1,413 results on '"Liang Du"'
Search Results
402. Quantum size effects in stacked multilayer graphene
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Zheng Chen, Zhenyu Cheng, Liang Du, and Yong Yang
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Condensed Matter Physics ,Mathematical Physics ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics - Abstract
In this paper,we study the quantum size effects in multilayer graphene sheets using first principles methods within the framework of density functional theory. Four different types of functionals are adopted respectively to describe the van der Waals interactions between graphene layer sheets: the DFT-GGA(PBE), the DFT-D2, the vdW-DF and the optPBE-vdW. By inspecting the binding energy as a function of increasing graphene layers, we find that the PBE functional can not well describe the van der Waals interactions between different layers of graphene sheets. In contrast, the other three methods exhibit similar results with monotonic increasing binding energy as a function of graphene layers towards the bulk limit, concluding that the layered graphene structure is stabilized by van der Waals interactions. The density of states at zero temperature indicate that the multilayer graphene sheets is a semi-metal, which is independent of sheet layers number. The finite temperature (about 200 K) density of states at Fermi surface are studied as a function of the number of stacking graphene layers. The systematic oscillating behavior of finite temperature density of states between odd and even number of layers is a demonstration of quantum size effects. The Fermi wavelength will converge to two times the inter-layer distance of graphite, which is consistent with the theory describing the motion of particles in a quantum well. Finally, we study the adsorption of single H atom on multilayer graphene sheets to test the role of quantum size effects. The adsorption energies and the vibration frequencies are calculated for comparison with experiments. Our results shed light on understanding the stacking process of multilayer graphene in vacuum both theoretically and experimentally.
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- 2023
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403. Update Summarization via Graph-Based Sentence Ranking.
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Xuan Li, Liang Du 0003, and Yi-Dong Shen
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- 2013
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404. Nonintrusive, Self-Organizing, and Probabilistic Classification and Identification of Plugged-In Electric Loads.
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Liang Du 0001, José A. Restrepo, Yi Yang, Ronald G. Harley, and Thomas G. Habetler
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- 2013
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405. Prevalence of Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis in Dalian, China: A Retrospective Study
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Yu Zhang, Xiao-Yan Shi, Jia Xu, Ling Zhou, Yang Gao, Xu Chen, Ruiheng Wu, Yuxin Duan, Haoqiang Ji, Xin-Tong Lv, Xiwei Lu, and Liang Du
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tuberculosis ,030106 microbiology ,Drug resistance ,epidemic ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,acquired ,MDR ,medicine ,Infection control ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Original Research ,Pharmacology ,biology ,business.industry ,Isoniazid ,initial ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,TB ,Infectious Diseases ,Infection and Drug Resistance ,Amikacin ,business ,Rifampicin ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Liang Du,1 Yu Zhang,1 Xintong Lv,2 Yuxin Duan,1 Xiaoyan Shi,2 Haoqiang Ji,1 Ruiheng Wu,1 Jia Xu,1 Xu Chen,1 Yang Gao,2 Xiwei Lu,2 Ling Zhou1 1School of Public Health, Dalian Medical University, Dalian, Liaoning, 116044, People’s Republic of China; 2Dalian Tuberculosis Hospital, Dalian, Liaoning, 116031, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Xiwei Lu; Ling Zhou 9 West Section, Lvshun South Road, Dalian, Liaoning Province, People’s Republic of ChinaTel +86 411 8611 0368Email tb_luxiwei@126.com; zhouling0609@163.comPurpose: Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is the cause of serious health and economic burdens worldwide. The present study aimed to explore the initial and acquired drug-resistance rates among TB patients from 2012 to 2019 in Dalian, China. The effectiveness of MDR-TB prevention and control strategies were then evaluated.Patients and Methods: Drug susceptibility testing (DST) was performed for 6429 diagnosed, culture-positive, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) strains, including 4661 new cases and 1768 previously treated cases. Descriptive statistics were employed to calculate the frequencies and percentages of TB strains, and the average annual growth rates (AAGRs) for each strain were calculated. The Chi-square test was applied to examine the significance of linear drug-resistance trends over time during the study period.Results: Over the eight-year study period, the percentages of both initial (from 9.01% to 4.82%) and acquired (from 40.85% to 9.09%) MDR-TB cases decreased significantly, AAGRs of 8.55% and 19.32%, respectively. Among new and previously treated TB patients, significant downtrends were observed for the rates of both initial and acquired MDR-TB among young and middle-aged individuals (P < 0.05). Additionally, among both new and previously treated TB patients, the percentages of individuals with drug resistance against isoniazid (INH), rifampicin (RFP), ofloxacin (OFX), and amikacin (AMK) decreased significantly (P < 0.05) from 2012 to 2019 in Dalian, China.Conclusion: The initial and acquired multidrug resistance rates exhibited significantly decreasing trends from 2012 to 2019, suggesting that MDR-TB prevalence has been controlled effectively in Dalian, China. The MDR-TB epidemic was reversed in the short term by establishing feasible strategies for detection, diagnosis, treatment, and infection control.Keywords: TB, initial, acquired, MDR, epidemic
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- 2021
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406. Body composition and risk of gastric cancer: A population‐based prospective cohort study
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Eddie C. Cheung, Bin Xia, Anran Liu, Jian-Liang Du, Gang Sun, Wenhui Wu, Peng Yun, Changhua Zhang, Yan Tang, You-Zhen Tang, Jinqiu Yuan, Yulong He, Zi-Chong Kuo, and Qiangsheng He
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,UK Biobank ,fat‐free mass ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sex Factors ,Risk Factors ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Weight management ,Confidence Intervals ,Electric Impedance ,cohort study ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Risk factor ,Prospective cohort study ,Adiposity ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Original Research ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,gastric cancer ,Hazard ratio ,Age Factors ,Cancer ,fat mass ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Body Composition ,Female ,business ,Body mass index ,Cancer Prevention ,Cohort study - Abstract
The recognition of adiposity as a risk factor for gastric cancer is mainly based on traditional anthropometric indices, such as body mass index, which are unable to discriminate between lean and fat mass. We undertook this study to examine body composition and subsequent risk of gastric cancer. This is a prospective analysis of participants free of cancer from the UK Biobank. We measured baseline body composition with electrical bioimpedance analysis and confirmed cancer diagnosis through linkage to cancer and death registries. We evaluated hazard ratios (HRs) and confidence interval (CIs) with COX models adjusting for potential confounders. We documented 326 cases of cancer from 474,929 participants over a median follow‐up of 6.6 years. Both male (HR 1.70, 95% CI 1.01 to 2.89) and female participants (HR 2.47, 95% CI 1.15 to 5.32) in the highest quartile of whole body fat‐free mass were associated with increased risk of gastric cancer as compared with those in the lowest quartile.Whole body fat mass was associated with a decreased risk of gastric cancer (HR per 5‐unit increase 0.86, 95% CI 0.74 to 0.99) in females, but not in males. We concluded that fat‐free mass and fat mass may have different effects on gastric cancer risk. This study provided evidence for individualized weight management for the prevention of gastric cancer., Based on UK biobank cohort (474,929 participants and 326 cases of gastric cancer), this study found fat‐free mass is assocated with increased risk of gastric cancer in both genders while fat mass is associated with reduced risk of gastric cancer in females. Our results provide new insights into relationships between obesity and gastric cancer, and deliver important clinical and public health messages about healthy body composition beyond BMI.
