218 results on '"Jiang, Z Y"'
Search Results
2. Toughening mechanisms of Ti3SiC2- and TiB2- toughened SiC matrix prepared via reactive melt infiltration
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Zhou, Y. R., Jiao, J., Jiang, Z. Y., Liu, H., Gao, Y., Lv, X. X., and Ai, Y. J.
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- 2021
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3. Size Effect on Deformation Behavior and Fracture in a Pure Copper Microtensile Test
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Zhang, H. M., Chen, R., Jing, V., Li, N., and Jiang, Z. Y.
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- 2021
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4. Mechanical Properties of Aluminium Metal Matrix Nanocomposites Manufactured by Assisted-Flake Powder Thixoforming Process
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Almotairy, Saud M., Boostani, A. Fadavi, Hassani, M., Wei, D., and Jiang, Z. Y.
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- 2021
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5. Effect of Solid-Solution Second-Phase Particles on the Austenite Grain Growth Behavior in Nb-Ti High-Strength if Steel
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Zhang, H. M., Chen, R., Jia, H. B., Li, Y., and Jiang, Z. Y.
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- 2020
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6. Effect of the Second-Phase Particle Precipitation on the Recrystallization Texture of High-Strength and Fine-Grain Interstitial-Free Steel
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Zhang, H. M., Chen, R., Wang, C. S., Li, Y., Jia, H. B., and Jiang, Z. Y.
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- 2020
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7. Effect of Strain on the Elastic, Electronic, and Magnetic Properties of Fluoro-Pervskite RbMnF3 and RbFeF3
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Huang, H. M., Yu, C. X., Jiang, Z. Y., Luo, S. J., and Hu, Y. J.
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- 2019
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8. New Benzylated Alkamide from the Roots of Lepidium meyenii
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Liu, W. X., Dong, M., Zhang, R. Q., Ma, Z. H., Yang, Q. F., Chen, Y. J., Ye, Y. Q., Liao, L. M., Cheng, P., Jiang, Z. Y., and Zhou, M.
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- 2019
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9. An experimental and numerical investigation on micro rolling for ultra-thin strip
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Xie, H. B., Manabe, K., Furushima, T., Tada, K., and Jiang, Z. Y.
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- 2016
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10. Phase dependent effect on the resonant absorption spectrum in a Ξ-configuration atom driven by a pair of bichromatic fields
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Jin, K., Xie, X.-T., and Jiang, Z.-Y.
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- 2012
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11. Effects of annealing temperature on micro deep drawing of stainless steel-copper composite.
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Qi, Y Y, Ma, X G, Ma, L N, Wang, T, Jiang, Z Y, Dobrzański, L A, and Zhao, J W
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- 2022
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12. Effect of rolling reduction on the microstructure of the copper/aluminum composite strip produced by micro flexible rolling.
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Wang, C, Ma, L N, Ma, X G, Wang, T, Jiang, Z Y, Dobrzański, L A, and Zhao, J W
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- 2022
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13. A study of the formability of stainless steel foils during micro deep drawing.
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Li, L, Qi, Y Y, Ma, X G, Jiang, Z Y, Manabe, K, Lee, C S, and Zhao, J W
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- 2022
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14. LXRβ activation increases intestinal cholesterol absorption, leading to an atherogenic lipoprotein profile
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Hu, X., Steffensen, K. R., Jiang, Z.-Y., Parini, P., Gustafsson, J.-Å., Gåfvels, M., and Eggertsen, G.
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- 2012
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15. Coupled deformation and temperature analysis of strip rolling with a local perturbation of deformation using a 3D rigid-plastic FEM
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Jiang, Z. Y., Hu, W. P., Zhang, X. M., Liu, X. H., and Wang, G. D.
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- 2004
16. Toughening mechanisms of Ti3SiC2- and TiB2- toughened SiC matrix prepared via reactive melt infiltration.
- Author
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Zhou, Y. R., Jiao, J., Jiang, Z. Y., Liu, H., Gao, Y., Lv, X. X., and Ai, Y. J.
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- 2021
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17. Enhanced ferroelectric and pyroelectric properties of poly(vinylidene fluoride) with addition of graphene oxides.
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Jiang, Z. Y., Zheng, G. P., Han, Z., Liu, Y. Z., and Yang, J. H.
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CRYSTALLIZATION , *SEPARATION (Technology) , *SPECTRUM analysis , *GRAPHENE , *ABSORPTION spectra - Abstract
Poly(vinylidene fluoride)/graphene oxide (PVDF/GO) nanocomposites are synthesized and their structural, ferroelectric, and pyroelectric properties are investigated. The dielectric spectrum analysis and P-E loop tests indicate that the nanocomposites exhibit enhanced ferroelectric and pyroelectric properties compared with those of poly(vinylidene fluoride) samples. The isothermal crystallization kinetics of PVDF/GO nanocomposites quantitatively determined by differential scanning calorimetry demonstrates that GOs facilitate the crystallization of the PVDF. Dynamic mechanical analyses on the PVDF/GO reveal that the amorphous and crystalline phases of PVDF are modified by the addition of GO sheets. The GO-enhanced formation of crystalline β phase in PVDF could result from the strong interaction between the -C=O groups in GO and the -CF2 groups in PVDF, and the GO-induced ordering of the microstructures of amorphous and crystalline phases. The results suggest that PVDF/GO nanocomposites could be promising dielectric materials used in sensors, transducers, and actuators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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18. Effect of music intervention during hemodialysis: a comprehensive meta-analysis.
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WU, X.-L., JI, B., YAO, S.-D., WANG, L.-L., and JIANG, Z.-Y.
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Aggravating disease and the accompanying increase in the frequency of hemodialysis interventions worsen the quality of life of patients leading to poor physical and psychological outcomes. Music-based interventions have been suggested to improve both the physical and psychological prognoses for patients undergoing hemodialysis. Two meta-analyses on the impact of music-based interventions on anxiety in patients undergoing hemodialysis failed to evaluate the impact of these interventions on other physiological outcomes. Therefore, in this study, we gather evidence on the effects of music-based interventions on physical and psychological outcomes in patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis. To determine the influence of music-based interventions on anxiety, pain, heart rate, and blood pressure (systolic, diastolic) in patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis, we performed a systematic literature search adhering to PRISMA guidelines on the EMBASE, CENTRAL, Scopus, and MEDLINE academic databases. We performed meta-analyses to consolidate the evidence on the influence of music-based interventions on the physical and psychological outcomes of patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis. From 1,402 studies, we found eight eligible studies with 597 (264 women, 287 men) patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis (mean age, 56.9 ± 10.8 years). Among these patients, 298 received the music-based intervention and 299 were included as controls. Our meta-analysis revealed a small-to-medium effect of the music-based intervention to reduce pain levels (Hedge's g, -0.75), anxiety (-0.16), heart rate (-0.15), and systolic (-0.14) and diastolic blood pressure (-0.11) in patients with chronic kidney disease receiving hemodialysis as compared to the values of the same variables in the control group. The evidence from our analyses supports the beneficial impact of music-based interventions to alleviate anxiety and pain, and to reduce heart rate and blood pressure in these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
19. Experimental studies of gastric dysfunction in motion sickness: The effect of gastric and vestibular stimulation on the vagal and splanchnic gastric efferents
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Niijima, A, Jiang, Z. Y, Daunton, Nancy G, and Fox, Robert A
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Life Sciences (General) - Abstract
The experiments were conducted in anaesthetized rats. In the first part of the experiments, the effect of CuSO4 on the afferent activity in the gastric branch of the vagus nerve was investigated. Gastric perfusion of CuSO4 solution (0.04 percent and 0.08 percent) provoked an increase in afferent activity. In the second part of the experiments, the reflex effects of gastric perfusion of CuSO4 solution, repetitive stimulation of the gastric vagus nerve, and caloric stimulation of the right vestibular apparatus (5-18 C water) on gastric autonomic outflow were investigated. The results of these experiments showed that these three different types of stimulation caused an inhibition in efferent activity of the gastric vagus nerve and a slight activation of the splanchnic gastric efferents. The summation of the effect of each stimulation was also observed. These results, therefore, provide evidence for a possible integrative inhibitory function of the vagal gastric center as well as an excitatory function of gastric sympathetic motoneurons in relation to motion sickness.
