Industrialization releases many high-viscosity oil pollutants into the environment, requiring a hydrophobic recyclable oil-absorbing material. Therefore, a self-heating and superhydrophobic melamine sponge (MS) by connecting polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) was coated with functionalized molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) nanosheets on a three-dimensional microstructure of a commercial MS (MoS2/PDMS/MS) via a simple and low-cost dip-coating method. The prepared sponge showed a water contact angle of 151.8°, indicating that the modified sponge exhibited superhydrophobicity. Due to the addition of MoS2, the modified sponge can convert light into heat, and its surface could be heated to 59.7 °C within 30 s. Because of the excellent MoS2/PDMS/MS photothermal performance, the sponge could decrease the viscosity of the high-viscosity oil, absorbing the high-viscosity oil efficiently. After simultaneous thermal analysis and repeated compression tests, the modified sponge exhibited high thermochemical stability, mechanical property, and reusability. This superhydrophobic multifunctional sponge shows excellent potential for high-viscosity oil absorption.
Snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is the vegetable form of common bean, and regarded as one of the most important and commonly consumed products in the world. In this study, 221 snap bean core accessions mostly from China were characterized the genetic diversity, gene pool identity, and relationships using 30 microsatellite markers, and concurrently evaluated for phenotype traits and phaseolin patterns. A total of 140 alleles were detected with an average of 4.67 per locus. The polymorphic information content ranged from 0.215 to 0.823, with an average of 0.488. Nei's genetic distances between accessions ranged from 0 to 0.9999, with an average of 0.6143. In those Chinese snap beans, structure analysis proved the existence of a high proportion of hybrid accessions except for identification of Andean and Mesoamerican gene pools. Neighbor‐joining clustering and principal coordinate analysis based microsatellite markers were similar in explaining the extent of diversity with both revealed Andean and Mesoamerican gene pools, which were divided into seven subgroups. Four of those subgroups, including one arising from introgression, were identified as belonging to the Andean gene pool, which likely represented Nueva Granada and Peru races. Other three subgroups were identified as belonging to the Mesoamerican gene pool, which likely represented the Mesoamerican race, owing to their close association with the control genotype. The diversity index of the qualitative traits was 0.80 to 1.88, with the average value of 1.20, while the diversity of the quantitative traits was ranked as 100‐seed weight (H′ = 1.98) > pod length (H′ = 1.90). Six principal components explained 69.13% of the total variation. Eight phaseolin patterns were identified in the 221 accessions. This study demonstrated the gene pool, as well as geographical, diversity of snap bean germplasms in China. The substantial diversity level is important for the utilization and conservation of snap bean, as well as future breeding programs.
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