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- 2021
407. Inhibition of Type-2 Diabetes Mellitus Development by Sophocarpine through Targeting PPARy-Regulated Gene Expression
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Liang Du, Haisheng Zheng, Xiaoqian Su, Wei Miao, Gaimei Hao, and Li Li
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Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors ,Biophysics ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Alkaloids ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Insulin ,Vitamin E ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Metabolic disorder ,Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus ,General Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Glutathione ,medicine.disease ,Streptozotocin ,Oxidative Stress ,Endocrinology ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Gene Expression Regulation ,chemistry ,Disease Progression ,business ,Oxidative stress ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Diabetes mellitus (DM), a metabolic disorder, is the causes of oxidative stress leading to complications in micro- and macro-vascular system. The present study investigated sophocarpine for anti-diabetic potential in vivo in mice model. Sophocarpine administration to diabetic mice significantly (p < 0.05) attenuated glucose content in the plasma. The diabetes mediated lowering of GSH, ceruloplasmin and vitamin E was prevented in mice plasma by sophocarpine administration. Sophocarpine significantly (p < 0.05) reversed diabetes mediated suppression of insulin level and total Hb content in the mice plasma. In sophocarpine administrated diabetic mice C-peptide level was elevated and glycosylated hemoglobin content was suppressed significantly (p < 0.05) relative to diabetic group. Administration of sophocarpine significantly (p < 0.05) repressed diabetes mediated increase in TG and TC levels in dose-based manner. Administration of sophocarpine exhibited preventive role against diabetes mediated pathological damage to pancreas in the mice. Sophocarpine administration to diabetic mice repressed PPARγ recruitment significantly (p < 0.05) in dose-dependent manner. Sophocarpine prevents oxidative stress mediated pancreatic damage through increase in vitamin E, GSH and C-peptide levels, Moreover, the PPARγ activity was down-regulated, LDL-c content lowered and HDL-c level elevated in diabetic mice by sophocarpine. Therefore, sophocarpine may be developed for treatment of diabetes, however, further in vivo studies need to confirm the same.
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- 2021
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408. Association between solid fuel use and cognitive decline among middle-aged and elderly Chinese adults: a longitudinal study
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Yuxin Duan, Liang Du, Yuanping Pan, Yunting Chen, Ling Zhou, Xu Chen, Ruiheng Wu, Haoqiang Ji, Meng Sun, and Jia Xu
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Gerontology ,Adult ,Male ,Longitudinal study ,China ,Fossil Fuels ,Science ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Environmental impact ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Asian People ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cooking ,Longitudinal Studies ,Cognitive decline ,Association (psychology) ,Episodic memory ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Aged ,Public health ,Multidisciplinary ,Cognitive ageing ,Middle Aged ,Solid fuel ,Moderation ,Medicine ,Residence ,Female ,Psychology ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
This study was conducted to investigate (1) the association between solid fuel use for cooking and cognitive function; (2) the moderating effects of gender and residential area on cognitive scores among solid fuel users; and (3) the effects of solid fuel use on cognitive decline among different gender and age subgroups in 2011–2018. A total of 5140 Chinese middle-aged and elderly participants were successfully followed for 7 years (2011–2018). Solid fuel use was self-reported as using solid fuel for cooking at home, and cognitive function was assessed by 4 parts: episodic memory, time orientation, numerical ability and picture drawing. After adjusting for covariates, solid fuel users had lower cognitive scores, and the moderation effects of gender and residence on cognitive function were significant among the solid fuel users. In addition, compared with the group of clean fuel users, solid fuel users had a faster decline rate of cognitive function among the subgroups of female and elderly people.
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- 2021
409. N-Heterocyclic Carbene-Stabilized Gold Nanoparticles: Mono- Versus Multidentate Ligands
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Neda Arabzadeh Nosratabad, Zhicheng Jin, Mannat Thakur, Hedi Mattoussi, and Liang Du
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Denticity ,General Chemical Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Transition metal ,chemistry ,Colloidal gold ,Polymer chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Carbene - Abstract
Over the past decade, N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) have attracted remarkable attention as metal-coordinating ligands because of their ability to strongly interact with transition metal complexes ...