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- 1991
20. Effects of dietary incorporation of linseed oil with soybean isoflavone on fatty acid profiles and lipid metabolism-related gene expression in breast muscle of chickens.
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Gou, Z. Y., Cui, X. Y., Li, L., Fan, Q. L., Lin, X. J., Wang, Y. B., Jiang, Z. Y., and Jiang, S. Q.
- Abstract
The meat quality of chicken is an important factor affecting the consumer's health. It was hypothesized that n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (n-3 PUFA) could be effectively deposited in chicken, by incorporating antioxidation of soybean isoflavone (SI), which led to improved quality of chicken meat for good health of human beings. Effects of partial or complete dietary substitution of lard (LA) with linseed oil (LO), with or without SI on growth performance, biochemical indicators, meat quality, fatty acid profiles, lipid-related health indicators and gene expression of breast muscle were examined in chickens. A total of 900 males were fed a corn–soybean meal diet supplemented with 4% LA, 2% LA + 2% LO and 4% LO and the latter two including 30 mg SI/kg (2% LA + 2% LO + SI and 4% LO + SI) from 29 to 66 days of age; each of the five dietary treatments included six replicates of 30 birds. Compared with the 4% LA diet, dietary 4% LO significantly increased the feed efficiency and had no negative effect on objective indices related to meat quality; LO significantly decreased plasma triglycerides and total cholesterol (TCH); abdominal fat percentage was significantly decreased in birds fed the 4% LO and 4% LO + SI diets. Chickens with LO diets resulted in higher contents of α-linolenic acid (C18:3n-3), EPA (C20:5n-3) and total n-3 PUFA, together with a lower content of palmitic acid (C16:0), lignoceric acid (C24:0), saturated fatty acids and n-6:n-3 ratio in breast muscle compared to 4% LA diet (P < 0.05); they also significantly decreased atherogenic index, thrombogenic index and increased the hypocholesterolemic to hypercholesterolemic ratio. Adding SI to the LO diets enhanced the contents of EPA and DHA (C22:6n-3), plasma total superoxide dismutase, reduced glutathione (GSH)/oxidized glutathione and muscle GSH content, while decreased plasma total triglyceride and TCH and malondialdehyde content in plasma and breast muscle compared to its absence (P < 0.05). Expression in breast muscle of fatty acid desaturase 1 (FADS1), FADS2, elongase 2 (ELOVL2) and ELOVL5 genes were significantly higher with the LO diets including SI than with the 4% LA diet. Significant interactions existed between LO level and inclusion of SI on EPA and TCH contents. These findings indicate that diet supplemented with LO combined with SI is an effective alternative when optimizing the nutritional value of chicken meat for human consumers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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21. Search for charmless hadronic decays of B mesons with the SLAC SLD detector
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Eschenburg, V., Abe, K., Abe, T., Adam, I., Akagi, T., Akimoto, H., Allen, N. J., Ash, W. W., Aston, D., Baird, K. G., Baltay, Charles, Band, H. R., Barakat, M. B., Bardon, O., Barklow, T. L., Bashindzhagyan, G. L., Bauer, J. M., Bellodi, G., Benvenuti, A. C., Bilei, G. M., Bisello, D., Blaylock, G., Bogart, J. R., Bower, G. R., Brau, J. E., Breidenbach, M., Bugg, W. M., Burke, D., Burnett, T. H., Burrows, P. N., Byrne, R. M., Calcaterra, A., Calloway, D., Camanzi, B., Carpinelli, M., Cassell, R., Castaldi, R., Castro, A., Cavalli-Sforza, M., Chou, A., Church, E., Cohn, H. O., Coller, J. A., Convery, M. R., Cook, V., Cowan, R. F., Coyne, D. G., Crawford, G., Damerell, C. J. S., Danielson, M. N., Daoudi, M., De Groot, N., Dell'Orso, R., Dervan, P. J., De Sangro, R., Dima, Mihai Octavian, Dong, D. N., Doser, M., Dubois, R., Eisenstein, B. I., Erofeeva, I., Etzion, E., Fahey, S., Falciai, D., Fan, C., Fernandez, J. P., Fero, M. J., Flood, K., Frey, R., Gifford, J., Gillman, T., Gladding, G., Gonzalez, S., Goodman, E. R., Hart, E. L., Harton, John L., Hasuko, K., Hedges, S. J., Hertzbach, S. S., Hildreth, M. D., Huber, J., Huffer, M. E., Hughes, E. W., Huynh, X., Hwang, H., Iwasaki, M., Jackson, D. J., Jacques, P., Jaros, J. A., Jiang, Z. Y., Johnson, A. S., Johnson, J. R., Johnson, R. A., Junk, T., Kajikawa, R., Kalelkar, M., Kamyshkov, Y., Kang, H. J., Karliner, I., Kawahara, H., Kim, Y. D., King, M. E., King, R., Kofler, R. R., Krishna, N. M., Kroeger, R. S., Langston, M., Lath, A., Leith, D. W. G., Lia, V., Lin, C., Liu, M. X., Liu, X., Loreti, M., Lu, A., Lynch, H. L., Ma, J., Mahjouri, M., Mancinelli, G., Manly, S., Mantovani, G., Markiewicz, T. W., Maruyama, T., Masuda, H., Mazzucato, E., McKemey, A. K., Meadows, B. T., Menegatti, G., Messner, R., Mockett, P. M., Moffeit, K. C., Moore, T. B., Morii, M., Muller, D., Murzin, V., Nagamine, T., Narita, S., Nauenberg, U., Neal, H., Nussbaum, M., Oishi, N., Onoprienko, D., Osborne, L. S., Panvini, R. S., Park, C. H., Pavel, T. J., Peruzzi, I., Piccolo, M., Piemontese, L., Pitts, K. T., Plano, R. J., Prepost, R., Prescott, C. Y., Punkar, G. D., Quigley, J., Ratcliff, B. N., Reeves, T. W., Reidy, J., Reinertsen, P. L., Rensing, P. E., Rochester, L. S., Rowson, P. C., Russell, J. J., Saxton, O. H., Schalk, T., Schindler, R. H., Schumm, B. A., Schwiening, J., Sen, S., Serbo, V. V., Shaevitz, M. H., Shank, J. T., Shapiro, G., Sherden, D. J., Shmakov, K. D., Simopoulos, C., Sinev, N. B., Smith, S. R., Smy, M. B., Snyder, J. A., Staengle, H., Stahl, A., Stamer, P., Steiner, H., Steiner, R., Strauss, M. G., Su, D., Suekane, F., Sugiyama, A., Suzuki, S., Swartz, M., Szumilo, A., Takahashi, T., Taylor, F. E., Thom, J., Torrence, E., Toumbas, Nicolaos K., Usher, T., Vannini, C., Va'vra, J., Vella, E., Venuti, J. P., Verdier, R., Verdini, P. G., Wagner, D. L., Wagner, S. R., Waite, A. P., Walston, S., Watts, S. J., Weidemann, A. W., Weiss, E. R., Whitaker, J. S., White, S. L., Wickens, F. J., Williams, B., Williams, D. C., Williams, S. H., Willocq, S., Wilson, R. J., Wisniewski, W. J., Wittlin, J. L., Woods, M., Word, G. B., Wright, T. R., Wyss, J., Yamamoto, R. K., Yamartino, J. M., Yang, X., Yashima, J., Yellin, S. J., Young, C. C., Yuta, H., Zapalac, G., Zdarko, R. W., Zhou, J., and Toumbas, Nicolaos K. [0000-0001-8879-7330]
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Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Meson ,Branching fraction ,Electron–positron annihilation ,Hadron ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Elementary particle ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Particle decay ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,B meson ,Boson - Abstract
