26 results on '"Yuanjie Lin"'
Search Results
2. Preparation of a reference material for tea containing five pesticide residues and its evaluation in an interlaboratory comparison study in China
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Yuhang Chen, Xinlei Qiu, Chao Feng, Qian Xu, Yuanjie Lin, Sunyang Le, Yu’e Jin, Guoquan Wang, and Dasheng Lu
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General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,Instrumentation - Published
- 2022
3. The Diagnosis of Gastric Cancer due to a Parathyroid Adenoma Almost Missed in a Hypercalcemia Patient with Severe Vomiting
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Fan Wu, Yuanjie Lin, Yuzhu Li, Bingqing Liu, Hong Chen, Lantao Dai, and Danhua Lin
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General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Published
- 2023
4. Infant Exposure to PCBs and PBDEs Revealed by Hair and Human Milk Analysis: Evaluation of Hair as an Alternative Biomatrix
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Yuanjie Lin, Chao Feng, Sunyang Le, Xinlei Qiu, Qian Xu, Shuping Jin, Yamin Fang, Yu’e Jin, Yimin Wen, Guoquan Wang, and Dasheng Lu
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China ,Milk, Human ,Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers ,Environmental Chemistry ,Infant ,Humans ,Environmental Pollutants ,General Chemistry ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Environmental Monitoring ,Hair - Abstract
Human hair, as an emerging biological monitoring matrix, has begun to be used in various human exposure studies, but little research has been done on persistent organic pollutants (POPs), especially for the body burden of POPs in infants. In this study, 36 breast-fed infants in Shanghai were recruited for a study to determine their exposure to POPs, including 12 dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (dl-PCBs), 6 indicator PCBs, and 8 polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in the inner layer (internal) and outer layer (external) of infant hair and human milk. The similarity or difference of the POP distribution pattern or concentration among these matrices was investigated, and only weak correlations (
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- 2022
5. Handwritten Mathematical Expression Recognition via GCAttention-Based Encoder and Bidirectional Mutual Learning Transformer
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Xiaoxiang Han, Qiaohong Liu, Ziqi Han, Yuanjie Lin, and Naiyue Xu
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- 2022
6. Prenatal perfluoroalkyl substances exposure and neurodevelopment in toddlers: Findings from SMBCS
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Boya Zhang, Zheng Wang, Jiming Zhang, Yiming Dai, Chao Feng, Yuanjie Lin, Lei Zhang, Jianqiu Guo, Xiaojuan Qi, Xiuli Chang, Dasheng Lu, Chunhua Wu, and Zhijun Zhou
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Environmental Engineering ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Environmental Chemistry ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Pollution - Abstract
Prenatal perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) exposure has been reported to affect offspring neurodevelopment, while epidemiological evidences were limited and inconsistent.We aimed to evaluate the associations between cord serum PFAS concentrations and neurodevelopment in toddlers from 1 to 3 years of age.A total of 716 children from Sheyang Mini Birth Cohort Study (SMBCS) were included in this study. 12 PFAS concentrations were quantified in cord serum. Neurodevelopment was assessed using the Developmental Screen Test for Children Aged 0-6 Years at 1 year and the Gesell Developmental Schedules (GDS) at 2 and 3 years, respectively. Development quotient (DQ) z-score was standardized from DQ to eliminate the difference caused by two methods. We used generalized linear model (GLM) and Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR) to explore the associations of single or mixture PFAS exposure with neurodevelopment measurements at each time point. Associations between PFAS exposure and longitudinal changes in DQ z-score were investigated through generalized estimating equation (GEE) and trajectory analysis.In general, prenatal PFAS concentrations showed negative associations with neurodevelopment measurements at specific age. When accounting for longitudinal changes from 1 to 3 years of age, PFOA was negatively associated with DQ z-score (β = -0.212, 95% CI: -0.422, -0.003), the association was only found significant in boys after stratified by gender (β = -0.327, 95% CI: -0.616, -0.038). Meanwhile, increased PFBS (OR = 2.159, 95% CI: 1.177, 3.959) and PFHpA (OR = 1.700, 95% CI: 1.016, 2.846) exposure was associated with elevated odds for the low-score trajectory group. The results of mixture of PFAS further confirmed above findings.Our findings suggested that prenatal PFAS exposure may be associated with adverse neurodevelopment effects in the first 3 years of life. Further studies are warranted to confirm our findings.
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- 2023
7. Wireless Traffic Prediction with Series Fluctuation Pattern Clustering
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Hui Gao, Yueming Lu, Yuanjie Lin, and Xudong Xing
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Tree (data structure) ,Boosting (machine learning) ,Artificial neural network ,Computer science ,Wireless network ,business.industry ,Feature (computer vision) ,Pattern recognition ,Artificial intelligence ,Time series ,Residual ,business ,Cluster analysis - Abstract
Accurate traffic prediction is vital in intelligent wireless network, which enables intelligent operation to improve the quality of experience of users. In this paper, we propose a wireless traffic prediction architecture with series fluctuation pattern clustering. We first extract fluctuation pattern, i.e., the baseline feature, from the original series, while retaining the noise component, i.e., the residual feature. Then a hierarchical density-based strategy is proposed to cluster the baseline feature and extract the unique fluctuation pattern. Furthermore, we propose a LSTM-based neural network model, called TPBLN, to fit the baseline feature of each cluster set with a parameterized residual feature processing. As compared to conventional schemes without series fluctuation pattern extracting and clustering, or boosting tree-based schemes, our proposed architecture reduces the mutual influence among series with different fluctuation patterns before the predicting. Moreover, we use real data to experiment and therefore have the potential to better adapt to the real environment. The experiment results show that the proposed scheme effectively improves the prediction performance compared to the reference schemes.