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- 2021
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410. Luminescent Quantum Dots Stabilized by N-Heterocyclic Carbene Polymer Ligands
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Banghao Chen, Chengqi Zhang, Liang Du, Zhicheng Jin, Neda Arabzadeh Nosratabad, Hedi Mattoussi, and Sisi Wang
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Luminescence ,Polymers ,Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,General Chemistry ,Polymer ,Ligands ,010402 general chemistry ,Photochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,3. Good health ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,chemistry ,Heterocyclic Compounds ,Quantum dot ,Quantum Dots ,Carbon-13 Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Methane ,Carbene - Abstract
We have tested the ability of N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC)-modified ligands to coordinate and stabilize luminescent CdSe-ZnS core-shell quantum dot (QD) dispersions in hydrophilic media. In particular, we probed the effects of ligand structure and coordination number on the coating affinity to the nanocrystals. We find that such NHC-based ligands rapidly coordinate onto the QDs (requiring ∼5-10 min of reaction time), which reflects the soft Lewis base nature of the NHC groups, with its two electrons sharing capacity. Removal of the hydrophobic cap and promotion of carbene-driven coordination on the nanocrystals have been verified by
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- 2021
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411. Polysalt ligands achieve higher quantum yield and improved colloidal stability for CsPbBr3 quantum dots
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Yan Xin, Sisi Wang, Selin Donmez, Hedi Mattoussi, and Liang Du
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Colloid ,Materials science ,Nanocrystal ,Chemical engineering ,chemistry ,Quantum dot ,Ligand ,Phase (matter) ,Quantum yield ,General Materials Science ,Alkyl ,Perovskite (structure) - Abstract
Colloidal lead halide perovskite quantum dots (PQDs) are relatively new semiconductor nanocrystals with great potential for use in optoelectronic applications. They also present a set of new scientifically challenging fundamental problems to investigate and understand. One of them is to address the rather poor colloidal and structural stability of these materials under solution phase processing and/or transfer between solvents. In this contribution, we detail the synthesis of a new family of multi-coordinating, bromide-based polysalt ligands and test their ability to stabilize CsPbBr3 nanocrystals in polar solutions. The ligands present multiple salt groups involving quaternary cations, namely ammonium and imidazolium as anchors for coordination onto PQD surfaces, along with several alkyl chains with varying chain length to promote solubilization in various conditions. The ligands provide a few key benefits including the ability to repair damaged surface sites, allow rapid ligand exchange and phase transfer, and preserve the crystalline structure and morphology of the nanocrystals. The polysalt-coated PQDs exhibit near unity PLQY and significantly enhanced colloidal stability in ethanol and methanol.
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- 2021
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412. Agreement of Risk-of -Bias varied in systematic reviews on acupuncture and was associated with methodological quality
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Yifei Lin, Liu Yang, Youlin Long, Rui Chen, Tengyue Hu, Qiong Guo, Xin Wang, Wenzhe Xiao, Jin Huang, Liang Du, Yifan Cheng, and Shanxia Luo
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Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blinding ,Databases, Factual ,Epidemiology ,Acupuncture Therapy ,Logistic regression ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bias ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Acupuncture ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Statistic ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Odds ratio ,Systematic review ,Physical therapy ,Epidemiologic Methods ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Kappa ,Systematic Reviews as Topic - Abstract
Objectives The objective of the study was to evaluate the consistency of risk of bias assessments for overlapping randomized controlled trials (RCTs) included in systematic reviews (SRs) on acupuncture. Study Design and Setting Databases were searched for acupuncture SRs. A weighted kappa (κ) statistic was calculated, and logistic regression was used to explore the factors of disagreements. Results We included 241 RCTs from 109 SRs on acupuncture. The percentage disagreements ranged from 25% to 44%, with moderate agreement for random sequence generation (κ = 0.57), allocation concealment (κ = 0.50), and incomplete outcome data (κ = 0.50), besides fair agreement for blinding of participants and personnel (κ = 0.44), blinding of outcome assessment (κ = 0.31), and selective reporting (κ = 0.39). Only 19% RCTs were evaluated completely consistent. Methodological quality (random sequence generation, odds ratio (OR) = 3.46), international cooperation (allocation concealment, OR = 0.14; incomplete outcome data, OR = 0.14; selective reporting, OR = 0.05), and risk of bias reporting completeness score (selective reporting, OR = 0.53) significantly affected the relative odds of disagreements. Conclusion The level of agreement varied from fair to moderate agreement depending on the risk of bias domain. Methodological quality appears to be an overarching factor to account for disagreements.
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- 2021
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413. Research progress of quantum dot light-emitting devices for display application
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Xiao-ya Guan, Zu-liang Du, Huai-bin Shen, and Hong-zhe Wang
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Physics ,business.industry ,Quantum dot ,Signal Processing ,Optoelectronics ,business ,Instrumentation ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Published
- 2021
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414. Bidirectional Locomotion of Soft Inchworm Crawler Using Dynamic Gaits
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Liang Du, Shugen Ma, Keisuke Tokuda, Yang Tian, and Longchuan Li
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Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Inchworm-styled locomotion is one of the simplest gaits for mobile robots, which enables easy actuation, effective movement, and strong adaptation in nature. However, an agile inchworm-like robot that realizes versatile locomotion usually requires effective friction force manipulation with a complicated actuation structure and control algorithm. In this study, we embody a friction force controller based on the deformation of the robot body, to realize bidirectional locomotion. Two kinds of differential friction forces are integrated into a beam-like soft robot body, and along with the cyclical actuation of the robot body, two locomotion gaits with opposite locomotion directions can be generated and controlled by the deformation process of the robot body, that is, the dynamic gaits. Based on these dynamic gaits, two kinds of locomotion control schemes, the amplitude-based control and the frequency-based control, are proposed, analyzed, and validated with both theoretical simulations and prototype experiments. The soft inchworm crawler achieves the versatile locomotion result via a simple system configuration and minimalist actuation input. This work is an example of using soft structure vibrations for challenging robotic tasks.
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- 2022
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415. Dynamics Analysis of Microgrids Integrated with EV Charging Stations based on Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm
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Hang Jing, Ye Wang, Yan Li, Liang Du, and Ziping Wu
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- 2022
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416. Enabling Reconfigurable Naval SCADA Network through Software-Defined Networking
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Justin Michael Szatkowski, Yan Li, and Liang Du
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- 2022
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417. Constant Overpotential Fast Charging for Lithium-Ion Battery with Twin Delayed DDPG Algorithm
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Xiaofeng Yang, Zhongbao Wei, and Liang Du
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- 2022
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418. Economic Control for Hybrid-Electric Shipboard Microgrids Considering Battery Degradation and Cycling Life Costs
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Kaitlyn Sitch and Liang Du
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- 2022
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419. Denial of Service Cyberattacks to Naval Software Defined-Networking-Enabled SCADA Network
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Ethan Liu, Yan Li, and Liang Du
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- 2022
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420. Synergized Heating and Fast Charging for Lithium-Ion Batteries at Low Temperatures
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Xin Xu, Zhongbao Wei, and Liang Du
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- 2022
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421. A Mathematical Design for a Novel Walking Support Device that Leverages Passive Dynamics and Coupling Effects
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Longchuan Li, Shugen Ma, Isao Tokuda, Makoto Nokata, Yang Tian, Liang Du, and Zhiqing Li
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- 2022
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422. A search of only four key databases would identify most randomized controlled trials of acupuncture: A meta-epidemiological study
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Qiong Guo, Yifan Cheng, Chenyang Zhang, Huifang Yang, Xia Chen, Xinyi Wang, Liu Yang, Kun Feng, Youlin Long, Zilun Shao, Yutian Wang, Yifei Lin, Ga Liao, Jin Huang, and Liang Du
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Epidemiologic Studies ,Databases, Factual ,Acupuncture Therapy ,Education ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
Little research has been conducted to assess which specific databases should be searched when performing a systematic review (SR) on acupuncture. The current study aimed to identify key databases and the optimal database combination to retrieve randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on acupuncture for inclusion in SRs. A systematic search for SRs in the field of acupuncture was conducted in order to identify target databases and RCTs were extracted from the SRs that had searched all target databases. The proportions of SRs that had achieved 100%, 95%, or 90% recall of RCTs and the total recall of RCTs in various combinations of target databases were calculated. Sensitivity analysis was performed on those SRs that included 10 or more RCTs. CNKI, WanFang, VIP, PubMed, CENTRAL and Embase were regarded as target databases. A total of 4349 acupuncture RCTs were extracted from 286 SRs. Searching all six target databases retrieved 99.3% of all RCTs while 99.1% were recalled by searching the combination of CNKI, WanFang, PubMed and CENTRAL. There were no significant differences on total recall of RCTs (p = 0.549) or in the proportion of SRs with 90% recall of RCTs (97.2% vs. 97.6%; p = 0.794) between searching the above four and the full six target databases. Most results were similar in the sensitivity analysis. The combined retrieval power of CNKI, WanFang, PubMed and CENTRAL was considered an efficient choice to retrieve acupuncture RCTs included in SRs.