Based on a sample of approximately 500,000 hadronic Z0 decays accumulated between 1993 and 1998, the SLD experiment has set limits on 24 fully charged two-body and quasi two-body exclusive charmless hadronic decays of B+, B0, and B0_s mesons. The precise tracking capabilities of the SLD detector provided for the efficient reduction of combinatoric backgrounds, yielding the most precise available limits for ten of these modes., Comment: LaTex, 11 pages, 2 figures, uses RevTeX. This version contains minor changes suggested by Phys Rev D reviewers. Previous version was the original resubmission to Physical Review D, Rapid Communications, after rejection from Physical Review Letters. The previous version incorporated a number of changes suggested by Phys. Rev. Lett. referees, including additional clarifying text and figures, as well as a consideration of the possible effects of vector polarization in vector-vector decay modes
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- 2016
22. Effect of Strain on the Elastic, Electronic, and Magnetic Properties of Fluoro-Pervskite RbMnF3 and RbFeF3.
- Author
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Huang, H. M., Yu, C. X., Jiang, Z. Y., Luo, S. J., and Hu, Y. J.
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RUBIDIUM ,MOLECULAR magnetic moments ,MAGNETIC properties ,ELASTIC constants ,MAGNETIC moments ,TRANSITION metals ,ELECTRONIC structure - Abstract
The elastic constants, electronic structure, and magnetic properties of rubidium-based fluoro-pervskite ferromagnetic semiconductor RbMnF
3 and ferromagnetic half-metal RbFeF3 under strain were studied by first-principle methods. The calculation of elastic constants and mechanical parameters shows that both RbMnF3 and RbFeF3 have very stable mechanical properties in the strain range studied. In the strain range of − 6.0 to 10.0%, the ferromagnetic semiconductor characteristics of RbMnF3 can be maintained, and the semiconductor band gap can be increased from 1.49 eV at equilibrium to a maximum value of 1.80 eV under strain. The half-metallicity of RbFeF3 can also be preserved in the strain range of − 8.0 to 10.0%, and the half-metallic gap can reach up to 1.19 eV in this strain range. When RbMnF3 and RbFeF3 are ferromagnetic semiconductor and ferromagnetic half-metal, respectively, their molecular magnetic moments are integer values, and transition metal atoms are the most important contributors to total magnetic moment. Strong correlation correction does not change the physical properties of RbMnF3 and RbFeF3 in equilibrium state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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23. Sodium and chloride requirements of yellow-feathered chickens between 22 and 42 days of age.
- Author
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Jiang, S. Q., Azzam, M. M., Yu, H., Fan, Q. L., Li, L., Gou, Z. Y., Lin, X. J., Liu, M., and Jiang, Z. Y.
- Abstract
Sodium and chloride are the key factors maintaining normal osmotic pressure (OSM) and volume of the extracellular fluid, and influencing the acid–base balance of body fluids. The experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of dietary Na
+ and Cl− level on growth performance, excreta moisture, blood biochemical parameters, intestinal Na+ –glucose transporter 1 (SGLT1) messenger RNA (mRNA), and Na+ –H+ exchanger 2 (NHE2) mRNA, and to estimate the optimal dietary sodium and chlorine level for yellow-feathered chickens from 22 to 42days. A total of 900 22-day-old Lingnan yellow-feathered male chickens were randomly allotted to five treatments, each of which included six replicates of 30 chickens per floor pen. The basal control diet was based on corn and soybean meal (without added NaCl and NaHCO3 ). Treatments 2 to 5 consisted of the basal diet supplemented with equal weights of Na+ and Cl− , constituting 0.1%, 0.2%, 0.3% and 0.4% of the diets. Supplemental dietary Na+ and Cl− improved the growth performance (P <0.05). Average daily gain (ADG) showed a quadratic broken-line regression to increasing dietary Na+ and Cl− (R2 =0.979, P <0.001), and reached a plateau at 0.1%. Supplemental Na+ and Cl− increased (P <0.05) serum Na+ and OSM in serum and showed a quadratic broken-line regression (R2 =0.997, P =0.004) at 0.11%. However, supplemental Na+ and Cl− decreased (P <0.05) serum levels of K+ , glucose (GLU) and triglyceride. Higher levels of Na+ and Cl− decreased duodenal NHE2 transcripts (P <0.05), but had no effect on ileal SGLT1 transcripts. The activity of Na+ /K+ -ATPase in the duodenum decreased (P <0.05) with higher levels of dietary Na+ and Cl− . In conclusion, the optimal dietary Na+ and Cl− requirements for yellow-feathered chickens in the grower phase, from 22 to 42 days of age, to optimize ADG, serum Na+ , OSM, K+ and GLU were 0.10%, 0.11%, 0.11%,0.17% and 0.16%, respectively, by regression analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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24. Micropore structure characteristics and water distribution in a coalbed methane reservoir.
- Author
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Lai, F. P., Li, Z. P., Dong, H. K., Jiang, Z. Y., and Mao, G. T.
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WATER distribution ,COALBED methane ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,GAS absorption & adsorption ,METHANE hydrates ,RESERVOIRS ,SCANNING electron microscopy - Abstract
Microscopic pore structure and water distribution are important and fundamental parameters for coalbed methane reservoir characterisation. These are closely related to the calculation/interpretation of other critical parameters, such as permeability and flow capacity. In this study, scanning electron microscopy, low-pressure nitrogen gas adsorption, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and theoretical calculations were used to study the pore structure characteristics and water distribution of Zhaozhuang coal mine in the southeastern Qinshui Basin, PR China. The results show that the pore radius ranges from 2.066 to 594.045 nm, mainly classified as micropores and transitional pores. The micropores significantly contribute to the total pore volume. The adsorption pores (micropores and transitional pores) contribute the most to the total specific surface area. The T
2 spectrum distributions of saturated water samples show two peaks. The first T2 spectrum peak is related to adsorption pores, whereas the second T2 spectrum peak is related to seepage pores. The seepage pores were not well developed as the adsorption pores. Most adsorption pores are saturated with irreducible water that could not be discharged by centrifugation, whereas the seepage pores are saturated with movable water that could be completely discharged by centrifugation. The T2 cutoff method was used to calculate the irreducible water saturation, and the irreducible water saturation of the sample was ≥90%. The irreducible water was mainly distributed in the micropores, and some of the irreducible water was distributed in the transitional pores. The irreducible water that remains in the pores can cause reservoir damage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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25. Localization of the active type I DNA topoisomerase gene on human chromosome 20q11.2-13.1, and two pseudogenes on chromosomes 1q23-24 and 22q11.2-13.1
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Kunze, N., Yang, G. C., Jiang, Z. Y., Hameister, H., Adolph, S., Wiedorn, K. -H., Richter, A., and Knippers, R.