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- 2021
8. Profiling of pesticides and pesticide transformation products in Chinese herbal teas
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Chao, Feng, Qian, Xu, Xinlei, Qiu, Yu'e, Jin, Jieyun, Ji, Yuanjie, Lin, Sunyang, Le, Liming, Xue, Yuhang, Chen, Jianwen, She, Ping, Xiao, Dasheng, Lu, and Guoquan, Wang
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China ,Chrysanthemum ,Pesticide Residues ,General Medicine ,Pesticides ,Risk Assessment ,Teas, Herbal ,Food Science ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
Herbal teas have potential health benefits, but they also contain a variety of pesticides and pesticide transformation products (PTPs) that might brings health risks. Our study maps the pesticides and PTPs in two herbal teas (chrysanthemum and Lusterleaf Holly) from two main producing areas in China. Almost all 122 samples contain pesticides, with concentration ranging from 0.0005 to 10.305 mg/kg. Nearly 40% carbendazim and imidacloprid in chrysanthemum teas and λ-cyhalothrin in Lusterleaf Holly have higher concentration levels than the values permitted in EC Regulation No. 396/2005. Distinct distributions of pesticides were found in different teas and production areas. Eight PTPs were identified along with their parents, and were confirmed using a biosynthetic strategy. Acute, chronic and cumulative health risk assessments of pesticides revealed acceptable results. Our study uncovers the profile of pesticides in herbal teas, and provides new insight into discovering the potential environmental pollution and food contaminants.
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- 2022
9. Dynamic Antenna Configuration for 3D Massive MIMO System via Deep Reinforcement Learning
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Yueming Lu, Hui Gao, Wenjun Xu, and Yuanjie Lin
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Optimization problem ,Computer science ,Real-time computing ,MIMO ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Reinforcement learning ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,02 engineering and technology ,Antenna (radio) ,Heterogeneous network - Abstract
We study the optimized dynamic antenna parameters configuration for the 3D massive multiple-input multiple- out (MIMO) system in a heterogeneous network (HetNet) with overlaid macrocells and smallcells. In particular, we propose a deep reinforcement learning (DRL) approach to jointly adjust three key antenna parameters, namely, downtilt angle, vertical and horizontal half-power beamwidths of the macro base stations (mBSs) automatically in a dynamic environment with strong user mobility. More specifically, employing the gridded user location information (ULI), we propose a novel mix Q-learning algorithm to efficiently address the challenging joint optimization problem, which integrates a parallel hyper-parameter updating mechanism in dual sub-networks and a technique of prioritized replay buffer. The resultant neural network can efficiently learn the historical experience in an online fashion and achieve excellent sum-rate performance with affordable trials. Moreover, thanks to the proposed gridded ULI, our DRL-empowered antenna configuration framework can easily fit various HetNet deployments with variable user densities. Numerical results show that the average weighted sum-rate is increased by 4.59 bit/s/Hz, and the average performance improvement is up to 24.82% as compared to the reference scheme without gridded ULI.
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- 2020
10. Corrigendum to 'Comprehensive strategy for analysis of pesticide multi-residues in food by GC–MS/MS and UPLC-Q-Orbitrap' [Food Chem., 320 (2020) 126576]
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Qian Xu, Dasheng Lu, Xinlei Qiu, Yu’e Jin, Sunyang Le, Jieyun Ji, Chao Feng, Guoquan Wang, and Yuanjie Lin
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Chromatography ,law ,Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Pesticide ,Orbitrap ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Food Science ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention - Published
- 2021
11. Multi-analyte method development for analysis of brominated flame retardants (BFRs) and PBDE metabolites in human serum
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Qian Xu, Dasheng Lu, Yu’e Jin, Zhijun Zhou, Xinlei Qiu, Yimin Wen, Jianwen She, Guoquan Wang, Yuanjie Lin, Dongli Wang, and Chao Feng
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Quality Control ,Analyte ,Polybrominated biphenyl ,Time Factors ,010501 environmental sciences ,Mass spectrometry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Bromine Compounds ,Gel permeation chromatography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Limit of Detection ,Biomonitoring ,Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers ,Humans ,Flame Retardants ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Detection limit ,Hexabromocyclododecane ,Chromatography ,Solid Phase Extraction ,010401 analytical chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Tetrabromobisphenol A ,Blood Chemical Analysis - Abstract
Commonly, analytical methods measuring brominated flame retardants (BFRs) of different chemical polarities in human serum are labor consuming and tedious. Our study used acidified diatomaceous earth as solid-phase extraction (SPE) adsorbent and defatting material to simultaneously determine the most abundant BFRs and their metabolites with different polarities in human serum samples. The analytes include three types of commercial BFRs, tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA), hexabromocyclododecane (HBCD) isomers, and polybrominated biphenyl ethers (PBDEs), and dominant hydroxylated BDE (OH-PBDE) and methoxylated BDE (MeO-PBDE) metabolites of PBDEs. The sample eluents were sequentially analyzed for PBDEs and MeO-BDEs on online gel permeation chromatography/gas chromatography-electron capture-negative ionization mass spectrometry (online GPC GC-ECNI-MS) and for TBBPA, HBCD, and OH-BDEs on liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Method recoveries were 67-134% with a relative standard deviation (RSD) of less than 20%. Method detection limits (MDLs) were 0.30-4.20 pg/mL fresh weight (f.w.) for all analytes, except for BDE-209 of 16 pg/mL f.w. The methodology was also applied in a pilot study, which analyzed ten real samples from healthy donors in China, and the majority of target analytes were detected with a detection rate of more than 80%. To our knowledge, it is the first time for us in effectively determining BFRs of most types in one aliquot of human serum samples. This new analytical method is more specific, sensitive, accurate, and time saving for routine biomonitoring of these BFRs and for integrated assessment of health risk of BFR exposure.
