15,792 results on '"Sun B"'
Search Results
102. Annual Summary Report (FY 2023): Composite Analysis for Low-Level Waste Disposal in the Central Plateau of the Hanford Site.
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Sun, B., primary
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- 2024
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103. Gravitational p → ∆+ transition form factors in chiral perturbation theory
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Alharazin, H., Sun, B.-D., Epelbaum, E., Gegelia, J., and Meißner, U.-G.
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- 2024
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104. A Computational Model of TE-Dominant Noticing, Repetition, Prior Knowledge and Grammatical Knowledge Acquisition
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Yang, Juan, Qi, X. F., Liu, R., Wang, L., and Sun, B.
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Computer-assisted textual enhancement (CATE) technology has been widely used to improve English as foreign language (EFL) learners' syntactical and grammatical learning. Visual attention, repetition, and prior knowledge are known as the vital factors in CATE-assisted knowledge-acquisition; however, there still lacks a model which can describe those factors' intrinsic cooperating-mechanism that works in the CATE-based knowledge-acquisition. Therefore, this paper built up a computational model (PESE) of using those factors as variables, by fitting and predicting the data collected from empirical experiments with an average accuracy of 78%, PESE testified and complemented the assumptions proposed by previous studies. PESE suggested that although the efficacy of CATE is majorly decided by learners' prior-knowledge of the targets, the interactive effects of visual-attention, repetition, and inductive activity could partly compensate for the effect from prior-knowledge, and the efficacy ceiling of repetition also could be estimated according to the 'easy-perceiving level' coefficient. At the end of this paper, 3 pedagogical implications were proposed for English teachers who are willing to integrate CATE into their teaching activities.
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- 2022
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105. Preparation, Physicochemical Characterization, and Pharmacodynamic Study of Betamethasone Dipropionate Nanosuspension
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Shen, Z., Chen, J., Liu, M., Ge, J. L., Chen, F. P., Sun, B. W., and Hua, X.-N.
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- 2023
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106. The description of giant dipole resonance key parameters with multitask neural networks
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Bai, J. H., Niu, Z. M., Sun, B. Y., and Niu, Y. F.
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Nuclear Theory ,81V35, 82D75, 68T07 ,I.2.6 ,J.2 - Abstract
Giant dipole resonance (GDR) is one of the fundamental collective excitation modes in nucleus. Continuous efforts have been made to the evaluation of GDR key parameters in different nuclear data libraries. We introduced multitask learning (MTL) approach to learn and reproduce the evaluated experimental data of GDR key parameters, including both GDR energies and widths. Compared to the theoretical GDR parameters in RIPL-3 library, the accuracies of MTL approach are almost doubled for 129 nuclei with experimental data. The significant improvement is largely due to the right classification of unimodal nuclei and bimodal nuclei by the classification neural network. Based on the good performance of the neural network approach, an extrapolation to 79 nuclei around the $\beta$-stability line without experimental data is made, which provides an important reference to future experiments and data evaluations. The successful application of MTL approach in this work further proofs the feasibility of studying multi-output physical problems with multitask neural network in nuclear physics domain., Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures
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- 2021
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107. Glucocorticoids promote CCL20 expression in keratinocytes.
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Wang, L, Yang, M, Wang, X, Cheng, B, Ju, Q, Eichenfield, D, and Sun, B
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Animals ,Chemokine CCL20 ,Glucocorticoids ,Humans ,Keratinocytes ,Mice ,NF-kappa B ,Signal Transduction ,p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucocorticoids (GCs) are generally envisioned as immunosuppressive, but in conditions such as rosacea and perioral dermatitis they can lead to increased skin inflammation. In lung epithelia, GCs promote expression of the proinflammatory cytokine CCL20, which contributes to steroid-resistant asthma. In the skin, CCL20 stimulates inflammation by recruiting T helper 17 T lymphocytes and dendritic cells, and is elevated in papulopustular rosacea. OBJECTIVES: To understand if, and how, GCs affect CCL20 expression in human keratinocytes. CCL20 expression was assessed by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. METHODS: Selective inhibition of candidate genes and signalling pathways was performed using RNA interference and chemical inhibitors. The binding of activated GC receptor to genomic DNA was determined by chromatin immunoprecipitation, and enhancer activity of genomic sequences was measured with a reporter assay. RESULTS: We found that GC treatment increased CCL20 expression in human keratinocytes and murine skin, both in the undisturbed state and with tumour necrosis factor-α stimulation. GC repressed proinflammatory signalling pathways, including nuclear factor kappa B and p38/mitogen-activated protein kinase, but these inhibitory effects were opposed by the direct binding of activated GC receptor to the CCL20 enhancer, promoting CCL20 expression. CONCLUSIONS: Viewed together, these findings demonstrate a mechanism by which GCs induce expression of CCL20 in keratinocytes, which may contribute to the inflammation seen in steroid-exacerbated skin conditions.
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- 2021
108. The electric vehicles-solar photovoltaics Nexus: Driving cross-sectoral adoption of sustainable technologies
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Sharda, S., Garikapati, V.M., Goulias, K.G., Reyna, J.L., Sun, B., Spurlock, C.A., and Needell, Z.
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- 2024
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109. Regional variations in retinopathy of prematurity incidence for preterm infants
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Lee, S.K., Chen, C., Du, L., Zhou, W., Cao, Y., Chen, X., Zhang, H., Tian, X., Shi, J., Li, Z., Yang, C., Liu, L., Yang, Z., Fu, J., Ji, Y., Chen, D., Chen, R., Peng, X., Shan, R., Han, S., Wu, H., Wang, L., Wei, Q., Li, M., Dai, Y., Jiang, H., Kang, W., Gong, X., Zhong, X., Shi, Y., Jiang, S., Sun, B., Li, L., Lin, Z., Liu, J., Pan, J., Xia, H., Li, X., Xu, F., Qiu, Y., Ma, L., Yang, L., He, X., Li, Y., Zhuang, D., Zhang, Q., Dong, W., Sun, J., Liang, K., Wang, H., Feng, J., Chen, L., Lin, X., Jiang, C., Niebl, C., Zeng, L., Hei, M., Zhu, H., Mi, H., Yin, Z., Song, H., Li, D., Gao, Y., Wang, Y., Dai, L., Zhang, L., Ding, G., Wang, J., Wang, Z., Tang, Z., Ma, X., Zhang, X., Wu, F., Chen, Y., Wu, Y., Ting, J., Du, J., Wu, D., Liu, Y., and Zhu, X.
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- 2024
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110. Variable selection and identification of high-dimensional nonparametric nonlinear systems by directional regression
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Sun, B., Cai, Q. Y., Peng, Z. K., Cheng, C. M., Wang, F., and Zhang, H. Z.
