change Science
topic_facet 0548
description Human activity is driving global change. Carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel combustion results in global effects including increases in temperatures as well as ocean acidification. Further, human-induced global change extends beyond carbon dioxide to pollution including microplastics. It is important to understand the impacts of global change and to optimize ways to mitigate it via technologies like biofuels. This thesis details devices and methods developed with the overall goal to enable experiments to increase this understanding. Specifically, this thesis presents devices and methods to (1) increase experimental throughput, enabling larger, multi-parameter experimental designs; (2) measure endpoints previously impractical to measure; and (3) inform laboratory experiments by improving the methods for obtaining data from environmental samples to set appropriate dosing levels. First, I developed a device which maps microalgae growth as a function of light and nutrients using a hydrogel-based concentration gradient generator to address experimental throughput in the biofuel context. Second, I developed a platform, incorporating a long-range aerogel-based gradient generator, a projector, and well plate compatibility to screen the effect of multiple environmental parameters on biota to further address experimental throughput. The third contribution is a digestible fluorescent coating for plastic particles that is stripped from the plastic upon ingestion by an organism; this can be used to determine if a plastic particle has been ingested in laboratory exposure experiments – providing the ability to measure cumulative plastic ingestion – a new endpoint. The last contribution is a method to bind iron nanoparticles to plastic in environmental samples enabling magnetic recovery, suited to recovering the smallest size fractions of microplastics from environmental samples for analysis– providing the ability to inform laboratory experiments. Overall, the four Chapters that make up the primary contributions of this thesis are technologies that allow experimenters to answer research questions in bioenergy and environmental science more efficiently. The methods and devices described in this thesis make technological progress but have limitations that prescribe caution when applying to new kinds of experiments. Nevertheless, with some adaptation, these technologies could further be applied to help answer several questions inside and outside of environmental science and bioenergy. Ph.D.
author2 Sinton, David
Mechanical and Industrial Engineering
format Thesis
author Nguyen, Brian
author_facet Nguyen, Brian
author_sort Nguyen, Brian
title Analytical Methods and Devices for Bioenergy and Global Change Science
title_short Analytical Methods and Devices for Bioenergy and Global Change Science
title_full Analytical Methods and Devices for Bioenergy and Global Change Science
title_fullStr Analytical Methods and Devices for Bioenergy and Global Change Science
title_full_unstemmed Analytical Methods and Devices for Bioenergy and Global Change Science
title_sort analytical methods and devices for bioenergy and global change science
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/91999
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1807/91999
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