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- 2017
12. Comprehensive strategy for analysis of pesticide multi-residues in food by GC-MS/MS and UPLC-Q-Orbitrap
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Chao Feng, Xinlei Qiu, Dasheng Lu, Sunyang Le, Yu’e Jin, Jieyun Ji, Guoquan Wang, Yuanjie Lin, and Qian Xu
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Chromatography, Gas ,Food Contamination ,Proficiency test ,Orbitrap ,Quechers ,01 natural sciences ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,law ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Vegetables ,Computer Simulation ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Mathematics ,Chromatography ,Pesticide residue ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Pesticide Residues ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Pesticide ,040401 food science ,0104 chemical sciences ,Pesticide screening ,Fruit ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Food Analysis ,Food Science - Abstract
A rapid and high-throughput method using both GC-MS/MS and UPLC-Q-Orbitrap systems was applied for pesticide multi-residues analysis in food samples. Strategies based on QuEChERs extraction, intelligent data mining tools with in-house/online database, and in-silico fragment prediction system were introduced to screen and identify target/untargeted features. Full-scan combined with data-independent-acquisition modes was evaluated in real sample in an attempt to improve and facilitate the pesticide screening process, of which the results showed that FS-vDIA provided equal detection rate (100%) and far less false positive results than FS-AIF did. The proposed methodology was evaluated in analysis of pesticide multi-residues in several proficiency test samples provided by EURL, and exhibited a high detection rate (>90%) of various pesticide residues with satisfactory recoveries (70-130%) without reporting false positive results. The method was also applied in China's national surveys from 2016 to 2019, and results showed its high performance in pesticide analysis in different food matrices.
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- 2019
13. [Investigation on the level of dioxin-like compounds in different animal-derived foods from Shaanxi Province]
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Cunwei, Liu, Rong, Guo, Wei, Wang, Xiaocong, Liang, Yuanjie, Lin, Sunyang, Yue, and Dasheng, Lu
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China ,Meat ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Eggs ,Animals ,Cattle ,Environmental Pollutants ,Food Contamination ,Dioxins ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Benzofurans - Abstract
To investigate the pollution level of dioxin-like compounds in animal-derived foods from 10 cities of Shaanxi Province.Collect four representative food samples( pork, beef, fish and eggs) to determine the concentrations of29 types of dioxin-like compounds by high-resolution gas chromatographs/high-resolution mass spectrometers( HRGC-HRMS).The result showed that the toxic equivalent quantity( TEQ) value of dioxin-like compounds in fish was 0. 085 pg TEQ/g, which was the biggest among the 4 food samples. The TEQ values for pork, beef and eggs were 0. 049, 0. 034 and 0. 040 pg TEQ/g, respectively. The TEQ values of dioxin-like compounds were higher in the fish meat of Ankang and the pork of Hanzhoung, but were lower than the max limit of commission regulation European Union. The total dietary intake of the above four foods was 2. 01 pg/( kg·BW·month), which was much lower than the provisional tolerable monthly intake( PTMI) of Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives 70 pg/( kg·BW·month).The residents in the 10 cities of Shaanxi Province are at a low health risk caused by the intake of dioxin-like compounds.