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- 2023
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111. Mass measurements for $T_{z}=-2$ $fp$-shell nuclei $^{40}$Ti, $^{44}$Cr, $^{46}$Mn, $^{48}$Fe, $^{50}$Co and $^{52}$Ni
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Fu, C. Y., Zhang, Y. H., Wang, M., Zhou, X. H., Litvinov, Yu. A., Blaum, K., Xu, H. S., Xu, X., Shuai, P., Lam, Y. H., Chen, R. J., Yan, X. L., Chen, X. C., He, J. J., Kubono, S., Sun, M. Z., Tu, X. L., Xing, Y. M., Zeng, Q., Zhou, X., Zhan, W. L., Litvinov, S., Audi, G., Uesaka, T., Yamaguchi, T., Ozawa, A., Sun, B. H., Sun, Y., and Xu, F. R.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
By using isochronous mass spectrometry (IMS) at the experimental cooler storage ring CSRe, masses of short-lived $^{44}$Cr, $^{46}$Mn, $^{48}$Fe, $^{50}$Co and $^{52}$Ni were measured for the first time and the precision of the mass of $^{40}$Ti was improved by a factor of about 2. Relative precisions of $\delta m/m=(1-2)\times$10$^{-6}$ have been achieved. Details of the measurements and data analysis are described. The obtained masses are compared with the Atomic-Mass Evaluation 2016 (AME$^{\prime}$16) and with theoretical model predictions. The new mass data enable us to extract the higher order coefficients, $d$ and $e$, of the quartic form of the isobaric multiplet mass equation (IMME) for the $fp$-shell isospin quintets. Unexpectedly large $d$- and $e$-values for $A=44$ quintet are found. By re-visiting the previous experimental data on $\beta$-delayed protons from $^{44}$Cr decay, it is suggested that the observed anomaly could be due to the misidentification of the $T=2$, $J^\pi=0^{+}$ isobaric analog state (IAS) in $^{44}$V.
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- 2020
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112. Magnetic Gradient Fluctuations from Quadrupolar $^{73}$Ge in Si/SiGe Exchange-Only Qubits
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Kerckhoff, J., Sun, B., Fong, B. H., Jones, C., Kiselev, A. A., Barnes, D. W., Noah, R. S., Acuna, E., Akmal, M., Ha, S. D., Wright, J. A., Thomas, B. J., Jackson, C. A. C., Edge, L. F., Eng, K., Ross, R. S., and Ladd, T. D.
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Quantum Physics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We study the time-fluctuating magnetic gradient noise mechanisms in pairs of Si/SiGe quantum dots using exchange echo noise spectroscopy. We find through a combination of spectral inversion and correspondence to theoretical modeling that quadrupolar precession of the $^{73}$Ge nuclei play a key role in the spin-echo decay time $T_2$, with a characteristic dependence on magnetic field and the width of the Si quantum well. The $^{73}$Ge noise peaks appear at the fundamental and first harmonic of the $^{73}$Ge Larmor resonance, superimposed over $1/f$ noise due to $^{29}$Si dipole-dipole dynamics, and are dependent on material epitaxy and applied magnetic field. These results may inform the needs of dynamical decoupling when using Si/SiGe quantum dots as qubits in quantum information processing devices., Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures
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- 2020
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113. Design of subwavelength optical fibre for low-loss Terahertz transmission
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Ren N. F., Chen M. Y., Sun B., and Ge L.
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thz transmission ,optical fibre ,absorption loss ,Applied optics. Photonics ,TA1501-1820 ,Optics. Light ,QC350-467 - Abstract
A low-loss Terahertz (THz) transmission optical fibre with a subwavelength core is reported in this article. The main fibre is composed of a subwavelength solid polymer core and a tube. The tube is used to prevent the extending of THz wave to the external environment. Two solid ends are introduced to suspend the subwavelength core in the air. The solid fibre ends are found have low splicing losses with the main fibre. The proposed fibre provides a simple technique for the transmission of THz wave in a short distance.
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- 2013
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114. Enhanced high-temperature thermal stability of the novel MoAlSiN-based solar selective absorbing coatings by optimizing the multilayer structure
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Sun, B., Ren, J., Wang, L., Sun, Y., Cui, J., Liang, D., Liu, H., Yang, Y., Li, A., and Wang, Cong
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- 2023
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115. Risk factors for portal vein system thrombosis after partial splenic embolisation in cirrhotic patients with hypersplenism
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Gao, H., Sun, B., Li, X., Bai, T., Du, L., Song, Y., Zheng, C., Kan, X., and Liu, F.
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- 2023
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116. New Test of Modulated Electron Capture Decay of Hydrogen-Like $^{142}$Pm Ions: Precision Measurement of Purely Exponential Decay
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Ozturk, F. C., Akkus, B., Atanasov, D., Beyer, H., Bosch, F., Boutin, D., Brandau, C., Bühler, P., Cakirli, R. B., Chen, R. J., Chen, W. D., Chen, X. C., Dillmann, I., Dimopoulou, C., Enders, W., Essel, H. G., Faestermann, T., Forstner, O., Gao, B. S., Geissel, H., Gernhäuser, R., Grisenti, R. E., Gumberidze, A., Hagmann, S., Heftrich, T., Heil, M., Herdrich, M. O., Hillenbrand, P. -M., Izumikawa, T., Kienle, P., Klaushofer, C., Kleffner, C., Kozhuharov, C., Knöbel, R. K., Kovalenko, O., Kreim, S., Kühl, T., Lederer-Woods, C., Lestinsky, M., Litvinov, S. A., Litvinov, Yu. A., Liu, Z., Ma, X. W., Maier, L., Mei, B., Miura, H., Mukha, I., Najafi, A., Nagae, D., Nishimura, T., Nociforo, C., Nolden, F., Ohtsubo, T., Oktem, Y., Omika, S., Ozawa, A., Petridis, N., Piotrowski, J., Reifarth, R., Rossbach, J., Sánchez, R., Sanjari, M. S., Scheidenberger, C., Sidhu, R. S., Simon, H., Spillmann, U., Steck, M., Stöhlker, Th., Sun, B. H., Susam, L. A., Suzaki, F., Suzuki, T., Torilov, S. Yu., Trageser, C., Trassinelli, M., Trotsenko, S., Tu, X. L., Walker, P. M., Wang, M., Weber, G., Weick, H., Winckler, N., Winters, D. F. A., Woods, P. J., Yamaguchi, T., Xu, X. D., Yan, X. L., Yang, J. C., Yuan, Y. J., Zhang, Y. H., Zhou, X. H., Collaboration, the FRS-ESR, Collaboration, the ILIMA, Collaboration, the SPARC, and Collaboration, the TBWD
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
An experiment addressing electron capture (EC) decay of hydrogen-like $^{142}$Pm$^{60+}$ ions has been conducted at the experimental storage ring (ESR) at GSI. The decay appears to be purely exponential and no modulations were observed. Decay times for about 9000 individual EC decays have been measured by applying the single-ion decay spectroscopy method. Both visually and automatically analysed data can be described by a single exponential decay with decay constants of 0.0126(7) s$^{-1}$ for automatic analysis and 0.0141(7) s$^{-1}$ for manual analysis. If a modulation superimposed on the exponential decay curve is assumed, the best fit gives a modulation amplitude of merely 0.019(15), which is compatible with zero and by 4.9 standard deviations smaller than in the original observation which had an amplitude of 0.23(4).