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- 2022
423. Indoor solid fuel use for cooking and the risk of incidental non-fatal cardiovascular disease among middle-aged and elderly Chinese adults: a prospective cohort study
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Haoqiang Ji, Qian Chen, Ruiheng Wu, Jia Xu, Xu Chen, Liang Du, Yunting Chen, Yuanping Pan, Yuxin Duan, Meng Sun, and Ling Zhou
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Adult ,Cohort Studies ,China ,Heart Diseases ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Humans ,Female ,General Medicine ,Cooking ,Prospective Studies ,Middle Aged ,Aged - Abstract
ObjectivesThe harm of indoor air pollution to health has gradually attracted attention, but the effect of indoor air pollution from burning solid fuels on incidental non-fatal cardiovascular disease (CVD) is not well understood. Under these circumstances, this study examined the association between solid fuel use and incidental non-fatal CVD.DesignThe prospective cohort study was conducted in 2011, 2013, 2015 and 2018.SettingThe nationally representative survey was conducted in 28 provinces of China.ParticipantsThis study included 13 544 middle-aged and elderly adults without CVD in the baseline survey, and they were followed for 7 years.Outcome measuresFirst incidence of non-fatal CVD (heart disease or stroke).MethodsBased on longitudinal data, Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess the effects of solid fuel use and persistent use on incidental CVD events.ResultsDuring the 7-year follow-up period, there were 1533 non-fatal CVD cases. A total of 7310 (54%) participants used solid fuel for cooking at the baseline survey, and 2998 (41%) users continued to use solid fuel. Solid fuel use was associated with incidental non-fatal CVD (HR: 1.18; 95% CI: 1.05 to 1.32) compared with clean fuel, and persistent solid fuel use might lead to a higher risk of incidental non-fatal CVD (HR: 1.38; 95% CI: 1.18 to 1.61) and heart disease (HR: 1.49; 95% CI: 1.24 to 1.81). In the subgroup analysis, the relationship remained significant in the female, elderly, rural and hypertensive groups. However, we found no significant interaction between these risk factors and fuel use (all pConclusionsThis cohort study provides evidence for the effects of solid fuel use on incidental non-fatal CVD in middle-aged and elderly Chinese adults. Advocating for the use of clean energy and ventilation stoves is important to cardiovascular health.
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- 2022
424. [Polyaspartic acid grafted dopamine polymer chelated Fe
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Liang, Du, Fulin, Lu, and Changqiang, Wu
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新技术与新方法 ,Photothermal Therapy ,Polymers ,Dopamine ,Nanoparticles ,Phototherapy ,Peptides ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging - Abstract
This study aims to explore the potential of polyaspartic acid grafted dopamine copolymer (PAsp-g-DA) chelated Fe(3+) for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) visual photothermal therapy. Polyaspartic acid grafted copolymer of covalently grafted dopamine and polyethylene glycol (PAsp-g-DA/PEG) was obtained by the ammonolysis reaction of poly succinimide (PSI), and then chelated with Fe(3+) in aqueous solution. The relaxivity in vitro, magnetic resonance imaging enhancement in vivo and photothermal conversion effect at 808 nm were investigated. The results showed that polymeric iron coordination had good near-infrared absorption and photothermal conversion properties, good magnetic resonance enhancement effect, and good longitudinal relaxation efficiency under different magnetic field intensities. In summary, this study provides a new magnetic resonance visual photothermal therapeutic agent and a new research idea for the research in related fields.
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- 2022
425. Is hemostatic agent effective and safe in minimally invasive partial nephrectomy?
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Qiong Guo, Yifei Lin, Chenyang Zhang, Fangqun Leng, Youlin Long, Yifan Cheng, Liu Yang, Liang Du, Jin Huang, and Ga Liao
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Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Laparoscopy ,General Medicine ,Nephrectomy ,Hemostatics ,Kidney Neoplasms - Published
- 2022
426. Design of Test System for Arc Fault Detection Device Based on High Frequency Coupling
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Zhenhua Xie, Wanhai Wu, Liwei Du, Kefeng Yuan, and Liang Du
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- 2022
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427. PEGylated Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide Nanocrystal as MRI T 1 -T 2 Dual- Modal Contrast Agent for Rat Liver Fibrosis Stage
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Fulin Lu, Liang Du, Wei Chen, Hai Jiang, Chenwu Yang, Yu Pu, Jun Wu, Jiang Zhu, Tianwu Chen, Xiaoming Zhang, and Changqiang Wu
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Background The development of an effective method for staging liver fibrosis has always been a hot topic of research in the field of liver fibrosis diagnosis and therapy. T1-T2 dual-modal contrast-enhanced MRI can provide complementary information with fault-free and self-confirm, and could be more objective and reliable for allowing quantitative evaluation of the liver parenchyma varieties at the progression of liver fibrosis. Results This study developed PEGylated small size superparamagnetic iron oxide nanocrystal (SPIO@PEG) for rat liver fibrosis magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) diagnosis and staging as a T1-T2 dual-mode MRI contrast agent. SPIO@PEG was proved to have satisfactory biosafety and T1-T2 dual-mode contrast effect under a 3.0 T MR scanner. In the following MR imaging of liver fibrosis rats in vivo, conventional T1 and T2 weighted imaging, T1 and T2 mapping of liver per- and post-intravenous administration of SPIO@PEG were systematically collected and analyzed. The results demonstrate that the combination of reduction rate of T1 value (ΔT1%) and T2 value (ΔT2%) could diagnose and distinguish the different stages of liver fibrosis. Furthermore, we creatively designed to fuse the T1 and T2 mapping images by Matrix laboratory (MATLAB) and quantitively measured each rat’s hepatic fibrosis positive pixel ratio (PPR). The results demonstrated that SPIO@PEG contrast-enhanced PPR could be used as a non-invasive biomarker to diagnose and discriminate the severity stages of biliary liver fibrosis. Conclusion The combination of T1-T2 dual-modal contrast agent SPIO@PEG and MATLAB-based image fusion technology could be a promising method for diagnosing and staging liver fibrosis in the rat model.