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- 1989
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26. Effects of oxidative stress induced by high dosage of dietary iron ingested on intestinal damage and caecal microbiota in Chinese Yellow broilers.
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Gou, Z. Y., Li, L., Fan, Q. L., Lin, X. J., Jiang, Z. Y., Zheng, C. T., Ding, F. Y., and Jiang, S. Q.
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BROILER chickens ,OXIDATIVE stress ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of iron ,INTESTINAL injuries ,IRON metabolism ,BROILER chicken diseases ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Summary: The objective of this trial was to test the effects of oxidative stress induced by a high dosage of dietary iron on intestinal lesion and the microbiological compositions in caecum in Chinese Yellow broilers. A total of 450 1‐day‐old male chicks were randomly allotted into three groups. Supplemental iron (0, 700 and 1,400 mg/kg) was added to the basal diet resulting in three treatments containing 245, 908 and 1,651 mg/kg Fe (measured value) in diet respectively. Each treatment consisted of six replicate pens with 25 birds per pen. Jejunal enterocyte ultrastructure was observed by transmission electron microscopy. The results showed that a high dosage of dietary iron induced oxidative stress in broilers. Dilated endoplasmic reticulum (ER), autophagosome formation of jejunal enterocytes and decreased villi were caused by this oxidative stress. Compared to the control, concentration of the malondialdehyde (MDA) in jejunal mucosa in the 908 and 1,651 mg/kg Fe groups increased by 180% (p < .01) and 155% respectively (p < .01); activity of copper‐zinc superoxide dismutase (Cu/ZnSOD) increased in jejunum (p < .01); and the concentration of plasma reduced glutathione (GSH) decreased by 34.9% (p < .01) in birds fed 1,651 mg/kg Fe. Gene expression of nuclear factor, erythroid‐derived 2‐like 2 (Nrf2) and zonula occludens‐1 (ZO‐1), in the higher dietary Fe groups was enhanced (p < .05). Species of microbial flora in caecum increased caused by oxidative stress. The PCR‐DGGE (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis) dendrograms revealed different microbiota (65% similarity coefficient) between the control and iron‐supplemented groups (p < .05). These data suggest high dosage of iron supplement in feed diet can induce oxidative stress in Chinese Yellow broilers, and composition of microbiota in the caecum changed. It implied there should be no addition of excess iron when formulating diets in Chinese Yellow broilers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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27. The effects of dietary soybean isoflavone on immunity in Chinese yellow-feathered broilers challenged with infectious bursal disease virus.
- Author
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Jiang, S. Q., Jiang, Z. Y., Chen, J. L., Zhu, C., Hong, P., and Chen, F.
- Abstract
To investigate the effects of soybean isoflavone (SI) on immunity in infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV)-infected broilers, chicks were fed the same basal diet supplemented with 0 (non-infected control), 0 (infected control), 10, 20 or 40 mg/kg SI for 44 days. At 21 days old, chickens were inoculated with bursal infectious dose causing 50% morbidity of the IBDV BC 6/85 strain by the eye-drop and nasal route (except for non-infected controls). Results showed that, over 1–23 days post-infection (dpi), there was a significant interaction between SI supplementation level and time: high-level SI supplementation increased peripheral T lymphocyte proliferation, percentages of CD3
+ , CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes, CD4+ to CD8+ ratio, serum concentrations of IgA, IgM and IgG, and IBDV antibody titres. Except for serum IgA and IgM, these variables increased over time with far higher values at 23 dpi than earlier. Compared with non-infected controls, IBDV inoculation decreased peripheral T lymphocyte proliferation at 3 dpi, percentages of CD3+ , CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes, and serum IgG, IgM concentration at 23 dpi, and increased IBDV antibody titres at 7, 15 and 23 dpi. Supplemental SI quadratically increased peripheral T lymphocyte proliferation, CD4+ to CD8+ ratio and serum IgA concentration at 3 dpi, percentages of CD3+ , CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes at 3 and 23 dpi, and serum IgM concentration and IBDV antibody titres at 23 dpi. These results indicate that dietary SI improved cellular and humoral immunity of IBDV-infected birds and may enhance resistance of Yellow-feathered broilers to infectious diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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28. IMPROVED MILK GLUTAMINE LEVEL AND GROWTH PERFORMANCE OF SUCKLING PIGLETS BY GLUTAMINE SUPPLEMENTATION IN MATERNAL DIET.
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Yang, X. F., Qin, J. F., Wang, L., Gao, K. G., Zheng, C. T., Huang, L., and Jiang, Z. Y.
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GLUTAMINE in the body ,SMALL intestine ,SOWS ,ARGININE ,DUODENUM - Abstract
Glutamine plays an important role in neonatal growth and health. It is unknown whether supplementing the lactating sows' diet with glutamine will benefit the growth performance and intestinal development of suckling piglets through increasing content of milk glutamine. A total of 24 lactating sows (Large White) were fed diets supplemented with/without 1% glutamine throughout the 21-d lactation. Feed intake of the sows was recorded, blood and milk samples were collected. Piglets were weighed at birth and weaning, one piglet randomly selected from each litter was sacrificed for morphological analysis of the small intestine. Average daily feed intake of the sows did not differ between control and glutamine groups. Concentrations of total protein and urea nitrogen in sows' serum was increased by glutamine at d 14 of lactation (P<0.05). Contents of glutamine in both plasma and milk of sows were significantly increased by glutamine supplementation throughout lactation (P<0.01). Concentrations of proline, citrulline, valine, isoleucine, leucine, and arginine in sows' plasma were increased by glutamine supplementation (all P<0.05). Milk yield was increased by glutamine supplementation at d 14 and 21 of lactation (P<0.05). Supplementing the lactating sows' diet with glutamine increased average daily gain (P=0.006), weaning weight (P=0.032), as well as villous height and ratio of villous height:crypt depth in duodenum of the suckling piglets (both P<0.05). Collectively, supplementing lactating sows' diet with 1% glutamine significantly improved the growth performance of suckling piglets through elevating milk yield and glutamine content in the milk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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29. Mechanics of Cold Rolling of Thin Strip
- Author
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Jiang, Z. Y.
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- 2011
30. Degradation of ferritic stainless steels at 1200 °C in air.
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Cheng, X.‐W., Jiang, Z.‐Y., Monaghan, B. J., Longbottom, R. J., Wei, D.‐B., Hee, A. C., and Jiang, L.‐Z.