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- 2019
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117. Masses of ground and isomeric states of $^{101}$In and configuration-dependent shell evolution in odd-$A$ indium isotopes
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Xu, X., Liu, J. H., Yuan, C. X., Xing, Y. M., Wang, M., Zhang, Y. H., Zhou, X. H., Litvinov, Yu. A., Blaum, K., Chen, R. J., Chen, X. C., Fu, C. Y., Gao, B. S., He, J. J., Kubono, S., Lam, Y. H., Li, H. F., Liu, M. L., Ma, X. W., Shuai, P., Si, M., Sun, M. Z., Tu, X. L., Wang, Q., Xu, H. S., Yan, X. L., Yang, J. C., Yuan, Y. J., Zeng, Q., Zhang, P., Zhou, X., Zhan, W. L., Litvinov, S., Audi, G., Naimi, S., Uesaka, T., Yamaguchi, Y., Yamaguchi, T., Ozawa, A., Sun, B. H., Kaneko, K., Sun, Y., and Xu, F. R.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
We report first precision mass measurements of the $1/2^-$ isomeric and $9/2^+$ ground states of $^{101}$In. The determined isomeric excitation energy continues a smooth trend of odd-$A$ indium isotopes up to the immediate vicinity of $N=50$ magic number. This trend can be confirmed by dedicated shell model calculations only if the neutron configuration mixing is considered. We find that the single particle energies are different for different states of the same isotope. The presented configuration-dependent shell evolution, type II shell evolution, in odd-$A$ nuclei is discussed for the first time. Our results will facilitate future studies of single-particle neutron states., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, submitted to physical review C, under review
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- 2019
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118. Masses of neutron-rich $^{\operatorname{52-54}}$Sc and $^{54,56}$Ti nuclides: The $N=32$ subshell closure in scandium
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Xu, X., Wang, M., Blaum, K., Holt, J. D., Litvinov, Yu. A., Schwenk, A., Simonis, J., Stroberg, S. R., Zhang, Y. H., Xu, H. S., Shuai, P., Tu, X. L., Zhou, X. H., Xu, F. R., Audi, G., Chen, R. J., Chen, X. C., Fu, C. Y., Ge, Z., Huang, W. J., Litvinov, S., Liu, D. W., Lam, Y. H., Ma, X. W., Mao, R. S., Ozawa, A., Sun, B. H., Sun, Y., Uesaka, T., Xiao, G. Q., Xing, Y. M., Yamaguchi, T., Yamaguchi, Y., Yan, X. L., Zeng, Q., Zhao, H. W., Zhao, T. C., Zhang, W., and Zhan, W. L.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Isochronous mass spectrometry has been applied in the storage ring CSRe to measure the masses of the neutron-rich $^{\operatorname{52-54}}$Sc and $^{54,56}$Ti nuclei. The new mass excess values $ME$($^{52}$Sc) $=$ $-40525(65)$ keV, $ME$($^{53}$Sc) $=$ $-38910(80)$ keV, and $ME$($^{54}$Sc) $=$ $-34485(360)$ keV, deviate from the Atomic Mass Evaluation 2012 by 2.3$\sigma$, 2.8$\sigma$, and 1.7$\sigma$, respectively. These large deviations significantly change the systematics of the two-neutron separation energies of scandium isotopes. The empirical shell gap extracted from our new experimental results shows a significant subshell closure at $N = 32$ in scandium, with a similar magnitude as in calcium. Moreover, we present $ab$ $initio$ calculations using the valence-space in-medium similarity renormalization group based on two- and three-nucleon interactions from chiral effective field theory. The theoretical results confirm the existence of a substantial $N = 32$ shell gap in Sc and Ca with a decreasing trend towards lighter isotones, thus providing a consistent picture of the evolution of the $N = 32$ magic number from the $pf$ into the $sd$ shell., Comment: 6 pages, 5figures, accepted by Physical Review C
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- 2019
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119. Improving the resolving power of Isochronous Mass Spectrometry by employing an in-ring mechanical slit
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Liu, J. H., Xu, X., Zhang, P., Shuai, P., Yan, X. L., Zhang, Y. H., Wang, M., Litvinov, Yu. A., Xu, H. S., Blaum, K., Bao, T., Chen, H., Chen, X. C., Chen, R. J., Fu, C. Y., Liu, D. W., Ge, W. W., Mao, R. S., Ma, X. W., Sun, M. Z., Tu, X. L., Xing, Y. M., Yang, J. C., Yuan, Y. J., Zeng, Q., Zhou, X., Zhou, X. H., Zhan, W. L., Litvinov, S., Uesaka, T., Yamaguchi, Y., Yamaguchi, T., Ozawa, A., and Sun, B. H.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Isochronous Mass Spectrometry (IMS) in heavy-ion storage rings is an excellent experimental method for precision mass measurements of exotic nuclei. In the IMS, the storage ring is tuned in a special isochronous ion-optical mode. Thus, the mass-over-charge ratios of the stored ions are directly reflected by their respective revolution times in first order. However, the inevitable momentum spread of secondary ions increases the peak widths in the measured spectra and consequently limits the achieved mass precision. In order to achieve a higher mass resolving power, the ring aperture was reduced to 60 mm by applying a mechanical slit system at the dispersive straight section. The momentum acceptance was reduced as well as better isochronous conditions were achieved. The results showed a significant improvement of the mass resolving power reaching $5.2 \times 10^{5}$, though at the cost of about 40\% ion loss., Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, proceeding of EMIS2018
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- 2019
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120. Improvement of charge resolution for radioactive heavy ions at relativistic energies using a hybrid detector system
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Zhao, J. W., Sun, B. H., He, L. C., Li, G. S., Lin, W. J., Liu, C. Y., Liu, Z., Lu, C. G., Shen, D. P., Sun, Y. Z., Sun, Z. Y., Tanihata, I., Terashima, S., Tran, D. T., Wang, F., Wang, J., Wang, S. T., Wei, X. L., Xu, X. D., Zhu, L. H., Zhang, J. C., Zhang, X. H., Zhang, Y., and Zhou, Z. T.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
In typical nuclear physics experiments with radioactive ion beams (RIBs) selected by the in-flight separation technique, Si detectors or ionization chambers are usually equipped for the charge determination of RIBs. The obtained charge resolution relies on the performance of these detectors for energy loss determination, and this affects the particle identification capability of RIBs. We present an approach on improving the resolution of charge measurement for heavy ions by using the abundant energy loss information from different types of existing detectors along the beam line. Without altering the beam line and detectors, this approach can improve the charge resolution by more than 12\% relative to the multiple sampling ionization chamber of the best resolution., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures
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- 2019
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121. Expeditious synthesis of covalent organic frameworks: A review
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Li, X, Yang, C, Sun, B, Cai, S, Chen, Z, Lv, Y, Zhang, J, and Liu, Y
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Macromolecular and Materials Chemistry ,Materials Engineering ,Interdisciplinary Engineering - Abstract
Covalent organic frameworks (COFs), a burgeoning class of crystalline porous materials constructed by covalently connecting organic building blocks, have garnered tremendous attention. The predominant solvothermal synthesis of COFs usually requires high temperature and long reaction times (three days or longer), which creates substantial obstacles for their accelerated discovery and exploration in practical applications. Hence, the expeditious synthesis of COFs without compromising their inherent properties is exceedingly appealing from the viewpoint of cost, time, and energy footprint. To overcome the sluggishness of the synthesis, considerable efforts have been invested in the rapid synthesis of high-quality COFs through innovations in energy source, catalyst, solvent, monomer, nucleation, and workup activation, leading to a drastic reduction of reaction time from multiple days to a few hours, and even to seconds in some cases. In this contribution, we provide a comprehensive overview of the advances in expediting the synthesis science of COFs. Though a nascent effort, six prevalent strategies have been identified for the rapid synthesis of COFs, which have led to intriguing applications in a diverse range of areas including gas adsorption, separation, heterogeneous catalysis, environmental remediation, and photodynamic therapy. We also outline the major challenges and perspectives on the future directions empowered by expeditious COF synthesis.