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- 2022
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428. Front-End Electronic Circuit Topology Analysis for Model-Driven Classification and Monitoring of Appliance Loads in Smart Buildings.
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Dawei He, Liang Du 0001, Yi Yang, Ronald G. Harley, and Thomas G. Habetler
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- 2012
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429. Self-paced Adaptive Bipartite Graph Learning for Consensus Clustering.
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PENG ZHOU, XINWANG LIU, LIANG DU, and XUEJUN LI
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BIPARTITE graphs ,TOYS - Abstract
Consensus clustering provides an elegant framework to aggregate multiple weak clustering results to learn a consensus one that is more robust and stable than a single result. However, most of the existing methods usually use all data for consensus learning, whereas ignoring the side effects caused by some unreliable or difficult data. To address this issue, in this article, we propose a novel self-paced consensus clustering method with adaptive bipartite graph learning to gradually involve data from more reliable to less reliable ones in consensus learning. At first, we construct an initial bipartite graph from the base results, where the nodes represent the clusters and instances, and the edges indicate that an instance belongs to a cluster. Then, we adaptively learn a structured bipartite graph from this initial one by self-paced learning, i.e., we automatically determine the reliability of each edge with adaptive cluster similarity measuring and involve the edges in bipartite graph learning in order of their reliability. At last, we obtain the final consensus result from the learned structured bipartite graph. We conduct extensive experiments on both toy and benchmark datasets, and the results show the effectiveness and superiority of our method. The codes of this article are released in http://Doctor-Nobody.github.io/codes/code_SCCABG.zip. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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430. Rapid Damage Prediction and Risk Assessment for Tropical Cyclones at a Fine Grid in Guangdong Province, South China.
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Ning, Yazhou, Wang, Xianwei, Yu, Qi, Liang, Du, and Zhai, Jianqing
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- 2023
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431. A Fast Dense Feature-Matching Model for Cross-Track Pushbroom Satellite Imagery.
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Wen-Liang Du, Xiao-Yi Li, Ben Ye, and Xiao-Lin Tian 0001
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- 2018
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432. A Blind Watermarking Scheme Using New Nontensor Product Wavelet Filter Banks.
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Xinge You, Liang Du, Yiu-ming Cheung, and Qiuhui Chen
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- 2010
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433. A novel iris segmentation using radial-suppression edge detection.
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Jing Huang 0018, Xinge You, Yuan Yan Tang, Liang Du, and Yuan Yuan 0001
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- 2009
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434. Characteristics and outcomes of Ludwig's angina in patients admitted to the intensive care unit: A 6-year retrospective study of 29 patients
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Hong-Liang Du, Huai-Yu Xiong, Jian Liu, Xiao-Hua Xing, Bin Li, and Qing-Ling Lin
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Microbiological culture ,law.invention ,Angina ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Intensive care unit ,Mortality ,General Dentistry ,Ludwig's angina ,APACHE II ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.disease ,Mediastinitis ,Length of hospital stay ,lcsh:RK1-715 ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,lcsh:Dentistry ,Original Article ,business - Abstract
Background/Purpose Ludwig's angina (LA) still presents regularly and various characteristics are documented, but patients admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) has not been studied. The purpose of this study was to investigate the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with LA who were admitted to ICU. Materials and methods We retrospectively reviewed all 29 patients with LA who were admitted to the ICU of a university hospital from January 2013 to October 2018. Results were evaluated via descriptive analysis. The Log–Rank test was used to analyze the hospital/ICU length of stay (LOS). Results The male: female ratio was 2.63:1. Mean age was 53.41 ± 16.57 years (range 8–78 years). Concomitant conditions comprised diabetes mellitus in 10 patients (34.48%), and hypertension in six (20.69%). The main reason for ICU admission was surgical (44.83%). The mean Acute Physiology, Age, Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE II) and the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores were 13.52 ± 3.18 and 3.83 ± 2.89, respectively. Twenty-eight patients (96.55%) received respiratory support. Sixteen patients (55.17%) had positive bacterial culture results. Fourteen bacterial strains were detected, most of which were gram-positive (72.72%). Mean LOS was 6.89 ± 14.39 days (range 0.5–73 days), and 24.79 ± 16 days in the hospital. The ICU mortality rate was 10.34%. Compared with LA patients without descending necrotizing mediastinitis (DNM), those with DNM had longer ICU and hospital LOS. The laboratory investigations were higher. Conclusion LA patients in ICU were predominantly male, with a wide range age, high incidence of complications, long hospital LOS.
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- 2020
435. A Deep Generative Model for Non-Intrusive Identification of EV Charging Profiles
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Liang Du, Dongbo Zhao, Jin Ye, and Shengyi Wang
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General Computer Science ,Artificial neural network ,Computer science ,020209 energy ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,Supervised learning ,Markov process ,02 engineering and technology ,Data modeling ,symbols.namesake ,Generative model ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Benchmark (computing) ,symbols ,Probability distribution ,Hidden Markov model ,Algorithm - Abstract
The proliferation of electric vehicles (EVs) brings environmental benefits and technical challenges to power grids. An identification algorithm which can accurately extract individual EV charging profiles out of widely available smart meter measurements has attracted great interests. This paper proposes a non-intrusive identification framework for EV charging profile extraction, which is driven by deep generative models (DGM). First, the proposed DGM is designed as a representation layer embedded into the Markov process and used to model the joint probability distribution of available time-series data. A novel contribution is to approximate posterior distributions by neural networks whose parameters are obtained by variational inference and supervised learning. Second, the EV charging status is inferred from the DGM via dynamic programming. Lastly, the desired EV charging profile can be reconstructed by the rated power of EV models and inferred status. Compared with the benchmark Hidden Markov Models, the proposed framework can better handle noise in data with less computational complexity and better overall accuracy performances with smaller recall. The proposed framework is validated by numerical experiments on the Pecan Street dataset.