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- *
FERRITIC steel , *CHEMICAL decomposition , *THERMOGRAVIMETRY , *OXIDATION kinetics , *STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) - Abstract
Three commercial ferritic stainless steels were investigated at 1200 °C by a thermogravimetric analyser (TGA) in air. The oxidation kinetics of the ferritic stainless steels differed significantly. The adhesion of the Cr2O3 scale, the morphology of the SiO2, with or without (Cr, Mn)3O4 spinel on the top can greatly influence the oxidation and the degradation behaviour of the steels. Although the SUS430 steel had less Cr among the ferritic stainless steels (16.2 wt% Cr), it did not show more degradation behaviour than the B443NT steel (21.0 wt% Cr). The spallation of the protective oxide scale on the B443NT steel was caused by vacancy condensation at the scale/substrate interface where the SiO2 particles were and the developed compressive stresses within the oxide scale during oxidation. (Cr, Mn)3O4 spinel on the top of the Cr2O3 scale on the B445J1M steel influenced its evaporation rate. The thermodynamic aspect of the chemical composition and oxidation atmosphere of the Fe-Cr-O system was also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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31. Differential expression of intestinal ion transporters and water channel aquaporins in young piglets challenged with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli K88.
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Zhu, C., Ye, J. L., Yang, J., Yang, K. M., Chen, Z., Liang, R., Wu, X. J., Wang, L., and Jiang, Z. Y.
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MAMMALS ,ION transport (Biology) ,PIGLETS ,ESCHERICHIA coli ,GENE expression ,CYSTIC fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator - Abstract
The study was to determine whether the expression of genes involved in intestinal water and ion transport would be affected by enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) K88 both in vitro and in vivo. First, 36 male piglets (4 d old) were randomly allotted to either the control or the ETEC K88 group. Each group had 6 replicates with 3 piglets per replicate. All piglets were fed with the same diets for 17 d. On d 15, piglets in the ETEC K88 group were challenged with ETEC K88 (serotype O149:K91:K88ac) at 1 × 10
8 cfu per pig, whereas those in the control group received the same volume of sterile PBS. After being challenged with ETEC K88 for 72 h (d 18), 1 piglet from each replicate was selected for slaughter to collect samples from the jejunum, ileum, and colon. The mRNA expression and protein abundance of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) in the ileum and colon were increased compared with that in the control group (P < 0.05). Furthermore, the mRNA expression of Na-K-Cl cotransporter 1 (NKCC1) in the ileum and colon was increased by ETEC K88 challenge (P < 0.05), whereas in the jejunum, both its mRNA and protein expression were increased by ETEC K88 treatment (P < 0.05). Additionally, an established porcine intestinal epithelial cell line (IPEC-J2) was used to investigate the effect and possible mechanism of ETEC K88 on expression of water channel aquaporins (AQP) and ion transporters. Cells (1.17 × 106 per well) were grown in 6-well plates and treated with ETEC K88 at a multiplicity of infection of 50:1 for 3 h. The mRNA expression of AQP3, AQP11, and Na+/H+ exchanger 3 (NHE3) in IPEC-J2 cells was reduced after ETEC K88 treatment (P < 0.05). Further analyses using western blotting also demonstrated that ETEC K88 decreased the protein expression of AQP3, AQP9, and AQP11 in IPEC-J2 cells (P < 0.05). Moreover, the phosphorylation levels of protein kinase A (PKA) and cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-response element binding protein (CREB) were decreased by ETEC K88 challenge (P < 0.05). The results indicate that ETEC K88 challenge induced differential expression of intestinal ion transporters and AQP in young piglets, probably by regulation of the cAMP-PKA signaling pathway. This study might provide new insights about the importance of fluid homeostasis in control of ETEC-induced diarrhea in young piglets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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32. Low-level arginine supplementation (0.1%) of wheat-based diets in pregnancy increases the total and live-born litter sizes in gilts.
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Guo, P., Jiang, Z. Y., Gao, K. G., Wang, L., Yang, X. F., Hu, Y. J., Zhang, J., and Ma, X. Y.
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- *
ARGININE , *SOWS , *SWINE , *PREGNANCY in mammals - Abstract
The present study was conducted to test the effects of L-arginine supplementation of wheat-based diets on the pregnancy outcome of gilts. Pregnant gilts (Yorkshire x Landrace, n = 113) were assigned randomly into two groups representing dietary supplementation with 0.1% L-arginine as L-arginine-HCl or 0.17% L-alanine (isonitrogenous control) Between Days 30 and 110 of pregnancy. Blood samples were obtained from the ear vein on Days 30, 70 and 90 of pregnancy. Compared with the control, arginine supplementation increased the total number of piglets born by 1.10 per litter and the number of live-born piglets by 1.10 per litter (P < 0.05). Plasma concentration of spermine was higher in gilts fed arginine diets than in those fed control diets at Day 90 of pregnancy (P < 0.05). Dietary arginine supplementation increased plasma concentration of IGF-I of gilts at Day 90 of pregnancy (P< 0.01) and plasma concentrations of arginine, proline and ornithine at Days 70 and 90 of pregnancy (P < 0.05). These results indicated that low-level supplementation (0.1%) of L-arginine-HCl of wheat-based diets beneficially enhances the reproductive performance of gilts and is feasible for use in commercial production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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33. Effects of high ambient temperature on meat quality, serum hormone concentrations, and gene expression in the longissimus dorsi muscle of finishing pigs.
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Shi, Z. B., Ma, X. Y., Zheng, C. T., Hu, Y. J., Yang, X. F., Gao, K. G., Wang, L., and Jiang, Z. Y.
- Abstract
This study examined the effect of high ambient temperature on the growth performance, meat quality, activity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis, and related gene expression in finishing pigs. All pigs received the same corn-soybean meal-based diet. Twenty-four Landrace pigs (initial bodyweight of 77.64 ± 0.67 kg) were assigned into three groups: Group 1 (22°C, ad libitum, 81% humidity); Group 2 (22°C, pair-fed to Group 3, 78% humidity); Group 3 (35°C, ad libitum, 78% humidity). The experiment lasted for 30 days. The average daily feed intake and average daily gain were markedly reduced in Group 3 compared with Group 1 (P < 0.05). The intramuscular fat content of longissimus dorsi muscle was decreased in Groups 2 and 3 (P < 0.05) when compared with Group 1. Muscle pH at 24 h post-mortem was higher in Group 3 (P < 0.05) compared with Groups 1 and 2, and the pH at 48 h post-mortem was higher in Group 3 (P < 0.05) than in Group 1. The MyHC IIb transcript abundance was lower in Group 3 (P < 0.05) than in the other two groups and that of MyHC IIx was higher in Group 3 than in Group 2 (P < 0.05). The relative abundance of calpastatin transcripts was lower in Group 3 (P < 0.05) than in the other two groups. Cortisol concentrations were lower in Group 3 (P < 0.05) than in Groups 1 and 2 on Day 3. Corticotropin releasing hormone concentrations in Group 3 were lower at Day 3 (P < 0.05) when compared with Group 2 and at Day 30 when compared with Groups 1 and 2.Glucagon concentrations were lower in Group 3 (P < 0.05) when compared with Groups 1 and 2 on Day 30. These results indicate that the decreased intramuscular fat content of pigs at high ambient temperature results from the reduction in feed intake. Independently of its effect on feed intake, high ambient temperature affected the meat quality of finishing pigs by increasing pH value probably due to the lower serum concentrations of corticotropin releasing hormone, and inducing a transition of muscle fibre types from IIb to IIx. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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34. INFLAMMATION-RELATED OXIDATIVE STRESS IN WHITE ADIPOSE TISSUES OF AN INBRED OBESE PIG.