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- 2020
122. Dynamic Covalent Synthesis of Crystalline Porous Graphitic Frameworks
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Li, X, Wang, H, Chen, H, Zheng, Q, Zhang, Q, Mao, H, Liu, Y, Cai, S, Sun, B, Dun, C, Gordon, MP, Zheng, H, Reimer, JA, Urban, JJ, Ciston, J, Tan, T, Chan, EM, and Zhang, J
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Macromolecular and Materials Chemistry - Abstract
Porous graphitic framework (PGF) is a two-dimensional (2D) material that has emerging energy applications. An archetype contains stacked 2D layers, the structure of which features a fully annulated aromatic skeleton with embedded heteroatoms and periodic pores. Due to the lack of a rational approach in establishing in-plane order under mild synthetic conditions, the structural integrity of PGF has remained elusive and ultimately limited its material performance. Here, we report the discovery of the unusual dynamic character of the C=N bonds in the aromatic pyrazine ring system under basic aqueous conditions, which enables the successful synthesis of a crystalline porous nitrogenous graphitic framework with remarkable in-plane order, as evidenced by powder X-ray diffraction studies and direct visualization using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. The crystalline framework displays superior performance as a cathode material for lithium-ion batteries, outperforming the amorphous counterparts in terms of capacity and cycle stability. Insertion of well-defined, evenly spaced nanoscale pores into the two-dimensional (2D) layers of graphene invokes exciting properties due to the modulation of its electronic band gaps and surface functionalities. A bottom-up synthesis approach to such porous graphitic frameworks (PGFs) is appealing but also remains a great challenge. The current methods of building covalent organic frameworks rely on a small collection of thermodynamically reversible reactions. Such reactions are, however, inadequate in generating a fully annulated aromatic skeleton in PGFs. With the discovery of dynamic pyrazine formation, we succeeded in applying this linking chemistry to obtain a crystalline PGF material, which has displayed high electrical conductivity and remarkable performance as a cathode material for lithium-ion batteries. We envision that the demonstrated success will open the door to a wide array of fully annulated 2D porous frameworks, which hold immense potential for clean energy applications. We report the unusual dynamic characteristics of the C=N bonds in the pyrazine ring promoted under basic aqueous conditions, which enables the successful synthesis of two-dimensional porous graphitic frameworks (PGFs) featuring fully annulated aromatic skeletons and periodic pores. The PGF displayed high electrical conductivity and remarkable performance as a cathode material for lithium-ion batteries, far outperforming the amorphous counterparts in terms of capacity and cycle stability.
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- 2020
123. Effect of strontium-doped coating prepared by microarc oxidation and hydrothermal treatment on apatite induction ability of Ti13Nb13Zr alloy in vitro
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Liu, Y. C., Xu, T. W., Sun, B. Q., Lv, B. J., and Wang, H.
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- 2022
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124. Quantifying error and leakage in an encoded Si/SiGe triple-dot qubit
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Andrews, R. W., Jones, C., Reed, M. D., Jones, A. M., Ha, S. D., Jura, M. P., Kerckhoff, J., Levendorf, M., Meenehan, S., Merkel, S. T., Smith, A., Sun, B., Weinstein, A. J., Rakher, M. T., Ladd, T. D., and Borselli, M. G.
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Quantum Physics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Quantum computation requires qubits that satisfy often-conflicting criteria, including scalable control and long-lasting coherence. One approach to creating a suitable qubit is to operate in an encoded subspace of several physical qubits. Though such encoded qubits may be particularly susceptible to leakage out of their computational subspace, they can be insensitive to certain noise processes and can also allow logical control with a single type of entangling interaction while maintaining favorable features of the underlying physical system. Here we demonstrate a qubit encoded in a subsystem of three coupled electron spins confined in gated, isotopically enhanced silicon quantum dots. Using a modified "blind" randomized benchmarking protocol that determines both computational and leakage errors, we show that unitary operations have an average total error of 0.35%, with 0.17% of that coming from leakage driven by interactions with substrate nuclear spins. This demonstration utilizes only the voltage-controlled exchange interaction for qubit manipulation and highlights the operational benefits of encoded subsystems, heralding the realization of high-quality encoded multi-qubit operations., Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures
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- 2018
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125. Application of isochronous mass spectrometry for the study of angular momentum population in projectile fragmentation reactions
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Tu, X. L., Kelic-Heil, A., Litvinov, Yu. A., Podolyak, Zs., Zhang, Y. H., Huang, W. J., Xu, H. S., Blaum, K., Bosch, F., Chen, R. J., Chen, X. C., Fu, C. Y., Gao, B. S., Ge, Z., Hu, Z. G., Liu, D. W., Litvinov, S. A., Ma, X. W., Mao, R. S., Mei, B., Shuai, P., Sun, B. H., Sun, Y., Sun, Z. Y., Walker, P. M., Wang, M., Winckler, N., Xia, J. W., Xiao, G. Q., Xing, Y. M., Xu, X., Yamaguchi, T., Yan, X. L., Yang, J. C., Yuan, Y. J., Zeng, Q., Zhang, W., Zhao, H. W., Zhao, T. C., and Zhou, X. H.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Isochronous mass spectrometry was applied to measure isomeric yield ratios of fragmentation reaction products. This approach is complementary to conventional gamma-ray spectroscopy in particular for measuring yield ratios for long-lived isomeric states. Isomeric yield ratios for the high-spin I = 19/2 states in the mirror nuclei 53Fe and 53Co are measured to study angular momentum population following the projectile fragmentation of 78Kr at energies of 480A MeV on a beryllium target. The 19/2 state isomeric ratios of 53Fe produced from different projectiles in the literature have also been extracted as a function of mass number difference between projectile and fragment (mass loss). The results are compared to ABRABLA07 model calculations. The isomeric ratios of 53Fe produced using different projectiles suggest that the theory underestimates not only the previously reported dependence on the spin but also the dependence on the mass loss., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures
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- 2018
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126. Isochronous mass measurements of $T_z=-1$ $fp$-shell nuclei from projectile fragmentation of $^{58}$Ni
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Zhang, Y. H., Zhang, P., Zhou, X. H., Wang, M., Litvinov, Yu. A., Xu, H. S., Xu, X., Shuai, P., Lam, Y. H., Chen, R. J., Yan, X. L., Bao, T., Chen, X. C., Chen, H., Fu, C. Y., He, J. J., Kubono, S., Liu, D. W., Mao, R. S., Ma, X. W., Sun, M. Z., Tu, X. L., Xing, Y. M., Zeng, Q., Zhou, X., Zhan, W. L., Litvinov, S., Blaum, K., Audi, G., Uesaka, T., Yamaguchi, Y., Yamaguchi, T., Ozawa, A., Sun, B. H., Sun, Y., and Xu, F. R.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Atomic masses of seven $T_z=-1$, $fp$-shell nuclei from $^{44}$V to $^{56}$Cu and two low-lying isomers, $^{44m}$V ($J^\pi=6^+$) and $^{52m}$Co ($J^\pi=2^+$), have been measured with relative precisions of $1-4\times 10^{-7}$ with Isochronous Mass Spectrometry (IMS) at CSRe. The masses of $^{56}$Cu, $^{52g,52m}$Co, and $^{44m}$V were measured for the first time in this experiment. The Mass Excesses ($ME^{\prime}$s) of $^{44}$V, $^{48}$Mn, $^{50}$Fe, and $^{54}$Ni are determined with an order of magnitude improved precision compared to the literature values. $^{52g,52m}$Co and $^{56}$Cu are found to be $370$~keV and $400$~keV more bound, respectively, while $^{44g,44m}$V are $\sim 300$~keV less bound than the extrapolations in the Atomic-Mass Evaluation 2012 (AME$^{\prime}$12). The masses of the four $T_z=-1/2$ nuclei $^{45}$V, $^{47}$Cr, $^{49}$Mn, and $^{51}$Fe are re-determined to be in agreement, within the experimental errors, with the recent JYFLTRAP measurements or with the previous IMS measurements in CSRe. Details of the measurements and data analysis are described, and the impact of the new $ME$ values on different aspects in nuclear structure are investigated and discussed., Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures
