Neblina Amazônica Transporta Bactérias e Fungos Vivos | Unesp Estudo
Pesquisa com participação da Unesp mostra neblina amazônica como vetor de microrganismos viáveis, impactando ciclo da água e ecossistema. Detalhes do estudo publicado na Nature.
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Rodolfo Debone Piazza is affiliated with the Institute of Chemistry at Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Campus de Araraquara. He earned a bachelor's degree in Chemistry from UNESP in 2011, followed by a master's degree in Chemistry in 2014 and a doctorate in Chemistry in 2018, all from the same institution. His work centers on physical chemistry, colloids, materials, and interfacial chemistry, with a primary focus on magnetic materials and biodegradable polymers for biomedical and biotechnological applications. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Center for Biomaterials at the University of Havana, where his research examined calcium phosphates for bone regeneration. In 2019, he served as a volunteer researcher at the Universidade Federal do Paraná, contributing to the characterization of polysaccharides by light scattering. He also conducted postdoctoral research at UNESP investigating polymeric nanoparticles for medical applications and enzyme polymerization assisted by external magnetic fields. His current research involves ceramic catalysts for converting Brazilian biomass into renewable fuels.
Pesquisa com participação da Unesp mostra neblina amazônica como vetor de microrganismos viáveis, impactando ciclo da água e ecossistema. Detalhes do estudo publicado na Nature.