- Published
- 2018
14. Evaluation and application of machine learning-based retention time prediction for suspect screening of pesticides and pesticide transformation products in LC-HRMS
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Xinlei Qiu, Guoquan Wang, Dasheng Lu, Jieyun Ji, Yuanjie Lin, Sunyang Le, Yu’e Jin, Chao Feng, Qian Xu, and Jianwen She
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Quantitative structure–activity relationship ,Environmental Engineering ,Computer science ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Food Contamination ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,01 natural sciences ,Mass Spectrometry ,Machine Learning ,Set (abstract data type) ,Feature (machine learning) ,Environmental Chemistry ,Pesticides ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Training set ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Pesticide ,Pollution ,020801 environmental engineering ,Random forest ,Transformation (function) ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,Retention time ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
Computational QSAR models have gradually been preferred for retention time prediction in data mining of emerging environmental contaminants using liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry. Generally, the model performance relies on the components such as machine learning algorithms, chemical features, and example data. In this study, we evaluated the performances of four algorithms on three feature sets, using 321 and 77 pesticides as the training and validation sets, respectively. The results were varied with different combinations of algorithms on distinct feature sets. Two strategies including enhancing the complexity of chemical features and enlarging the size of the training set were proved to improve the results. XGBoost, Random Forest, and lightGBM algorithms exhibited the best results when built on a large-scale chemical descriptors, while the Keras algorithm preferred fingerprints. These four models have comparable prediction accuracies that at least 90% of pesticides in validation set can be successfully predicted with ΔRT1.0 min. Meanwhile, a blended prediction strategy using average results from four models presented a better result than any single model. This strategy was used for assisting identification of pesticides and pesticide transformation products in 120 strawberry samples from a national survey of food contamination. Twenty pesticides and twelve pesticide transformation products were tentatively identified, where all pesticides and two pesticide transformation products (bifenazate diazene and spirotetramat-enol) were confirmed by standard materials. The outcome of this study suggested that retention time prediction is a valuable approach in compound identification when integrated with in silico MS
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- 2021
15. Exposure and health risk assessment of secondary contaminants closely related to brominated flame retardants (BFRs): Polybrominated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PBDD/Fs) in human milk in shanghai
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Hao Xu, Chao Feng, Yuanjie Lin, Dasheng Lu, Qian Xu, Yu’e Jin, Sunyang Le, Jianwen She, Yimin Wen, Huimin Zhang, Qinxiong Rao, Peipei Liu, Xinlei Qiu, and Shuping Jin
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Tolerable daily intake ,China ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,010501 environmental sciences ,Dioxins ,Toxicology ,Risk Assessment ,01 natural sciences ,Polybrominated diphenyl ethers ,Humans ,Potential source ,Flame Retardants ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Exposure assessment ,Pollutant ,Milk, Human ,Health risk assessment ,Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated ,Contamination ,Pollution ,Environmental chemistry ,Dibenzofurans ,Detection rate - Abstract
Polybrominated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PBDD/Fs), as the secondary environmental pollutants of the widely used brominated flame retardants (BFRs), possess the similar physicochemical and toxic properties as polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs). However, studies on human body exposure to them are extremely limited. In this study, forty human milk samples collected in Shanghai were measured for 13 PBDD/F congeners using gas chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (GC-HRMS), to investigate their exposure level and characteristics, potential source and corresponding health risks to breastfed infants. The results showed no PBDDs but three PBDF congeners including 2,3,7,8-TBDF, 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HpBDF and OBDF (mean concentration (detection rates) are 3.2 pg/g (72.5%), 9.5 pg/g (100%) and 28 pg/g (67.5%), respectively) were detected. The average toxic equivalent quantity (TEQ, 0.42 pg/g lw) presented the highest concentration level compared to other regions reported. The contribution of PBDFs to the total TEQ of PBDD/Fs and PCDD/Fs is 6.8%. The correlation between PBDD/Fs and age or dietary habits was not observed, which normally existed in their chlorinated analogues-PCDD/Fs. Significant correlations were observed between PBDFs and highly brominated polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) (especially for BDE 183 and BDE 209). The correlation between PCDD/Fs and PBDFs was not observed except 2,3,7,8-TBDF. The high PBDFs exposure in Shanghai may originate from the emission of PBDEs and/or non-PBDE BFRs in environment, according to the consistency of the environmental data previously reported. The average estimated dietary intakes (EDI) for breastfed infants is 2.0 pg TEQ/kg·bw/day (0.13-13 pg TEQ/kg·bw/day), within the range of the tolerable daily intake (TDI) for TCDD (1-4 pg TEQ/kg·bw/day) suggested by the World Health Organization (WHO). However, given the high toxicity of PBDD/Fs, the potential health risks of these pollutants for breastfed infants should be of concern.
- Published
- 2021
16. Determination of urinary bromophenols (BrPs) as potential biomarkers for human exposure to polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) using gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (GC–MS/MS)
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Yu’e Jin, Xinlei Qiu, Guoquan Wang, Yuanjie Lin, Dasheng Lu, Qian Xu, and Chao Feng
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Clinical Biochemistry ,Population ,Urine ,010501 environmental sciences ,Mass spectrometry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Polybrominated diphenyl ethers ,Phenols ,Limit of Detection ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers ,Humans ,education ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Detection limit ,education.field_of_study ,Chromatography ,Gas Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Environmental Exposure ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,0104 chemical sciences ,Environmental chemistry ,Linear Models ,Gas chromatography ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Bromophenols (BrPs), as the metabolites of PBDEs, would be the potential exposure markers for human biomonitoring (HB) of PBDEs in urine. An analytical method using solid-phrase extraction (SPE) and gas chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometer (GC-MS/MS) was developed and validated for simultaneous determination of nineteen BrPs in human urine. The method detection limits (MDLs) were below 23pgmL(-1), with recovery ranged from 63% to 133% and inter-day repeatability ranged from 3% to 11% for the majority of target analytes. This method was applied in a pilot study and 2-Bromophenol (2-BrP), 4-Bromophenol (4-BrP), 2,4-Dibromophenol (2,4-DBP) and 2,4,6-Tribromophenol (2,4,6-TBP) as the predominant analytes were detected in human urine samples collected from the general population. Among the four detected analytes, 2-BrP and 4-BrP as the mono-brominated BrP congeners were firstly reported. To our knowledge, it is the first study covering all BrP congeners (from mono-brominated to penta-brominated, totally 19 congeners) in human urine. Therefore, this study is very useful for profiling urinary BrPs and discovering potential relationship between urinary BrPs and human internal exposure to PBDEs. The mechanism of fragmentation pathway of silanized BrPs was firstly illustrated in this study.
