Salt-doped A/B/AB ternary polymer blends, wherein an AB copolymer acts as a surfactant to stabilize otherwise incompatible A and B homopolymers, display a wide range of nanostructured morphologies with significant tunability. Among these structures, a bicontinuous microemulsion (BμE) has been a notable target. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/LY2603618-IC-83.html Here, we report the surprising appearance of a robust C15 Laves phase, at compositions near where the BμE has recently been reported, in lithium bis(trifluoromethane) sulfonimide (LiTFSI)-doped low-molar-mass poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)/polystyrene (PS)/symmetric PS-b-PEO block copolymer blends. The materials were analyzed by a combination of small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), 1H NMR spectroscopy, and impedance spectroscopy. The C15 phase emerges at a high total homopolymer volume fraction ϕH = 0.8 with a salt composition r = 0.06 (Li+/[EO]) and persists as a coexisting phase across a large area of the isothermal phase diagram with high PS homopolymer compositions. Notably, the structure exhibits a huge unit cell size, a = 121 nm, with an unusually high micelle core volume fraction (fcore = 0.41) and an unusually low fraction of amphiphile (20%). This unit cell dimension is at least 50% larger than any previously reported C15 phase in soft matter, despite the low molar masses used, unlocking the possibility of copolymer-based photonic crystals without compromising processability. The nanostructured phase evolution from lamellar to hexagonal to C15 along the EO60 isopleth (ϕPEO,homo-LiTFSI/ϕH = 0.6) is rationalized as a consequence of asymmetry in the homopolymer solubility limit for each block, which leads to exclusion of PS homopolymer from the PS-b-PEO brush prior to exclusion of the PEO homopolymer, driving increased interfacial curvature and favoring the emergence of the C15 Laves phase.The increasing use of nanoscale TiO2 particles (nTiO2) and their subsequent leakage into aquatic environments poses a threat to the ecosystem. One major concern is that nTiO2 may alter the environmental behaviors of arsenic (As) and disrupt the equilibrium of As accumulation and speciation in organisms. In this study, we investigated the effects of nTiO2 on the bioaccumulation and biotransformation of As(V) in the mussel Perna viridis. Exposure to nTiO2 significantly increased As accumulation in mussels. Our As speciation analysis demonstrated that nTiO2 treatment increased the proportion of inorganic As and reduced that of organic As, displaying inhibitory effects on the methylation and detoxification of inorganic As in mussels. Analysis of enzyme systems related to As metabolism in mussels demonstrated that nTiO2 might limit the methylation of inorganic As by suppressing the GST activity and GSH content. The strong adsorption capacity and weak desorption rate of As by nTiO2, which could result in the disruption of As distribution and decrease of the amount of As involved in biotransformation, might serve as another mechanism to the limition on As methylation in mussels. Moreover, exposure to nTiO2 disturbed the osmotic adjustment system in mussels by reducing arsenobetaine and Na+-K+-ATPase activity, resulting in enhanced toxicity of As after coexposure. The findings indicate, for the first time, that nTiO2 can block the transformation and detoxification of As in mussels, which would increase the risk of As to marine animals and even humans via the food chain, and may disrupt the biogeochemical cycle of As in natural environments.On the basis of the scaffolds widely used in drug design, a series of novel spirooxindole derivatives containing hydantoin, thiohydantoin, urea, and thiourea moieties have been designed, synthesized, characterized, and first evaluated for their biological activities. The diastereoselectivity mechanism is proposed, and the systematic conformational analysis is performed. The bioassay results show that the target compounds possess moderate to good antiviral activities against tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), among which compound 22 shows the highest antiviral activity in vitro as well as inactivation, curative, and protection activities in vivo (45 ± 1, 47 ± 3, 50 ± 1, and 51 ± 1%, 500 mg/L, respectively), higher than ribavirin (38 ± 1, 36 ± 1, 38 ± 1, and 36 ± 1%, 500 mg/L, respectively). Thus, compound 22 is a promising candidate for anti-TMV development. Most of these compounds show broad-spectrum fungicidal activities against 14 kinds of phytopathogenic fungi and selective fungicidal activities against Physalospora piricola, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, and Rhizoctonia cerealis. Additionally, some of these compounds exhibit insecticidal activity against Culex pipiens pallens, Mythimna separata, Helicoverpa armigera, and Pyrausta nubilalis. Compound 17 exhibits the highest larvicidal activity (LC50 was 0.32 mg/L) against C. pipiens pallens.Solar fuel generation mediated by semiconductor heterostructures represents a promising strategy for sustainable energy conversion and storage. The design of semiconductor heterostructures for photocatalytic energy conversion requires the separation of photogenerated charge carriers in real space and their delivery to active catalytic sites at the appropriate overpotentials to initiate redox reactions. Operation of the desired sequence of light harvesting, charge separation, and charge transport events within heterostructures is governed by the thermodynamic energy offsets of the two components and their photoexcited charge-transfer reactivity, which determine the extent to which desirable processes can outcompete unproductive recombination channels. Here, we map energetic offsets and track the dynamics of electron transfer in MoS2/CdS architectures, prepared by interfacing two-dimensional MoS2 nanosheets with CdS quantum dots (QDs), and correlate the observed charge separation to photocatalytic activity in tphotocatalysts for H2 generation. The accurate mapping of thermodynamic driving forces and dynamics of charge transfer in these heterostructures suggests a means of engineering ultrafast electron transfer and effective charge separation to design viable photocatalytic architectures.