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- 2018
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127. Dominance of tensor correlations in high-momentum nucleon pairs studied by (p,pd) reaction
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Terashima, S., Yu, L., Ong, H. J., Tanihata, I., Adachi, S., Aoi, N., Chan, P. Y., Fujioka, H., Fukuda, M., Geissel, H., Gey, G., Golak, J., Haettner, E., Iwamoto, C., Kawabata, T., Kamada, H., Le, X. Y., Sakaguchi, H., Sakaue, A., Scheidenberger, C., Skibinski, R., Sun, B. H., Tamii, A., Tang, T. L., Tran, D. T., Topolnicki, K., Wang, T. F., Watanabe, Y. N., Weick, H., Witala, H., Zhang, G. X., and Zhu, L. H.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The isospin character of p-n pairs at large relative momentum has been observed for the first time in the 16O ground state. A strong population of the J,T=1,0 state and a very weak population of the J,T=0,1 state were observed in neutron pick up domain of 16O(p,pd) at 392 MeV. This strong isospin dependence at large momentum transfer is not reproduced by the distorted-wave impulse approximation calculations with known spectroscopic amplitudes. The results indicate the presence of high-momentum protons and neutrons induced by the tensor interactions in ground state of 16O., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review Letters
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- 2018
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128. Predictions of nuclear $\beta$-decay half-lives with machine learning and their impacts on $r$ process
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Niu, Z. M., Liang, H. Z., Sun, B. H., Long, W. H., and Niu, Y. F.
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Nuclear Theory ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Nuclear $\beta$ decay is a key process to understand the origin of heavy elements in the universe, while the accuracy is far from satisfactory for the predictions of $\beta$-decay half-lives by nuclear models up to date. In this letter, we pave a novel way to accurately predict $\beta$-decay half-lives with the machine-learning based on the Bayesian neural network, in which the known physics has been explicitly embedded, including the ones described by the Fermi theory of $\beta$ decay, and the dependence of half-lives on pairing correlations and decay energies. The other potential physics, which is not clear or even missing in nuclear models nowadays, will be learned by the Bayesian neural network. The results well reproduce the experimental data with a very high accuracy and further provide reasonable uncertainty evaluations in half-life predictions. These accurate predictions for half-lives with uncertainties are essential for the $r$-process simulations., Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures
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- 2018
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129. The Masses of the $T_z=-3/2$ Nuclei $^{27}$P and $^{29}$S
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Fu, C. Y., Zhang, Y. H., Zhou, X. H., Wang, M., Litvinov, Yu. A., Blaum, K., Xu, H. S., Xu, X., Shuai, P., Lam, Y. H., Chen, R. J., Yan, X. L., Bao, T., Chen, X. C., Chen, H., He, J. J., Kubono, S., Liu, D. W., Mao, R. S., Ma, X. W., Sun, M. Z., Tu, X. L., Xing, Y. M., Zhang, P., Zeng, Q., Zhou, X., Zhan, W. L., Litvinov, S., Audi, G., Uesaka, T., Yamaguchi, Y., Yamaguchi, T., Ozawa, A., Sun, B. H., Sun, Y., and Xu, F. R.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Isochronous mass spectrometry has been applied in the storage ring CSRe to measure the masses of the $T_z=-3/2$ nuclei $^{27}$P and $^{29}$S. The new mass excess value $ME$($^{29}$S) $=-3094(13)$~keV is 66(52)~keV larger than the result of the previous $^{32}$S($^3$He,$^{6}$He)$^{29}$S reaction measurement in 1973 and a factor of 3.8 more precise. The new result for $^{29}$S, together with those of the $T=3/2$ isobaric analog states (IAS) in $^{29}$P, $^{29}$Si, and $^{29}$Al, fit well into the quadratic form of the Isobaric Multiplet Mass Equation IMME. The mass excess of $^{27}$P has been remeasured to be $ME(^{27}$P$)=-685(42)$ keV. By analyzing the linear and quadratic coefficients of the IMME in the $T_z=-3/2$ $sd$-shell nuclei, it was found that the ratio of the Coulomb radius parameters is $R\approx0.96$ and is nearly the same for all $T=3/2$ isospin multiplets. Such a nearly constant $R$-value, apparently valid for the entire light mass region with $A>9$, can be used to set stringent constraints on the isovector and isotensor components of the isospin non-conserving forces in theoretical calculations., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures
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- 2018
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130. Light-by-Light Scattering in a Photon-Photon Collider
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Takahashi, T., An, G., Chen, Y., Chou, W., Huang, Y., Liu, W., Lu, W., Lv, J., Pei, G., Pei, S., Shen, C. P., Sun, B., and Zhang, C.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
We studied the feasibility of observing light-by-light scattering in a photon-photon collider based on an existing accelerator complex and a commercially available laser system. We investigated the statistical significance of the signal over the QED backgrounds through a Monte Carlo simulation with a detector model. The study showed that light-by-light scattering can be observed with a statistical significance of 8 to 10 sigma in a year of operation, depending on the operating conditions., Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures
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- 2018
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131. Mass Measurements of Neutron-Deficient Y, Zr, and Nb Isotopes and Their Impact on $rp$ and $\nu p$ Nucleosynthesis Processes
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Xing, Y. M., Li, K. A., Zhang, Y. H., Zhou, X. H., Wang, M., Litvinov, Yu. A., Blaum, K., Wanajo, S., Kubono, S., Martínez-Pinedo, G., Sieverding, A., Chen, R. J., Shuai, P., Fu, C. Y., Yan, X. L., Huang, W. J., Xu, X., Tang, X. D., Xu, H. S., Bao, T., Chen, X. C., Gao, B. S., He, J. J., Lam, Y. H., Li, H. F., Liu, J. H., Ma, X. W., Mao, R. S., Si, M., Sun, M. Z., Tu, X. L., Wang, Q., Yang, J. C., Yuan, Y. J., Zeng, Q., Zhang, P., Zhou, X., Zhan, W. L., Litvinov, S., Audi, G., Uesaka, T., Yamaguchi, Y., Yamaguchi, T., Ozawa, A., Fröhlich, C., Rauscher, T., Thielemann, F. -K., Sun, B. H., Sun, Y., Dai, A. C., and Xu, F. R.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Using isochronous mass spectrometry at the experimental storage ring CSRe in Lanzhou, the masses of $^{82}$Zr and $^{84}$Nb were measured for the first time with an uncertainty of $\sim 10$ keV, and the masses of $^{79}$Y, $^{81}$Zr, and $^{83}$Nb were re-determined with a higher precision. %The latter differ significantly from their literature values. The latter are significantly less bound than their literature values. Our new and accurate masses remove the irregularities of the mass surface in this region of the nuclear chart. Our results do not support the predicted island of pronounced low $\alpha$ separation energies for neutron-deficient Mo and Tc isotopes, making the formation of Zr-Nb cycle in the $rp$-process unlikely. The new proton separation energy of $^{83}$Nb was determined to be 490(400)~keV smaller than that in the Atomic Mass Evaluation 2012. This partly removes the overproduction of the $p$-nucleus $^{84}$Sr relative to the neutron-deficient molybdenum isotopes in the previous $\nu p$-process simulations.