- Author
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Yang, X. F., Jiang, Z. Y., Tian, Z. M., Qiu, Y. Q., Wang, L., Gao, K. G., Hu, Y. J., and Ma, X. Y.
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- *
ADIPOSE tissues , *FAT cells , *PHOSPHORYLATION , *OXIDATIVE stress , *OBESITY in animals , *LABORATORY swine - Abstract
The uneven development of adipose tissues reflects a differential occurrence of biological events in vivo while the underlying molecular mechanism remains largely unknown. In the present study, the in vivo inflammatory status of an inbred obese porcine model, Lantang pig, was assessed, aiming to provide evidence for obesity biology. Compared with genetically lean pigs (crossbred, Duroc x Landrace x Large White), Lantang pigs exhibited a larger amount of ultra large adipocytes in subcutaneous adipose tissue accompanied with higher expression of macrophage/monocytes markers and pro-inflammatory genes (TLR4, CD14, CD11β, MCP1, TNFα, IL1β and IL6) and lower expression of cellular antioxidant enzymes (SOD1, 2 and 3). Plasma concentrations of LPS and TNF-α were also higher in Lantang pigs than in lean pigs. Among adipose tissues of Lantang pigs, the subcutaneous tissue had the most abundant expression of inflammation related genes (TLR4, CD14, TNFα and IL6) and the lowest level of cellular antioxidant genes (SOD 1 and 2), while the perirenal adipose tissue had opposite profile. Significant activation of p38 MAPK pathway was indicated by increased phosphorylation of p38 in the subcutaneous adipose tissue of Lantang pigs. Collectively, the bacteria-derived LPS induced inflammation-associated oxidative stress indeed exists in adipose tissues of Lantang pig, and the differential expressions of inflammatory and antioxidant genes, to some extent, account for the uneven development of the adipose tissue within bodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
35. A Variable Mass Meso-Model for the Mechanical and Water-Expelled Behaviors of PVA Hydrogel in Compression.
- Author
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Zhang, Y. R., Tang, L. Q., Xie, B. X., Xu, K. J., Liu, Z. J., Liu, Y. P., Jiang, Z. Y., and Dong, S. B.
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HYDROGELS ,POLYVINYL alcohol ,COMPRESSION loads ,STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) ,BULK modulus - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. An Improved Test of the Flavor Independence of Strong Interactions
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Eschenburg, V., Abe, K., Abe, T., Adam, I., Akagi, T., Allen, N. J., Arodzero, A., Ash, W. W., Aston, D., Baird, K. G., Baltay, Charles, Band, H. R., Barakat, M. B., Bardon, O., Barklow, T. L., Bauer, J. M., Bellodi, G., Ben-David, R., Benvenuti, A. C., Bilei, G. M., Bisello, D., Blaylock, G., Bogart, J. R., Bolen, B., Bower, G. R., Brau, J. E., Breidenbach, M., Bugg, W. M., Burke, D., Burnett, T. H., Burrows, P. N., Calcaterra, A., Caldwell, D. O., Calloway, D., Camanzi, B., Carpinelli, M., Cassell, R., Castaldi, R., Castro, A., Cavalli-Sforza, M., Chou, A., Church, E., Cohn, H. O., Coller, J. A., Convery, M. R., Cook, V., Cotton, R., Cowan, R. F., Coyne, D. G., Crawford, G., Damerell, C. J. S., Danielson, M. N., Daoudi, M., De Groot, N., Dell'Orso, R., Dervan, P. J., De Sangro, R., Dima, Mihai Octavian, D'Oliveira, A., Dong, D. N., Du, P. Y. C., Dubois, R., Eisenstein, B. I., Etzion, E., Fahey, S., Falciai, D., Fan, C., Fernandez, J. P., Fero, M. J., Flood, K., Frey, R., Gillman, T., Gladding, G., Gonzalez, S., Hart, E. L., Harton, John L., Hasan, A., Hasuko, K., Hedges, S. J., Hertzbach, S. S., Hildreth, M. D., Huber, J., Huffer, M. E., Hughes, E. W., Huynh, X., Hwang, H., Iwasaki, M., Jackson, D. J., Jacques, P., Jaros, J. A., Jiang, Z. Y., Johnson, A. S., Johnson, J. R., Johnson, R. A., Junk, T., Kajikawa, R., Kalelkar, M., Kamyshkov, Y., Kang, H. J., Karliner, L., Kawahara, H., Kim, Y. D., King, R., King, M. E., Kofler, R. R., Krishna, N. M., Kroeger, R. S., Langston, M., Lath, A., Leith, D. W. G., Lia, V., Lin, C. -J S., Liu, X., Liu, M. X., Loreti, M., Lu, A., Lynch, H. L., Ma, J., Mancinelli, G., Manly, S., Mantovani, G., Markiewicz, T. W., Maruyama, T., Masuda, H., Mazzucato, E., McKemey, A. K., Meadows, B. T., Menegatti, G., Messner, R., Mockett, P. M., Moffeit, K. C., Moore, T. B., Morii, M., Muller, D., Murzin, V., Nagamine, T., Narita, S., Nauenberg, U., Neal, H., Nussbaum, M., Oishi, N., Onoprienko, D., Osborne, L. S., Panvini, R. S., Park, H., Park, C. H., Pavel, T. J., Peruzzi, I., Piccolo, M., Piemontese, L., Pieroni, E., Pitts, K. T., Plano, R. J., Prepost, R., Prescott, C. Y., Punkar, G. D., Quigley, J., Ratcliff, B. N., Reeves, T. W., Reidy, J., Reinertsen, P. L., Rensing, P. E., Rochester, L. S., Rowson, P. C., Russell, J. J., Saxton, O. H., Schalk, T., Schindler, R. H., Schumm, B. A., Schwiening, J., Sen, S., Serbo, V. V., Shaevitz, M. H., Shank, J. T., Shapiro, G., Sherden, D. J., Shmakov, K. D., Simopoulos, C., Sinev, N. B., Smith, S. R., Smy, M. B., Snyder, J. A., Staengle, H., Stahl, A., Stamer, P., Steiner, R., Steiner, H., Strauss, M. G., Su, D., Suekane, F., Sugiyama, A., Suzuki, S., Swartz, M., Szumilo, A., Takahashi, T., Taylor, F. E., Thom, J., Torrence, E., Toumbas, Nicolaos K., Trandafir, A. I., Turk, J. D., Usher, T., Vannini, C., Va'vra, J., Vella, E., Venuti, J. P., Verdier, R., Verdini, P. G., Wagner, S. R., Wagner, D. L., Waite, A. P., Walston, S., Wang, J., Ward, C., Watts, S. J., Weidemann, A. W., Weiss, E. R., Whitaker, J. S., White, S. L., Wickens, F. J., Williams, B., Williams, D. C., Williams, S. H., Willocq, S., Wilson, R. J., Wisniewski, W. J., Wittlin, J. L., Woods, M., Word, G. B., Wright, T. R., Wyss, J., Yamamoto, R. K., Yamartino, J. M., Yang, X., Yashima, J., Yellin, S. J., Young, C. C., Yuta, H., Zapalac, G., Zdarko, R. W., Zhou, J., and Toumbas, Nicolaos K. [0000-0001-8879-7330]
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Physics ,Quantum chromodynamics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Particle model ,Electron–positron annihilation ,Hadron ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Elementary particle ,01 natural sciences ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Particle decay ,0103 physical sciences ,Strong coupling ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,010306 general physics ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We present an improved comparison of the strong coupling of the gluon to light (q_l=u+d+s), c, and b quarks, determined from multijet rates in flavor-tagged samples of hadronic Z0 decays recorded with the SLC Large Detector at the SLAC Linear Collider between 1993 and 1995. Flavor separation among primary q_l q_l-bar, c c-bar, and b b-bar final states was made on the basis of the reconstructed mass of long-lived heavy-hadron decay vertices, yielding tags with high purity and low bias against >= 3-jet final states. We find alpha_s^c/alpha_s^uds = 1.036+-0.043 (stat) +0.041-0.045 (syst) +0.020-0.018 (theory) and alpha_s^b/alpha_s^uds = 1.004+-0.018 (stat) +0.026-0.031 (syst) +0.018-0.029 (theory)., 38 pages latex including 8 embedded eps figures
- Published
- 1998
37. Effects of high peanut meal with different crude protein level supplemented with amino acids on performance, carcass traits and nitrogen retention of Chinese Yellow broilers.