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- 2020
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436. Role of Treatment Adherence, Doctor–Patient Trust, and Communication in Predicting Treatment Effects Among Tuberculosis Patients: Difference Between Urban and Rural Areas
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Xu Chen, Ruiheng Wu, Liang Du, Jia Xu, Haoqiang Ji, and Ling Zhou
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medicine.medical_specialty ,China ,Tuberculosis ,inequality ,Treatment adherence ,Doctor patient ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,compliance ,Structural equation modeling ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,050602 political science & public administration ,medicine ,Treatment effect ,Statistical analysis ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,Original Research ,doctor–patient relationship ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,treatment effects ,medicine.disease ,0506 political science ,TB ,Family medicine ,Doctor–patient relationship ,Rural area ,business ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Purpose China is the second highest tuberculosis (TB) burden in the world, and TB patients in the rural areas are about twice as many as urban patients. The purpose of present study was to explore the roles of medication adherence, doctor-patient trust and communication on treatment effects, and its inequality between urban and rural areas. Methods There were 564 eligible TB patients, from four tuberculosis hospitals in China, participating in this cross-sectional study. They filled out questionnaires regarding socio-demographic characteristics, medication adherence, treatment effect, doctor-patient trust, and communication. The structural equation model (SEM) was applied to explore the hypotheses in this study. All statistical analysis was done by SPSS 25.0 and Mplus 7.0 statistical software. Results This study included 267 (47.34%) urban and 297 (52.66%) rural eligible TB patients. The data fitted the research model well, and the urban TB patients reported better treatment effect than the rural ones (P=0.027). Overall, treatment adherence positively predicted treatment effect (Est.=0.353, P
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- 2020
437. ADORA1-driven brain-sympathetic neuro-adipose connections control body weight and adipose lipid metabolism
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Xue liang Du, Yong Qi, Yunlei Yang, Julio Licinio, Guangzhi Sui, Yanjun Hou, Dan Chen, Jia Zhang, and Ma-Li Wong
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adipose tissue ,Lipid metabolism ,Biology ,Adenosine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adenosine A1 receptor ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Adipogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Adipocyte ,medicine ,Lipolysis ,Glucose homeostasis ,Molecular Biology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
It is essential to elucidate brain-adipocyte interactions in order to tackle obesity and its comorbidities, as the precise control of brain-adipose tissue cross-talk is crucial for energy and glucose homeostasis. Recent studies show that in the peripheral adipose tissue, adenosine induces adipogenesis through peripheral adenosine A1 receptor (pADORA1) signaling; however, it remains unclear whether systemic and adipose tissue metabolism would also be under the control of central (c) ADORA1 signaling. Here, we use tissue-specific pharmacology and metabolic tools to clarify the roles of cADORA1 signaling in energy and adipocyte physiology. We found that cADORA1 signaling reduces body weight while also inducing adipose tissue lipolysis. cADORA1 signaling also increases adipose tissue sympathetic norepinephrine content. In contrast, pADORA1 signaling facilitates a high-fat diet-induced obesity (DIO). We propose here a novel mechanism in which cADORA1 and pADORA1 signaling hinder and aggravate DIO, respectively.
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- 2020
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438. LncRNA XIST Promotes Migration and Invasion of Papillary Thyroid Cancer Cell by Modulating MiR-101-3p/CLDN1 Axis
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Guangqing Shi, Yong-Liang Du, Jian Li, Yan Cao, Yan Liang, and Le Liu
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0301 basic medicine ,MMP2 ,endocrine system diseases ,Cell ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Papillary thyroid cancer ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Cell Movement ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Claudin-1 ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,RNA, Neoplasm ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Gene knockdown ,Cell migration ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Blot ,MicroRNAs ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Thyroid Cancer, Papillary ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,RNA, Long Noncoding ,XIST ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is the most common endocrine malignancy in the worlds. Long non-coding RNA X-inactive specific transcript (XIST) was found to upregulate in PTC tissues and cell lines. However, the molecular mechanism underlying PTC metastasis and whether XIST plays regulatory role in PTC are still largely unknown. qRT-PCR was performed to detect the expression of lncRNA XIST and mRNAs. Western blotting was carried out to detect CLDN1, MMP2, and MMP9. Transwell assay was used to detect migration and invasion. Starbase bioinformatics prediction and luciferase assay were used to validate the relationship of miR-101-3p and XIST or CLDN1. LncRNA XIST was upregulated in PTC tissues and cells. XIST knockdown suppressed migration and invasion of PTC cells. XIST could directly bind with miR-101-3p. Overexpression of miR-101-3p suppressed migration and invasion of PTC cells. CLDN1 was the target of miR-101-3p, and overexpression of CLDN1 can reverse the inhibition of cell migration and invasion by miR-101-3p, What's more, miR-101-3p inhibition and CLDN1 overexpression can reverse the affection of sh-XIST on migration and invasion of PTC cells inhibition. XIST promotes migration and invasion of papillary thyroid cancer cell via directly regulating miR-101-3p/CLDN1 axis, which is a novel mechanistic of XIST in the regulation of PTC.