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- 2018
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132. New high-spin structure and possible chirality in $^{109}$In
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Wang, M., Wang, Y. Y., Zhu, L. H., Sun, B. H., Zhang, G. L., He, L. C., Qu, W. W., Wang, F., Wang, T. F., Chen, Y. Y., Xiong, C., Zhang, J., Zhang, J. M., Zheng, Y., He, C. Y., Li, G. S., Wang, J. L., Wu, X. G., Yao, S. H., Li, C. B., Li, H. W., Hu, S. P., and Liu, J. J.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
High-spin structure of $^{109}$In has been investigated with the $^{100}$Mo($^{14}$N, 5$n$)$^{109}$In reaction at a beam energy of 78 MeV using the in-beam $\gamma$ spectroscopic method. The level scheme of $^{109}$In has been modified considerably and extended by 46 new $\gamma$-rays to the highest excited state at 8.979 MeV and $J^{\pi}$=(45/2$^{+}$). The new level scheme consists of eight bands, six of which are identified as dipole bands. The configurations have been tentatively assigned with the help of the systematics of neighboring odd-$A$ indium isotopes and the experimental aligned angular momenta. The dipole bands are then compared with the titled axis cranking calculation in the framework of covariant density function theory (TAC-CDFT). The results of theoretical calculation based on the configurations, which involve one proton hole at the $g_{9/2}$ orbital and two or four unpaired neutrons at $g_{7/2}$, $d_{5/2}$ and $h_{11/2}$ orbitals, show that the shape of $^{109}$In undergoes an evolution on both $\beta$ and $\gamma$ deformations and possible chirality is suggested in $^{109}$In., Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, 75 conference
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- 2018
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133. The spatial scale dependence of diazotrophic and bacterial community assembly in paddy soil
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Gao, Q, Yang, Y, Feng, J, Tian, R, Guo, X, Ning, D, Hale, L, Wang, M, Cheng, J, Wu, L, Zhao, M, Zhao, J, Qin, Y, Qi, Q, Liang, Y, Sun, B, Chu, H, and Zhou, J
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Ecology ,Ecological Applications ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience - Abstract
Aim: The factors driving microbial community β-diversity (variation in composition) at different spatial scales yield fundamental insights into the mechanisms that maintain ecosystem biodiversity, which as yet are uncertain. Here, we explore whether spatial scale-dependent patterns of β-diversity vary between microbial functional groups and bacterial taxa (i.e., diazotrophic and bacterial communities) across local to regional scales (from metres to hundreds of kilometres). Location: Eastern China. Time period: October and November 2015. Major taxa studied: Diazotrophic and bacterial communities. Methods We use two complementary statistical tools to unveil biotic mechanisms (i.e., species association) underlying variation in β-diversity of diazotrophic and bacterial communities. We examined distance–decay slopes of both communities at the local (1–113 m), meso- (3.4–39 km) and regional (103–668 km) scales. We used an environmentally constrained checkerboard score and topological features of association networks as indices of species association. We then calculated contributions of species association, abiotic factors and geographical distance to explain community β-diversity. The scale-dependent distance–decay relationships were also examined in ubiquitous (high occupancy across samples) and endemic communities of diazotrophs and bacteria. Results Diazotrophs displayed steeper distance–decay slopes than bacteria, suggesting that the β-diversity of diazotrophic communities was more variable. The distance–decay slopes were dependent on spatial scales in both communities, owing to different contributions of geographical distance, abiotic factors and species association at three spatial scales. Intriguingly, species association was greater and contributed more to community β-diversity than other forces at the local scale, implying that species association could greatly alter community structures. Main conclusions Drivers of diazotrophic and bacterial community β-diversity depended on spatial scales, resulting in different distance–decay patterns. Moreover, this was the first study to use two methods to demonstrate that species association played important, but as yet unrecognized, roles in driving spatial scale-dependent β-diversity.
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- 2019
134. Association of Fractional Flow on 3D-TOF-MRA with Cerebral Perfusion in Patients with MCA Stenosis
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Ge, X, Zhao, H, Zhou, Z, Li, X, Sun, B, Wu, H, Wan, J, Xu, J, Villablanca, JP, and Liu, X
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Biomedical Imaging ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Adult ,Aged ,Brain ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Constriction ,Pathologic ,Female ,Hemodynamics ,Humans ,Imaging ,Three-Dimensional ,Infarction ,Middle Cerebral Artery ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Neuroimaging ,Perfusion ,Prospective Studies ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Clinical sciences ,Physical chemistry - Abstract
Background and purposeFractional flow measured on 3D-TOF-MRA was proposed to quantify cerebral hemodynamic changes in patients with artery stenosis. We investigated the association between fractional flow and cerebral perfusion changes in patients with symptomatic MCA stenosis.Materials and methodsThis prospective study was approved by the institutional review board, and all participants provided written informed consent. From June 2015 to May 2018, four hundred twenty-nine patients with symptomatic intracranial arterial stenosis were consecutively recruited and underwent conventional brain MR imaging, 3D-TOF-MRA, and brain CTP. A total of 91 patients with unilateral M1 segment stenosis of the MCA and a stenosis degree of 50%∼99% were included in the analysis. Fractional flow was measured by comparing distal and proximal signal intensity changes across the stenosis on 3D-TOF-MRA. The cutoff value for fractional flow for discriminating between normal perfusion and hypoperfusion was obtained from the receiver operating characteristic curve. Associations between fractional flow and hypoperfusion were assessed using univariate and multivariate analyses.ResultsThe receiver operating characteristic curve showed a significant fractional flow threshold value at 0.90 (sensitivity, 70.1%; 95% CI, 55.9%-81.2%; specificity, 69.6%; 95% CI, 47.6%-84.1%). Participants with a fractional flow of ≤0.90 were independently associated with cerebral hypoperfusion downstream from the stenosis site (adjusted OR, 3.68; 95% CI, 1.63-11.62; P = .027).ConclusionsFractional flow measured on 3D-TOF-MRA may serve as a noninvasive and practical tool for determining the cerebral hypoperfusion in patents with symptomatic MCA stenosis.