- Author
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Gou, Z. Y., Jiang, S. Q., Jiang, Z. Y., Zheng, C. T., Li, L., Ruan, D., Chen, F., and Lin, X. J.
- Subjects
BROILER chickens ,PEANUT products ,PROTEIN content of food ,DIETARY supplements ,AMINO acids ,BIRD food - Abstract
This study assessed the effects of feeding high peanut meal diets of reduced crude protein ( CP) content supplemented with essential amino acids ( EAA) on growth performance, carcass traits, biochemical indices in plasma, and nitrogen (N) retention of male and female Lingnan Yellow broilers from day 22 to day 42 of age. Each of four dietary treatments (19%, 18%, 17% or 16% CP, dietary CP level reduced by the reduced dietary peanut meal) contained six replicate pens with 35 birds of each sex (males and females with equal number), separately (1680 in total). The three diets with reduced CP were supplemented with 5 EAA to meet the requirements and provide the same levels as in the 19% CP diet. Average daily gain decreased and feed:gain ratio was worse in both sexes with reduced CP% (linear, p < 0.05). Dressing percentage increased as CP% decreased in males (linear, p < 0.05) and thigh muscle percentage reduced slightly in females (linear, p < 0.05). Abdominal fat percentage of males fed the 17% CP was the lowest (quadratic, p < 0.05). The plasma metabolic indices, concentrations of triglycerides and malondialdehyde, showed linear responses to reduced CP% (p < 0.05) with triglycerides increasing while malondialdehyde decreased. Plasma uric acid increased in females (linear, p < 0.05), but not in males, as CP% decreased. Efficiency of N retention increased and N excretion strikingly decreased with lower CP diets (p < 0.001), and both variables showed significant (p < 0.05) linear and quadratic effects. It is concluded that there was a limit to which dietary CP of broilers could be reduced without adverse effects. Dietary CP could be reduced to 17% for males and 18% for females (or 18% when fed together) between day 22 and day 42, if diets are supplemented with synthetic EAA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Inhibition of miR-141 reverses cisplatin resistance in non-small cell lung cancer cells via upregulation of programmed cell death protein 4.
- Author
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FU, W.-F., CHEN, W.-B., DAI, L., YANG, G.-P., JIANG, Z.-Y., PAN, L., ZHAO, J., and CHEN, G.
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: MicroRNAs are a class of essential regulators in cancer, and previous studies have shown that miR-141 is a tumor suppressor in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, it is still unknown whether it regulates chemosensitivity. We aimed to investigate the role of miR-141 in cisplatin resistance in NSCLC cells. MATERIALS AND METHODS: MiR-141 expression in A549 and A549/DDP cell lines have been quantified by real-time PCR. Protein level of PDCD4 and caspase-3 have been determined by Western blot analysis. Drug sensitivity and apoptosis have been determined by MTT assay and TUNEL assay, respectively. Luciferase activity assay was employed to validate the relationship between 3'UTR of PDCD4 mRNA and miR- 141. RESULTS: We observed that miR-141 expression was significantly up-regulated in cisplatin-resistant A549/DDP cells compared with the parental cell line A549; and PDCD4, an important apoptosis regulator, was found to be down-regulated. Luciferase activity assay and Western blot analysis confirmed that PDCD4 is a direct target of miR-141. Inhibition of miR-141 in A549/DDP cells markedly increased cisplatin sensitivity and apoptosis, which was partially abrogated by PDCD4 inhibition, indicating that PDCD4 is a functional target of miR-141 in of the regulation of cisplatin sensitivity. CONCLUSIONS: Our data showed that miR- 141 participates in regulating cisplatin sensitivity in non-small lung cancer cells via PDCD4 inhibition, and suppression of miR-141 might be a therapeutic method to overcome cisplatin resistance in clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
39. MicroRNA-185 inhibits cell proliferation and epithelial-mesenchymal transition in hepatocellular carcinoma by targeting Six2.
- Author
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ZHU, S.-M., CHEN, C.-M., JIANG, Z.-Y., YUAN, B., JI, M., WU, F.-H., and JIN, J.
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) plays an important role in the malignant transformation of cancer. MicroRNAs are a group of small non-coding RNA molecules that down-regulate the expression of genes involved in tumorigenesis. Although microRNA-185 (miR-185) participates in the pathogenesis of several types of cancer, its relationship with EMT in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has not been investigated. The present study aims to elucidate the regulatory effects of miR-185 on EMT in HCC cells. MATERIALS AND METHODS: MTT and an in vitro wound-healing assay were performed to determine cell growth and metastasis potential, respectively. Real-time PCR was used to measure the mRNA expression of miR-185 and Six2. In addition, protein expression levels of Six2 and EMT-related markers were determined by western blot. RESULTS: Our study showed that miR-185 was significantly down-regulated in HCC cells. Also, a luciferase reporter gene assay confirmed Six2 as a direct target of miR-185. Functional analyses indicated that miR-185 up-regulation remarkably suppressed cell growth and the metastatic potential of HCC cells. We also found that ectopic expression of miR-185 reversed EMT via the up-regulation of E-cadherin and down-regulation of vimentin in epithelial and mesenchymal HCC cells. CONCLUSIONS: miR-185 suppresses cell growth and EMT progression by targeting Six2, European Review for Medical and Pharmacological Sciences MicroRNA-185 inhibits cell proliferation and epithelial-mesenchymal transition in hepatocellular carcinoma by targeting Six2 S.-M. ZHU1, C.-M. CHEN2, Z.-Y. JIANG3, B. YUAN4, M. JI5, F.-H. WU6, J. JIN6 1Department of Surgery, Xin Hua Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Chongming Branch, Shanghai, China 2Information Center, The First Affiliated of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, China 3Cancer Center, Zhejiang Quhua Hospital, Quzhou, Zhejiang, China 4Department of Pharmacy, Tongren Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China 5Yang Pu District Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medical, Shanghai, China; 6Department of Pharmacy, Shanghai Ninth People’s Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China Song-ming Zhu, Chi-mei Chen, Zhong-yu Jiang and Bo Yuan are the co-first authors providing a novel target for the molecular treatment of liver malignancies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
40. Measurement and analysis of EMI radiated by a high-frequency AC distribution system in vehicles.
- Author
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Jiang, Z. Y., Xue, X. D., Mei, J., and Cheng, Eric K. W.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Positive Association Between Betatrophin and Diabetic Retinopathy Risk in Type 2 Diabetes Patients.