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- 2020
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439. An SOC-Based Virtual DC Machine Control for Distributed Storage Systems in DC Microgrids
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Na Zhi, Hui Zhang, Ding Ke, and Liang Du
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business.industry ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,02 engineering and technology ,Inertia ,computer.software_genre ,Energy storage ,law.invention ,Virtual machine ,law ,Control theory ,Distributed generation ,Distributed data store ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Microgrid ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,computer ,media_common ,Machine control ,Armature (electrical engineering) - Abstract
Distributed energy storage systems (DESSs) play an important role in maintaining voltage stability in DC microgrids. In order to improve the inertia of DC microgrid and balance the charge/discharge power and the state-of-charge (SOC) of each energy storage unit (ESU), an SOC-based virtual DC machine (VDCM) control strategy for DESSs in DC microgrid is proposed in this paper. By adding SOC to the armature resistance, the improved virtual machine algorithm can dynamically balance power and SOC simultaneously. In this article, the transient stability of DC bus voltage is enhanced using the output inertia of VDCM, and the SOC differences between ESUs are rapidly reduced by introducing the average SOC of ESUs. Small-signal models of both each ESU-interfacing converter and DESS-inclusive DC microgrid with proposed control method are established. The impact of VDCM parameters on voltage stability is analyzed. Finally, a test DC microgrid is built to verify feasibility and effectiveness of the VDCM control strategy.
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- 2020
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440. Identification and Characterization of circRNAs in the Developing Stem Cambium of Poplar Seedlings
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Xinwei Wang, M. Wei, B. Chen, Wenqing Zheng, Liang Du, and Yuan Zhang
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Structural Biology ,RNA Isoforms ,Circular RNA ,fungi ,microRNA ,Biophysics ,Xylem ,Identification (biology) ,Cambium ,Biology ,Gene ,Function (biology) ,Cell biology - Abstract
Non-coding RNAs are a class of RNAs with multiple roles in plant life. Covalently closed circular RNA molecules (circRNAs) have been recently shown to be a group of RNA isoforms that show widespread tissue-specific expression in plants, often cooperating with the corresponding linear mRNAs to regulate gene function. However, no previous study of poplar has identified circRNAs in the cambium and determined their potential roles in the cambium or xylem development. In the present study, we sequenced RNAs in the cambium of poplar seedlings at two developmental stages, and identified and characterized 4912 circRNAs. Alternative back-splicing circularization events for 87 genes were identified among the circRNAs derived from different chromosomes. A total of 1138 circRNAs originated from 928 host genes, which were classified among the three major functional categories by GO analysis. Thirty-nine circRNAs were differentially expressed between cambium samples of stems at two developmental stages. Twenty-four DEcircRNAs interacted with 98 miRNAs as targets, of which some were associated with cambium growth and development. The results suggest that circRNAs play important roles in the cambium in relation to the regulation of stem growth and development in poplar seedlings.
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- 2020
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441. The effects of family, society and national policy support on treatment adherence among newly diagnosed tuberculosis patients: a cross-sectional study
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Liang Du, Yu Zhang, Haoqiang Ji, Xuexue Zhu, Jia Xu, Xu Chen, Ruiheng Wu, and Ling Zhou
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,China ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tuberculosis ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Family support ,030106 microbiology ,Antitubercular Agents ,Medication Adherence ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medical microbiology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Outpatient clinic ,Family ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Society ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Physician-Patient Relations ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Social Support ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Infectious Diseases ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Adherence ,Family medicine ,Tropical medicine ,Female ,Ordered logit ,business ,National policy ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Non-adherence to tuberculosis (TB) treatment is the most important cause of poor TB outcomes, and improving support for TB patients is a primary priority for governments, but there has been little research on the effects of family, social and national policy support factors on TB treatment adherence. The current study evaluated treatment adherence among newly diagnosed TB patients in Dalian, north-eastern China, and determined the effects of family, society, and national policy support factors on treatment adherence. Methods A cross-sectional survey was conducted among newly diagnosed TB patients treated at the outpatient department of Dalian Tuberculosis Hospital from September 2019 to January 2020. Data were collected using a questionnaire that measured medication adherence, family support, social support, and national policy support and so on. Differences between groups were assessed using Chi-square tests and Fisher’s exact tests. Ordinal logistic regression analysis was used to determine the predictors of adherence. Results A total of 481 newly diagnosed TB patients were recruited, of whom 45.7% had good adherence, and 27.4 and 26.8% had moderate and low adherence, respectively. Patients who had family members who frequently supervised medication (OR:0.34, 95% CI:0.16–0.70), family members who often provided spiritual encouragement (OR:0.13, 95% CI:0.02–0.72), a good doctor-patient relationship (OR:0.61, 95% CI:0.40–0.93), more TB-related knowledge (OR:0.49, 95% CI:0.33–0.72) and a high need for TB treatment policy support (OR:0.38, 95% CI:0.22–0.66) had satisfactory medication adherence. However, patients who had a college degree or higher (OR:1.69, 95% CI:1.04–2.74) and who suffered adverse drug reactions (OR:1.45, 95% CI:1.00–2.11) were more likely to have lower adherence. Conclusions Our findings suggested that non-adherence was high in newly diagnosed TB patients. Patients who had family members who frequently supervised medication and provided spiritual encouragement and a good doctor-patient relationship and TB-related knowledge and a high need for policy support contributed to high adherence. It is recommended to strengthen medical staff training and patient and family health education and to increase financial support for improving adherence.
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- 2020
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442. Rapid Photoligation of Gold Nanocolloids with Lipoic Acid-Based Ligands
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Goutam Palui, Chengqi Zhang, Zhicheng Jin, Liang Du, Yan Xin, Hedi Mattoussi, Narjes Dridi, Yuya Sugiyama, and Sisi Wang
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Ligand ,General Chemical Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,Photothermal therapy ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Combinatorial chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Lipoic acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Ft ir spectroscopy ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
An effective and easy to implement ligand exchange strategy is paramount to the design of stable and multifunctional gold and other inorganic nanocolloids. This is also crucial for their use in bio...