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- 2016
17. A validated method for rapid determination of dibenzo-p-dioxins/furans (PCDD/Fs), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in human milk: focus on utility of tandem solid phase extraction (SPE) cleanup
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Yu’e Jin, Guoquan Wang, Dongli Wang, Dasheng Lu, Jianwen She, Yuanjie Lin, Zhijun Zhou, Xinlei Qiu, Chao Feng, and Qian Xu
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Analyte ,Population ,Food Contamination ,010501 environmental sciences ,Tandem mass spectrometry ,Hydrocarbons, Aromatic ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Specimen Handling ,Analytical Chemistry ,Polybrominated diphenyl ethers ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Animals ,Humans ,Solid phase extraction ,education ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Detection limit ,education.field_of_study ,Chromatography ,Tandem ,Chemistry ,Solid Phase Extraction ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,0104 chemical sciences ,Dioxins furans ,Milk ,Environmental chemistry ,Environmental Pollutants ,Food Analysis - Abstract
An improved method based on tandem solid phase extraction (SPE) cleanup and gas chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (GC-HRMS) has been validated for a rapid determination of dibenzo-p-dioxins/furans (PCDD/Fs), dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), marker polychlorinated biphenyls (M-PCBs), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) using a large volume (50 mL) of human milk. This method was well validated for the measurement of these analytes in human milk from the general population with low limits of detection (LODs, 0.004-0.12 ng/g lipid), satisfactory accuracy (75-120 % of recoveries), and precision [less than 10 % of relative standard deviations (RSDs)]. To comprehensively evaluate the performance of this method, a good, presently validated and routinely used method based on an automated sample clean-up system (ASCS, based on the commercial acid multilayer silica, basic alumina, and carbon columns) was used in parallel for comparison. Compared with the ASCS method, this method presented comparable specificity. Additionally, this method, in contrast to ASCS method, highly reduced consumption of solvents (40 mL versus 500 mL), which results in much lower background in the procedural blank, reduced time, and enhanced sample pretreatment throughput. This method was also applied in a pilot study to measure a batch of human milk samples with satisfactory results. Graphical Abstract Characteristics of the application of tandem SPE cleanup for determination of PCDD/Fs, DL-PCBs,M-PCBs and PBDEs in human milk.
- Published
- 2016
18. Identification of flurochloridone metabolites in rat urine using liquid chromatography/high resolution mass spectrometry
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Liming Tang, Qian Xu, Chao Feng, Suhui Zhang, Dasheng Lu, Chunhua Wu, Yu ’e Jin, Guoquan Wang, Jianwen She, Yuanjie Lin, Shihong Liu, Zhijun Zhou, and Dongli Wang
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Metabolite ,In silico ,Urine ,Urinalysis ,Orbitrap ,Mass spectrometry ,Tandem mass spectrometry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,law ,Animals ,Biotransformation ,Chromatography ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Flurochloridone ,General Medicine ,Pyrrolidinones ,Rats ,0104 chemical sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Urine sample ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
It is of great interest to develop strategic methods to enable chemicals' metabolites to be accurately and rapidly screened and identified. To screen and identify a category of metabolites with distinct isotopic distribution, this study proposed a generic strategy using in silico metabolite prediction plus accurate-mass-based isotopic pattern recognition (AMBIPR) and library identification on the data acquired via the data dependent MS/MS scan of LC-Q Exactive Orbitrap mass spectrometry. The proposed method was evaluated by the analysis of flurochloridone (FLC) metabolites in rat urine sample collected from toxicity tests. Different from the traditional isotopic pattern recognition (IPR) approach, AMBIPR here was performed based on the potential metabolites predicted via in silico metabolite prediction tools. Thus, the AMBIPR treated FLC data was only associated with FLC metabolites, consequently not only avoiding great efforts made to remove FLC-unrelated information and reveal FLC metabolites, but also increasing the percent of positive hits. Among the FLC metabolite peaks screened using AMBIPR, 87% of them (corresponding 97 metabolites and 49 biotransformation) were successfully identified via multiple MS identification techniques packaged in an established FLC's metabolites library based on Mass Frontier. Noteworthy, 34 metabolites (89%) were identified without distinct naturally isotopic distribution. The universal strategic approach based on background subtraction (BS) and mass defect filtering (MDF) was used to evaluate the AMBIPR and no more false positive and negative metabolites were detected. Furthermore, our results revealed that AMBIPR is very effective, inherently sensitive and accurate, and is easily automated for the rapidly screening and profiling chemicals related metabolites.