- Author
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Wang, Y.-Y., Zhang, D., Jiang, Z.-Y., Lu, X.-Q., Zheng, X., Yu, Y.-J., Wang, Y.-G., and Dong, J.
- Subjects
PROTEINS ,DIABETIC retinopathy ,PEOPLE with diabetes ,LIPID metabolism ,INSULIN resistance ,HYPOGLYCEMIC agents - Abstract
Betatrophin is a recently identified protein that has been shown to be associated with lipid metabolism and insulin resistance. This study aimed to measure serum betatrophin concentrations in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and evaluate the association of betatrophin with diabetic retinopthy (DR). Serum betatrophin concentrations were compared between (1) gender-, age-and body mass index-matched T2DM patients with (n = 17) or without (n = 33) DR; (2) gender-, age-, and body mass index-matched healthy subjects (n = 31), newly-diagnosed T2DM patients before treatment (n = 24), and T2DM patients under antidiabetic treatment (n = 35). Serum betatrophin concentrations were determined by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to assess the association between betatrophin concentration and DR. Serum betatrophin concentration was significantly associated with DR in T2DM patients under treatment (Odds Ratio 2.01; 95 % Confidence Interval 1.12-3.60; p = 0.019). Betatrophin concentrations were significantly increased in treated T2DM patients compared to the healthy subjects (4.17 ± 0.60 vs. 0.54 ± 0.07 ng/ml; p < 0.001). Serum betatrophin concentrations are increased in T2DM patients under antidiabetic treatment and positively associated with diabetic retinopathy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Supplementation of pre-weaning diet with L-arginine has carry-over effect to improve intestinal development in young piglets.
- Author
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Yang, X. F., Jiang, Z. Y., Gong, Y. L., Zheng, C. T., Hu, Y. J., Wang, L., Huang, L., and Ma, X. Y.
- Subjects
PIGLETS ,ARGININE ,INGESTION ,INTESTINES ,ANIMAL nutrition - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Animal Science is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
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43. The enhanced electrocaloric effect in P(VDF-TrFE) copolymer with barium strontium titanate nano-fillers synthesized via an effective hydrothermal method.
- Author
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Jiang, Z. Y., Zheng, X. C., and Zheng, G. P.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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44. Mechanism of the Strain Rate Effect of Metal Foams with Numerical Simulations of 3D Voronoi Foams during the Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar Tests.
- Author
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Yang, B., Liu, Z. J., Tang, L. Q., Jiang, Z. Y., and Liu, Y. P.
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STRAIN rate ,METAL foams ,COMPUTER simulation ,HOPKINSON bars (Testing) ,SENSITIVITY analysis - Abstract
With the demand of lightweight structure, more and more metal foams were employed as impact protection and efficient energy absorption materials in engineering fields. But, results from different impact experiments showed that the strain rate sensitivity of metal foams were different or even controversial. In order to explore the true hiding behind the controversial experimental data about the strain rate sensitivity of metal foams, numerical simulations of split Hopkinson pressure bar (SHPB) tests of the metal foams were carried out by finite element methods. In the analysis, cell structures of metal foams were constructed by means of 3D Voronoi, and the matrix metal was assumed to be no strain rate sensitivity, which helps to learn the strain rate effects quantitatively by the foam structures. Numerical simulations showed that the deformation of the metal foam specimen is not uniform during the SHPB tests along the specimen, and the strain-stress relations of the metal foams at two ends of the specimen are different; there exists strain rate sensitivity of the metal foams even the matrix metal has no strain rate sensitivity, when the strain of the metal foams is defined by the displacement difference between the ends of the specimen; localized deformation of the metal foams and the inertia effect of matrix metal are the two main contributions to the strain rate sensitivity of the metal foams. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The optimisation of the secondary cooling water distribution with improved genetic algorithm in continuous casting of steels.
- Author
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Zhai, Y. Y., Li, Y., Ma, B. Y., Yan, C., and Jiang, Z. Y.
- Abstract
An improved genetic algorithm is presented for the water consumption of the secondary cooling zone based on the heat transfer model of the off-line bloom caster. This study is to control the existing cooling systems and the steel casting practises in order to produce steel with best possible quality. The fitness function of improved genetic algorithm is founded according to the metallurgical criteria. This algorithm coupled with heat transfer model and metallurgical criteria, added dynamic coding method and self-adapting mutation on the original genetic algorithm can increase water distribution adaptively and improve the process efficiency. The simulation results of T91 bloom show that the optimised distribution reduced by 2% of water consumption comparing to that of before optimisation. The maximum surface cooling rate and the rate of temperature rise reduced, and the equiaxed rate increases. The function is built for explaining the relationship between the casting speed and water distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Study on the influence of temperature on the surface asperity in micro cross wedge rolling.
- Author
-
Lu, H. N., Wei, D. B., Jiang, Z. Y., Wu, D., and Zhao, X. M.
- Subjects
ROLLING (Metalwork) ,DEFORMATIONS (Mechanics) ,METAL formability ,TEMPERATURE effect ,LASER beams ,FINITE element method ,LASER heating - Abstract
When the common deformation processes are scaled down to micro/meso dimensions, size effect is the particular phenomena in microforming, which is related to the dominant influence of single grains inside the micropart. The conventional cross wedge rolling (CWR) is introduced into the micro scale in order to take the advantages of CWR. The micro cross wedge rolling (MCWR) has to confront with the phenomena of size effect that occurs in the common microforming processes inevitably. One of the approaches to compensate size effect is to increase the deforming temperature. An increased formability is achieved because more slip systems of polycrystal metal are activated at the elevated temperature. This reduces the anisotropic material behavior resulting in a more homogeneous forming with improved reproducibility. In this study, a YAG laser beam is applied to heat the workpiece. Finite element model (FEM) associated with a material constitutive formulation considering dislocation mechanics is set up to simulate the MCWR of pure copper utilizing the laser heating. The surface asperity as an indication of material heterogeneity in micro scale is quantitatively analysed. The simulation results show a good agreement with experimental results in terms of the surface asperity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Tribology in Hot Rolling of Steel Strip.
- Author
-
Wei, D. B. and Jiang, Z. Y.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. 3D FINITE ELEMENT MODELLING OF COMPLEX STRIP ROLLING.
- Author
-
JIANG, Z. Y.
- Subjects
FINITE element method ,DEFORMATIONS (Mechanics) ,STRUCTURAL engineering ,NUMERICAL analysis ,MECHANICAL stress analysis - Published
- 2009
49. MICROSTRUCTURE AND CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC TEXTURE OF STRIP-CAST FE-3.2%SI STEEL SHEET.
- Author
-
XU, Y. B., YU, Y. M., CAO, G. M., LI, C. S., WANG, G. D., and JIANG, Z. Y.
- Subjects
STEEL castings ,SILICON steel ,STEEL strip ,MICROSTRUCTURE ,METALLIC composites - Published
- 2009
50. AN INFLUENCE FUNCTION METHOD ANALYSIS OF COLD STRIP ROLLING.
- Author
-
JIANG, Z. Y., WEI, D. W., and TIEU, A. K.
- Subjects
COLD rolling ,STEEL strip ,FINITE element method ,FLATNESS measurement ,ENGINEERING design - Published
- 2009
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