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- 2019
135. Efficient Tandem Organic Photovoltaics with Tunable Rear Sub-cells
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Cheng, P, Liu, Y, Chang, SY, Li, T, Sun, P, Wang, R, Cheng, HW, Huang, T, Meng, L, Nuryyeva, S, Zhu, C, Wei, KH, Sun, B, Zhan, X, and Yang, Y
- Abstract
A tandem structure was invented to enhance photon utilization efficiency and reduce thermal loss. Considering the unique advantages of non-fullerene acceptors (NFAs), the combination of NFAs and the tandem concept shows great potential for organic photovoltaics (OPVs). Herein, a simple strategy to balance the voltage-current trade-off in tandem OPVs by employing mixed NFAs in rear sub-cells is reported. The V OC and J SC of rear sub-cells can be tuned by using the blend of donor/NFA/NFA. This strategy offers an easy approach to balance the V OC and J SC in tandem OPVs toward higher power conversion efficiency (PCE) without rational and careful synthesis of new materials. Tandem OPVs based on mixed NFAs in rear sub-cells exhibited the best PCE of 13.3% in the lab. Importantly, the tandem devices were certified by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) under asymptotic scans, and a PCE of 11.52% was achieved and recognized on the most recent NREL chart. Organic photovoltaics (OPVs) have attracted considerable attention in the last decade due to some potential advantages, such as flexibility, light weight, possible semi-transparency, and fast large-area fabrication with low energy consumption. To achieve higher performing OPVs, a tandem structure was invented by stacking two or more sub-cells together. In tandem OPVs, the photon utilization efficiency can be improved and the thermal losses can be reduced. Herein, a simple strategy to balance the voltage-current trade-off in tandem OPVs by employing mixed non-fullerene acceptors in rear sub-cells is reported. By this strategy, tandem OPVs exhibited the best power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 13.3% in the lab. Importantly, the tandem devices were certified by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) under the new protocols (asymptotic scans), and a PCE of 11.52% was achieved and recognized on the most recent NREL chart. A simple strategy to balance the voltage-current trade-off in tandem organic photovoltaics by employing mixed non-fullerene acceptors in rear sub-cells is reported. The tandem device with the best power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 13.3% was achieved in the lab. Importantly, the tandem devices were certified by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) under the new protocols (asymptotic scans, which are much tougher than regular fast scans); a PCE of 11.52% was achieved and recognized on the most recent NREL chart.
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- 2019
136. Site-selective occupation of Cr3+ ions toward ultra-broadband near-infrared emission stannate phosphors
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Sun, B., Dai, P., Zhu, H., and Zhang, M.
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- 2022
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137. Hydrogen production from ethanol by combined microwave discharge plasma and Cu/Zn/Al catalyst
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Li, Z., Zhu, X., Sun, J., Wang, Q., and Sun, B.
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- 2022
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138. A flexible resistive switching device for logical operation applications in wearable systems
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Zhu, S., Sun, B., Zhou, G., Ke, C., Guo, T., Zhao, H., Yang, F., Zhang, Y., Wu, Y.A., and Zhao, Y.
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- 2022
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139. Vented Individual Patient (VIP) Hoods for the Control of Infectious Airborne Diseases in Healthcare Facilities
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Patel, J., McGain, F., Bhatelia, T., Wang, S., Sun, B., Monty, J., and Pareek, V.
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- 2022
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140. Precipitation and coarsening kinetics of H-phase in NiTiHf high temperature shape memory alloy
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Shuitcev, A., Ren, Y., Sun, B., Markova, G.V., Li, L., Tong, Y.X., and Zheng, Y.F.
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- 2022
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141. Local spatial densities for composite spin-3/2 systems
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Alharazin, H., Sun, B.-D., Epelbaum, E., Gegelia, J., and Meißner, U.-G.
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- 2023
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142. Reinvestigation of the excited states in the proton emitter $^{151}$Lu: particle-hole excitations across the $N=Z=64$ subshell
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Wang, F., Sun, B. H., Liu, Z., Qi, C., Zhu, L. H., Scholey, C., Ashley, S. F., Bianco, L., Cullen, D. M., Cullen, I. J., Darby, I. G., Eeckhaudt, S., Garnsworthy, A. B., Gelletly, W., Gomez-Hornillos, M. B., Grahn, T., Greenlees, P. T., Jenkins, D. G., Jones, G. A., Jones, P., Joss, D. T., Julin, R., Juutinen, S., Ketelhut, S., Khan, S., Kishada, A., Leino, M., Niikura, M., Nyman, M., Page, R. D., Pakarinen, J., Pietri, S., Podolyák, Zs., Rahkila, P., Rigby, S., Sarén, J., Shizuma, T., Sorri, J., Steer, S., Thomson, J., Thompson, N. J., Uusitalo, J., Walker, P. M., and Williams, S.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The excited states of the proton emitter $^{151}$Lu were reinvestigated in a recoil-decay tagging experiment at the Accelerator Laboratory of the University of Jyv\"askyl\"a (JYFL). The level scheme built on the ground state of $^{151}$Lu was updated with five new $\gamma$-ray transitions. Large-scale shell model calculations were carried out to interpret the experimental level scheme. It is found that the excitation energies of states above the $27/2^-$ and $23/2^+$ isomeric levels can be sensitive to excitations from $g_{7/2}$ and $d_{5/2}$ to single-particle orbitals above $N=Z=64$., Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables
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- 2017
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143. Multi-layer plastic scintillation detector for intermediate- and high-energy neutrons with $\it{n}$-$\gamma$ discrimination capability
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Yu, L., Terashima, S., Ong, H. J., Chan, P. Y., Tanihata, I., Iwamoto, C., Tran, D. T., Tamii, A., Aoi, N., Fujioka, H., Gey, G., Sakaguchi, H., Sakaue, A., Sun, B. H., Tang, T. L., Wang, T. F., Watanabe, Y. N., and Zhang, G. X.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
A new type of neutron detector, named Stack Structure Solid organic Scintillator (S$^4$), consisting of multi-layer plastic scintillators with capability to suppress low-energy $\gamma$ rays under high-counting rate has been constructed and tested. To achieve $\it{n}$-$\gamma$ discrimination, we exploit the difference in the ranges of the secondary charged particles produced by the interactions of neutrons and $\gamma$ rays in the scintillator material. The thickness of a plastic scintillator layer was determined based on the results of Monte Carlo simulations using the Geant4 toolkit. With layer thicknesses of 5 mm, we have achieved a good separation between neutrons and $\gamma$ rays at 5 MeV$_{\rm ee}$ threshold setting. We have also determined the detection efficiencies using monoenergetic neutrons at two energies produced by the $\it{d}$+$\it{d}\to\it{n}$+$^{3}$He reaction. The results agree well with the Geant4 simulations implementing the Li$\grave{\rm e}$ge Intranuclear Cascade hadronic model (INCL++) and the high-precision model of low-energy neutron interactions (NeutronHP)., Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures and 1 table
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- 2017