- Published
- 2016
19. Levels of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins/furans (PCDD/Fs) and dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (DL-PCBs) in breast milk in Shanghai, China: A temporal upward trend
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Chao Feng, Haitao Shen, Dongli Wang, Guoquan Wang, Jianwen She, Dasheng Lu, Yuanjie Lin, and Zhijun Zhou
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Adult ,Male ,China ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Time Factors ,Environmental Engineering ,Adolescent ,Polymers ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Population ,Polychlorinated dibenzodioxins ,Mothers ,Breast milk ,Risk Assessment ,Young Adult ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Animals ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Shanghai china ,education ,Benzofurans ,education.field_of_study ,Milk, Human ,biology ,Fishes ,Infant, Newborn ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Pollution ,Breast Feeding ,Fresh water ,chemistry ,Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-dioxins ,Environmental chemistry ,Freshwater fish ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Breast feeding ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Human milk samples were collected from 150 mothers in 2011 and 2012 in Shanghai, China and analyzed for 17 polychlorinated dibenzo- p -dioxins/furans (PCDD/Fs) and 12 dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (DL-PCBs). The up-bound Toxic Equivalent Quantity (TEQ) ranged from 0.27 to 16.8 pg TEQ/g lipid (mean 5.4 pg TEQ/g lipid) for ∑PCDD/Fs and from 0.75 to 10.2 pg TEQ/g lipid (mean 2.9 pg TEQ/g lipid) for ∑DL-PCBs. TEQs in our study were lower than those in most countries worldwide, and displayed a notable uptrend, in contrast with those in China’s national survey in 2007. TEQs in mother milks from urban areas were higher than those from rural areas, and an orderly distribution was found in four geographical regions: Eastern China > Central China ≈ Southwestern China > Northwestern China. Levels of analytes in Shanghai native mothers’ milk ranked the first among those from all provinces and cities investigated. Migrant mothers to Shanghai from other inland provinces could potentially represent the population for exposure and risk assessment in their birth and grown-up places. Both the distribution and the uptrend were associated with release of these pollutants due to rapid industrialization and urbanization in China. Fine correlations were observed between TEQs and age of mothers, and weak correlations between TEQs and consumption of meat & meat products. Participants, who preferred both fresh water and marine fish to freshwater fish only, were prone to be exposed to higher level of PCBs. The estimated daily intake (EDI) doses for breastfed neonates entirely exceeded the tolerable intake dose by WHO.
- Published
- 2015
20. Determination of polybrominated diphenyl ethers and polychlorinated biphenyls in fishery and aquaculture products using sequential solid phase extraction and large volume injection gas chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry
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Guoquan Wang, Yu’e Jin, Yuanjie Lin, Dasheng Lu, Dongli Wang, Ying Jin, Libei Xiong, Xinlei Qiu, and Chao Feng
- Subjects
Clinical Biochemistry ,Fisheries ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Polybrominated diphenyl ethers ,Aquaculture ,Limit of Detection ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Fish Products ,Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers ,Animals ,Solid phase extraction ,Detection limit ,Chromatography ,Gas Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,Solid Phase Extraction ,Fishes ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Solvent ,Fishery ,Certified reference materials ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Environmental chemistry ,business ,Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points ,Water Pollutants, Chemical - Abstract
a b s t r a c t A new method was developed to determine polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and polychlori- nated biphenyls (PCBs) in fishery and aquaculture products. Samples were extracted by an accelerated solvent extraction system and cleaned up by sequential solid phase extraction (SPE) including dispersive SPE (D-SPE) and tandem SPE. PBDEs and PCBs were analyzed by a large-volume injection gas chro- matography triple quadrupole mass spectrometry (LVI-GC-QqQ-MS/MS). Good linearity (R 2 ≥ 0.9958) was achieved. Method detection limits (MDLs) were 0.16-3.3 pg g−1 (wet weight, ww) for PBDEs and 0.13-0.97 pg g −1 ww for PCBs. Mean recoveries were 60-140% with relative standard deviations (RSDs) of less than 20% in weever fish, scallop and shrimp samples spiked at a lower level of 13-31 pg g−1 ww and a higher level of 50-125 pg g −1 ww. Certified reference materials were analyzed with acceptable results. The method reduced solvent consumption, analytical time and labor, and is suitable for the routine analysis of PBDEs and PCBs in fishery and aquaculture products. © 2013 Published by Elsevier B.V.
