Journal ArticleDOI
The Chemical Effects of Ultrasound
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This article is published in Scientific American.The article was published on 1989-02-01. It has received 876 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Ultrasound.read more
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A review of imperative technologies for wastewater treatment I: oxidation technologies at ambient conditions
TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight five different oxidation processes operating at ambient conditions viz. cavitation, photocatalytic oxidation, Fenton's chemistry, ozonation, and use of hydrogen peroxide.
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Ultrasound assisted extraction of food and natural products. Mechanisms, techniques, combinations, protocols and applications. A review.
Farid Chemat,Natacha Rombaut,Anne-Gaëlle Sicaire,Alice Meullemiestre,Anne-Sylvie Fabiano-Tixier,Maryline Abert-Vian +5 more
TL;DR: This review presents a complete picture of current knowledge on ultrasound-assisted extraction in food ingredients and products, nutraceutics, cosmetic, pharmaceutical and bioenergy applications, and applications from laboratory to industry, security, and environmental impacts.
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Applications of Ultrasound to the Synthesis of Nanostructured Materials
Jin Ho Bang,Kenneth S. Suslick +1 more
TL;DR: The fundamental principles of both synthetic methods and recent development in the applications of ultrasound in nanostructured materials synthesis are summarized.
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Chemistry of single-walled carbon nanotubes.
Sandip Niyogi,M. A. Hamon,Hui Hu,Bin Zhao,Paragranjita Bhowmik,Rahul Sen,Mikhail E. Itkis,Robert C. Haddon +7 more
TL;DR: It is shown that carbon nanotubes may take on properties that are normally associated with molecular species, such as solubility in organic solvents, solution-based chemical transformations, chromatography, and spectroscopy.
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Sonochemical synthesis of amorphous iron
TL;DR: In this paper, the synthesis of metallic glass powders using the microscopically extreme (yet macroscopically mild) conditions induced by high-intensity ultrasound was described, and the results showed that metallic glass powder is a highly active catalyst for the Fischer-Tropsch hydrogenation of carbon monoxide and for hydrogenolysis and dehydrogenation of saturated hydrocarbons.