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144. Missing-mass spectroscopy of the ${}^{12}{\rm C}(p,d)$ reaction near the $\eta^\prime$-meson production threshold
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Tanaka, Y. K., Itahashi, K., Fujioka, H., Ayyad, Y., Benlliure, J., Brinkmann, K. -T., Friedrich, S., Geissel, H., Gellanki, J., Guo, C., Gutz, E., Haettner, E., Harakeh, M. N., Hayano, R. S., Higashi, Y., Hirenzaki, S., Hornung, C., Igarashi, Y., Ikeno, N., Iwasaki, M., Jido, D., Kalantar-Nayestanaki, N., Kanungo, R., Knoebel, R., Kurz, N., Metag, V., Mukha, I., Nagae, T., Nagahiro, H., Nanova, M., Nishi, T., Ong, H. J., Pietri, S., Prochazka, A., Rappold, C., Reiter, M. P., Rodríguez-Sánchez, J. L., Scheidenberger, C., Simon, H., Sitar, B., Strmen, P., Sun, B., Suzuki, K., Szarka, I., Takechi, M., Tanihata, I., Terashima, S., Watanabe, Y. N., Weick, H., Widmann, E., Winfield, J. S., Xu, X., Yamakami, H., and Zhao, J.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Excitation-energy spectra of $^{11}$C nuclei near the $\eta^\prime$-meson production threshold have been measured by missing-mass spectroscopy using the $^{12}$C($p$,$d$) reaction. A carbon target has been irradiated with a 2.5 GeV proton beam supplied by the synchrotron SIS-18 at GSI to produce $\eta^\prime$ meson bound states in $^{11}$C nuclei. Deuterons emitted at $0^\circ$ in the reaction have been momentum-analyzed by the fragment separator (FRS) used as a high-resolution spectrometer. No distinct structure due to the formation of $\eta^\prime$-mesic states is observed although a high statistical sensitivity is achieved in the experimental spectra. Upper limits on the formation cross sections of $\eta^\prime$-mesic states are determined, and thereby a constraint imposed on the $\eta^\prime$-nucleus interaction is discussed., Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review C
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- 2017
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145. Spectroscopic factor and proton formation probability for the d3/2 proton emitter 151mLu
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Wang, F., Sun, B. H., Liu, Z., Page, R. D., Qi, C., Scholey, C., Ashley, S. F., Bianco, L., Cullen, I. J., Darby, I. G., Eeckhaudt, S., Garnsworthy, A. B., Gelletly, W., Gomez-Hornillos, M. B., Grahn, T., Greenlees, P. T., Jenkins, D. G., Jones, G. A., Jones, P., Joss, D. T., Julin, R., Juutinen, S., Ketelhut, S., Khan, S., Kishada, A., Leino, M., Niikura, M., Nyman, M., Pakarinen, J., Pietri, S., Podolyak, Z., Rahkila, P., Rigby, S., Saren, J., Shizuma, T., Sorri, J., Steer, S., Thomson, J., Thompson, N. J., Uusitalo, J., Walker, P. M., William, S., Zhang, H. F., Zhang, W. Q., and Zhu, L. H.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The quenching of the experimental spectroscopic factor for proton emission from the short-lived $d_{3/2}$ isomeric state in $^{151m}$Lu was a long-standing problem. In the present work, proton emission from this isomer has been reinvestigated in an experiment at the Accelerator Laboratory of the University of Jyv\"{a}skyl\"{a}. The proton-decay energy and half-life of this isomer were measured to be 1295(5) keV and 15.4(8) $\mu$s, respectively, in agreement with another recent study. These new experimental data can resolve the discrepancy in the spectroscopic factor calculated using the spherical WKB approximation. Using the R-matrix approach it is found that the proton formation probability indicates no significant hindrance for the proton decay of $^{151m}$Lu., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures
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- 2017
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146. $\beta$-decay half-lives and $\beta$-delayed neutron emission probabilities for several isotopes of Au, Hg, Tl, Pb and Bi, beyond N=126
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Caballero-Folch, R., Domingo-Pardo, C., Agramunt, J., Algora, A., Ameil, F., Ayyad, Y., Benlliure, J., Bowry, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Cortès, G., Davinson, T., Dillmann, I., Estrade, A., Evdokimov, A., Faestermann, T., Farinon, F., Galaviz, D., García, A. R., Geissel, H., Gelletly, W., Gernhäuser, R., Gómez-Hornillos, M. B., Guerrero, C., Heil, M., Hinke, C., Knöbel, R., Kojouharov, I., Kurcewicz, J., Kurz, N., Litvinov, Yu. A., Maier, L., Marganiec, J., Marta, M., Martínez, T., Montes, F., Mukha, I., Napoli, D. R., Nociforo, C., Paradela, C., Pietri, S., Podolyák, Zs., Prochazka, A., Rice, S., Riego, A., Rubio, B., Schaffner, H., Scheidenberger, Ch., Smith, K., Sokol, E., Steiger, K., Sun, B., Taín, J. L., Takechi, M., Testov, D., Weick, H., Wilson, E., Winfield, J. S., Wood, R., Woods, P. J., and Yeremin, A.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
$Background:$ Previous measurements of $\beta$-delayed neutron emitters comprise around 230 nuclei, spanning from the $^{8}$He up to $^{150}$La. Apart from $^{210}$Tl, with a minuscule branching ratio of 0.007\%, no other neutron emitter is measured yet beyond $A=150$. Therefore new data are needed, particularly in the heavy mass region around N=126, in order to guide theoretical models and to understand the formation of the third r-process peak at $A\sim195$. $Purpose:$ To measure both, $\beta$-decay half-lives and neutron branching ratios of several neutron-rich Au, Hg, Tl, Pb and Bi isotopes beyond $N=126$. $Method:$ Ions of interest are produced by fragmentation of a $^{238}$U beam, selected and identified via the GSI-FRS fragment separator. A stack of segmented silicon detectors (SIMBA) is used to measure ion-implants and $\beta$-decays. An array of 30 $^3$He tubes embedded in a polyethylene matrix (BELEN) is used to detect neutrons with high efficiency and selectivity. A self-triggered digital system is employed to acquire data and to enable time-correlations. The latter are analyzed with an analytical model and results for the half-lives and neutron-branching ratios are derived using the binned Maximum-Likelihood method. $Results:$ Twenty new $\beta$-decay half-lives are reported for $^{204-206}$Au, $^{208-211}$Hg,$^{211-216}$Tl,$^{215-218}$Pb and $^{218-220}$Bi, nine of them for the first time. Neutron emission probabilities are reported for $^{210,211}$Hg and $^{211-216}$Tl. $Conclusions:$ The new $\beta$-decay half-lives are in good agreement with previous measurements in this region. The measured neutron emission probabilities are comparable or smaller than values predicted by global models like RHB+RQRPA., Comment: 17 pages, 21 figures, will be submitted at PRC
- Published
- 2017
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147. Radiation tolerance analysis of 4H-SiC PIN diode detectors for neutron irradiation
- Author
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Gao, R.L., Du, X., Ma, W.Y., Sun, B., Ruan, J.L., Ouyang, X., Li, H., Chen, L., Liu, L.Y., and Ouyang, X.P.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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148. Annual Status Report (FY 2021): Performance Assessment for the Disposal of Low-Level Waste in the 200 West Area Burial Grounds.
- Author
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Sun, B, primary
- Published
- 2023
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149. Annual Status Report (FY 2021) Performance Assessment for the Environmental Restoration Disposal Facility.
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Sun, B, primary
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- 2023
- Full Text
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150. Flexible ureteroscopy in Chinese air force pilots with renal calculi: a cohort study at a single medical centre
- Author
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Li, Xintao, primary, Zhang, J, additional, Yu, D, additional, Wang, J, additional, Sheng, H, additional, Li, D, additional, Chen, K, additional, Xing, J, additional, Wei, X, additional, Yan, J, additional, Xiao, S, additional, Mu, D, additional, Guo, H, additional, Sun, B, additional, and Li, J, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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