- Published
- 2014
21. Urinary concentrations of metabolites of pyrethroid insecticides in textile workers, Eastern China
- Author
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Chao Feng, Dasheng Lu, Zhijun Zhou, Yu’e Jin, Guoquan Wang, Yuanjie Lin, Dongli Wang, and Chunhua Wu
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,China ,Insecticides ,Textile ,Adolescent ,Textile production ,Biology ,Toxicology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Young Adult ,Isomerism ,Occupational Exposure ,Pyrethrins ,parasitic diseases ,Humans ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,Pyrethroid ,business.industry ,Textiles ,Eastern china ,Middle Aged ,chemistry ,Wool ,Textile Industry ,Female ,business ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Pyrethroid insecticides have been applied in the production of cotton, wool and textile. In order to examine whether textile workers are exposed to pyrethroid insecticides, we recruited 50 textile workers in two textile plants in Eastern China. Their urine samples were collected for the measurement of pyrethroid metabolites: cis- and trans-isomers of 2,2-dichlorovinyl-2,2-dimethylcyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (cis-Cl2CA and trans-Cl2CA) and 3-phenoxybenzoic acid (3-PBA). Our results showed that textile workers were exposed to high levels of pyrethroid insecticides. cis-Cl2CA and 3-PBA were dominant metabolites with concentrations of 0.17–261 μg/L, while concentrations of trans-Cl2CA were in the range of 0.26–11 μg/L. Levels of three metabolites were in a descending order: cis-Cl2CA, 3-PBA, and trans-Cl2CA. Levels of the metabolites were associated with ages and job responsibilities of textile workers. Sewing workers, cutting workers, machine operators, reorganizers, and older workers were more likely in contact with pyrethroid insecticides in the textile production. trans- to cis-Cl2CA ratios might indicate that exposure of textile workers was via dermal absorption and inhalation. Keywords: Human biomonitoring, Pyrethroids, Exposure assessment, Metabolism
- Published
- 2013
22. Simultaneous determination of 45 pesticides in fruit and vegetable using an improved QuEChERS method and on-line gel permeation chromatography–gas chromatography/mass spectrometer
- Author
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Xinlei Qiu, Dongli Wang, Libei Xiong, Guoquan Wang, Yimin Wen, Chao Feng, Yuanjie Lin, Dasheng Lu, and Yu’e Jin
- Subjects
Chromatography ,Pesticide residue ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pesticide Residues ,Reproducibility of Results ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Acetates ,Chemical Fractionation ,Pesticide ,Quechers ,Mass spectrometry ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Biochemistry ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Gel permeation chromatography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Fruit ,Vegetables ,Chromatography, Gel ,Salting out ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Metalaxyl - Abstract
In this study, a method was developed to determine 45 selected pesticides (of different chemical families) in fruit and vegetable (including apple, spinach and cucumber). Samples were extracted using an improved QuEChERS method with salting out and phase separation in two steps. The target pesticides in concentrated extracts were analyzed by an on-line gel permeation chromatography-gas chromatography/mass spectrometer (online-GPC-GC/MS). Online GPC effectively removed matrix interferences and greatly improved the method sensitivity, recoveries and automation. Method limits of quantification were 10 ng/g for uniconazole and metalaxyl, and 5 ng/g for other 43 target analytes. In three fruit and vegetable matrices each spiked with 45 pesticides (0.01 μg/g), mean recoveries ranged from 80 to 118% for most of the tested pesticides except for profenofos (77% in apple) and chlorpyrifos (68% in apple and 75% in cucumber), with relative standard deviations (RSDs) of less than 14%. The results of the proficiency testing showed that the method is very successful in measuring the certified pesticides with less than 1.3 of the absolute value of Z-score. This method has been applied for routinely monitoring pesticides in fresh fruit and vegetable.
- Published
- 2012
23. Analysis of twenty phenolic compounds in human urine: hydrochloric acid hydrolysis, solid-phase extraction based on K2CO 3-treated silica, and gas chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- Author
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Jianwen She, Zhijun Zhou, Chunhua Wu, Dasheng Lu, Qian Xu, Guoquan Wang, Chao Feng, Yuanjie Lin, Dongli Wang, and Ho Sai Simon Ip
- Subjects
Adult ,Chromatography, Gas ,Carbonates ,Urine ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Phenols ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Vanillic acid ,Humans ,Solid phase extraction ,Derivatization ,Detection limit ,Chromatography ,Gas Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Hydrolysis ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Solid Phase Extraction ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Silicon Dioxide ,chemistry ,Child, Preschool ,Potassium ,Acid hydrolysis ,Hydrochloric Acid - Abstract
This study developed a new method for the analysis of 20 phenolic compounds in human urine. The urine samples were prepared by hydrochloric acid (HCl) hydrolysis, liquid-liquid extraction (LLE), and solid-phase extraction (SPE) cleanup. We found that HCl hydrolysis is of similar effectiveness to, and much cheaper than, the traditional enzymatic method. Vanillic acid was co-eluted with butyl paraben and interfered with the determination of butyl paraben in urine. K2CO3-treated-silica-gel SPE was designed to efficiently eliminate interference from the endogenous organic acids (especially vanillic acid) in urine. After derivatization, the samples were analyzed by large-volume-injection gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LVI-GC-MS-MS). Good linearity (R (2) ≥ 0.996) was established in the range 0.1-100 ng mL(-1) for all analytes. Method detection limits (MDLs) were 0.7-9.8 pg mL(-1). Intraday (n = 5) and interday (n = 5 days) validation was performed, with satisfactory accuracy (recovery: 70-126 % and 73-107 %, respectively) and precision (RSD ≤ 19 %) at two levels (low: 0.1 and 0.5 ng mL(-1); high: 5 and 10 ng mL(-1)). The method was used in a population study and achieved more than 85 % detection for most analytes; mean analyte concentrations were in the range 0.01-185 ng mL(-1). The method is suitable for the analysis of multiple phenolic metabolites in human urine.
- Published
- 2014
24. Organochlorine pesticides and their metabolites in human breast milk from Shanghai, China
- Author
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Chao Feng, Guoquan Wang, Rong Ni, Yuanjie Lin, Dongli Wang, Xiaodong Jia, Qian Xu, Dasheng Lu, and Zhijun Zhou
- Subjects
Male ,China ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Hexachlorocyclohexane ,Biology ,Breast milk ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Pregnancy ,Lactation ,medicine ,Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecotoxicology ,Humans ,Pesticides ,Exposure assessment ,Milk, Human ,Infant exposure ,Methoxychlor ,General Medicine ,Hexachlorobenzene ,Pollution ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Female - Abstract
Organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) are persistent organic pollutants that could cause deleterious effects on human health. Breast milk represents a noninvasive specimen source to assess maternal and infant exposure to OCPs. This study recruited 142 pregnant mothers in 2011-2012 in Shanghai, China, and their breast milk samples were collected during lactation and analyzed for 27 OCP compounds. Detection rates were in a range of 65.5 to 100 %. In particular, metabolites of 2,2-bis(chlorophenyl)-1,1,1-trichloroethane (DDT) such as 2-chloro-1,1-bis(4-chlorophenyl)ethylene (DDMU), 2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)ethanol (DDOH), bis(4-chlorophenyl)ketone (DBP), and 4,4'-dichlorodiphenylmethane (DDM) were detected in most milk samples. DDTs, hexachlorobenzene (HCB), and hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) were dominant OCPs with mean levels of 316, 49.8, and 41.5 ng/g lipid content, respectively, whereas levels of methoxychlor, ∑Drins, ∑Heptachlor, ∑Chlordane, and ∑Endosulfan were fairly low (0.87-5.6 ng/g lipid content). Milk concentrations of OCPs were weakly correlated with maternal age, body weight, and body mass indexes (BMIs). ∑OCPs in this study were much lower than those in human breast milk samples collected in 2002 and 2007. Consumption of higher amounts of fish was associated with higher milk levels of OCPs. Specific OCP patterns in breast milk samples from migrant mothers in Shanghai reflected features of OCP production, use, and exposure in their home provinces. The probabilistic exposure assessment model reveals that Shanghai infants were exposed to low levels of OCPs through breast milk consumption. However, infants as the vulnerable group might be subject to the potential additive and/or synergistic health effects from complex OCP exposure.
- Published
- 2014
25. Determination of organochlorines, polychlorinated biphenyls and polybrominated diphenyl ethers in human hair: estimation of external and internal exposure
- Author
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Guoquan Wang, Chao Feng, Xinlei Qiu, Yuanjie Lin, Jianwen She, Dongli Wang, Dasheng Lu, and Ho Sai Simon Ip
- Subjects
Environmental Engineering ,Formates ,Formic acid ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Mass spectrometry ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Gel permeation chromatography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Polybrominated diphenyl ethers ,Limit of Detection ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers ,Environmental Chemistry ,Humans ,Solid phase extraction ,Pesticides ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Hydrolysis ,Hair analysis ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Solid Phase Extraction ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Contamination ,Pollution ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Environmental chemistry ,Environmental Pollutants ,Environmental Monitoring ,Hair - Abstract
A novel method was developed for the analysis of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in human hair samples. External contaminants of hair were extracted with acetone under sonication, while washed hair was further hydrolyzed in formic acid and acetone (1:4, v/v) with microwave assisted extraction (MAE) for internal contaminant measurements. Both internal and external extracts were cleaned up with gel permeation chromatography (GPC) and then solid phase extraction (SPE), before analyzed by a large volume injection-gas chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LVI–GC–MS/MS) using triple quadruple mass analyzer. Good linearity ( R 2 ⩾ 0.996) was established within a concentration range between 0.1 and 100 ng mL − 1 among all target analytes. The method was validated for accuracy, precision and sensitivity. The developed method is intended to be cost effective and robust for the routine human hair analysis of PCBs, PBDEs and OCPs including acid-labile OCPs. The described method has been applied in pilot biomonitoring study and the preliminary data suggested that the contaminant profiles with the use of partial least-squares analysis discriminant analysis (PLA-DA) could be useful in differentiating external and internal exposure.
- Published
- 2014
26. Subcarrier Allocation for OFDMA Relay Networks with Proportional Fair Constraint
- Author
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W. Wang, Kan Zheng, Bo Fan, Lin Huang, and Yuanjie Lin
- Subjects
Mathematical optimization ,Optimization problem ,Frequency-division multiple access ,business.industry ,Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing ,Computer science ,ComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKS ,Data_CODINGANDINFORMATIONTHEORY ,Proportionally fair ,Subcarrier ,Scheduling (computing) ,law.invention ,Spread spectrum ,Relay ,law ,Max-min fairness ,Wireless ,Fading ,business ,Computer network - Abstract
This paper considers subcarrier allocation for the multihop orthogonal frequency division multiple-access (OFDMA) broadcast networks consisting of one source, multiple destinations, and one amplify-and-forward (AF) relay. In this paper, proportional fair (PF) based subcarrier allocation is discussed to get a tradeoff between the system transmission rate and fairness. First, the problem is formulated as an optimization problem with prohibitive complexity. Second, by analyzing the optimal solution for the subcarrier allocation problem without PF constraint, two suboptimal schemes are proposed. The simulation results indicate that with the same fairness performance, the proposed schemes achieve considerable capacity gain compared with the conventional PF scheduling method which is extended simply from the single-hop system.
- Published
- 2009
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