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- 2020
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443. Determinants of Medication Adherence for Pulmonary Tuberculosis Patients During Continuation Phase in Dalian, Northeast China
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Xiwei Lu, Liang Du, Ling Zhou, Jia Xu, Haoqiang Ji, Xu Chen, Ruiheng Wu, Xuexue Zhu, and Yu Zhang
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate statistics ,Tuberculosis ,Descriptive statistics ,business.industry ,Continuation Phase ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Medication adherence ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,0506 political science ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pulmonary tuberculosis ,Internal medicine ,050602 political science & public administration ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Ordered logit ,business ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Purpose Medication adherence is crucial for decreasing the burden of tuberculosis, but few relevant studies have been conducted in northeast China. This study aimed to explore the level of medication adherence among pulmonary tuberculosis outpatients and the predictive factors based on the bio-psycho-social medical model. Patients and Methods A cross-sectional multi-center survey was conducted in four tuberculosis medical institutions in Dalian, northeast China. Medication adherence was measured using the eight-item Chinese version of the Morisky Medication Adherence Scale, which divides adherence into three levels. The independent variables consisted of sociodemographic characteristics, treatment factors, knowledge about TB, mental health, and behavioral characteristics. Descriptive statistics, the chi-square test, and multivariate ordinal logistic regression were applied to analyze the data using Stata/MP 14.0. Results Among the 564 eligible participants, 236 (41.84%) and 183 (32.45%) exhibited high and medium medication adherence, respectively, but 145 (25.71%) exhibited low medication adherence. Multivariate ordinal logistic regression showed that patients who were older (OR: 1.02, p=0.013) were employed (OR: 1.61, p=0.011), had better tuberculosis knowledge (OR: 1.34, p
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- 2020
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444. Enhanced Stabilization and Easy Phase Transfer of CsPbBr3 Perovskite Quantum Dots Promoted by High-Affinity Polyzwitterionic Ligands
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Yan Xin, Liang Du, Sisi Wang, Hedi Mattoussi, and Zhicheng Jin
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High affinity binding ,Chemistry ,Nanotechnology ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Cell technology ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Nanocrystal ,Quantum dot ,Phase (matter) ,Perovskite (structure) - Abstract
The successful growth of colloidal lead halide perovskite quantum dots (PQDs) has generated tremendous interest in the community, due to the unique properties and the promise PQDs offer for use in ...
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- 2020
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445. Application of ultra-deep sandstone reservoirs prediction technology under controlled seismic facies in Yudong block of Tabei Uplift, Tarim Basin, China
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Peng Peng, Zheng Liu, Yuzhe Cui, Fengying Yang, Liang Du, Yongfu Liu, Zhou Su, Haining Luo, Jianfa Han, and Huifang Zhang
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Seismic facies ,Lithology ,020209 energy ,Inversion (geology) ,Well logging ,Trough (geology) ,02 engineering and technology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Cretaceous ,Amplitude ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Waveform ,Petrology ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Thin sand layers are widely developed in the Cretaceous Baxigai Formation in the Yudong area, western Tabei Uplift, and series of lithologic traps controlled by the structures are formed. The thickness of the target layer is 3–5 m, which is beyond the resolution of conventional seismic data; this causes the prediction of the reservoir to be difficult. Starting from the forward simulation, a forward model was designed based on the well logging data and characteristics of the strata in the well area to analyze the impact of different thin reservoir development modes on the seismic waveform. The experimental results show that the amplitude of thick sandstone is strong, while that of the thin sandstone is weaker. When mudstone barriers develop in sandstones, the amplitude decreases and the trough widens. Based on the results above, the seismic facies plan is formed by clustering the two attributes of wave trough width and amplitude, and the qualitative prediction of the reservoir can be realized on the plane by referring to the drilled rock information. Based on this, high-resolution seismic waveform inversion was carried out to achieve vertical reservoir prediction. The inversion results on the profile are higher than those of well logging. Furthermore, geological knowledge is achieved on the plane and good application results are obtained.
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- 2020
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446. Corrosion Resistance of Nickel-Based Composite Coatings Reinforced by Spherical Tungsten Carbide
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Li Fan, Haiyan Chen, Qian Cheng, Yue Hou, and Hai Liang Du
- Subjects
Materials science ,020209 energy ,Mechanical Engineering ,Composite number ,Metallurgy ,02 engineering and technology ,Nickel based ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Corrosion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Mechanics of Materials ,Tungsten carbide ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,General Materials Science ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Nickel-based composite coatings reinforced by spherical tungsten carbide were deposited on 42CrMo alloy steel using plasma transfer arc welding (PTAW) process. Their electrochemical corrosion properties in NaCl solution under atmospheric and high pressure were studied by polarization curve, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The corrosion and erosion resistance of the coatings were also investigated by salt spray corrosion and erosion corrosion tests. The results show that the self-corrosion potential of the composite coatings increased with the increase of tungsten carbide content, and the Cr element in Ni60 sample formed a stable and compact passivation film. Compared with corrosion at atmospheric pressure, the adsorption and penetration of Cl- on the coating surface enhanced due to the increase of Cl- activity under pressure, thereby to weaken the corrosion resistance. The Samples that passivated in salt spray environment, cannot completely hinder the corrosion of the coating, just only to slow down the corrosion. This study can provide theoretical basis for deep-sea oil drilling and production engineering equipment.
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- 2020
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447. Fish consumption and multiple health outcomes: Umbrella review
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Liang Du, Yong Zhou, Chuncheng Wu, Zhiyong Rao, Yi Chen, Qianyi Wan, Rui Zhao, Lin Xia, Xiao-Ting Wu, Ni Li, Wen Zhuang, and Mengshi Yi
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Pregnancy ,Acute coronary syndrome ,business.industry ,Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Systematic review ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Dementia ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Metabolic syndrome ,business ,Stroke ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Background Fish contains a variety of essential nutrients, which may contribute to multiple health benefits in humans. Conversely, it also may contain contaminants, resulting in confusion over the health impact of fish consumption. Scope and approach To assess the strength and validity of associations between fish intake and multiple health outcomes. We performed an umbrella review of systematic reviews and meta-analyses in humans. Key findings and conclusions: Of the 55 unique outcomes in the identified 89 systematic reviews and meta-analyses, fish consumption did more benefit than harm for a variety of health outcomes with largest risk reduction at 2 to 4 servings per week. Dose-response analyses revealed that every 20 g/d (approximately one serving/week) increment could decrease 2%–7% risk of coronary heart disease mortality, cardiovascular disease mortality, all-cause mortality, stroke, myocardial infarction, acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, gastrointestinal cancer, metabolic syndrome, dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Beneficial associations were also found for cancers, atopic, musculoskeletal, gastrointestinal and ophthalmologic outcomes. Caution is warranted for potential allergy or contamination when advising during pregnancy and young children. Fish intake appears generally safe in this umbrella review with largest risk reduction for a range of health outcomes at two to four servings per week, and seems more beneficial than harmful. High-quality prospective studies are needed.
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- 2020
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448. Compact, 'Clickable' Quantum Dots Photoligated with Multifunctional Zwitterionic Polymers for Immunofluorescence and In Vivo Imaging
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Erna A. van Niekerk, James D. Baker, Yang Zhang, Wentao Wang, Françisco M. Raymo, Liang Du, Hedi Mattoussi, Xin Ji, Kimberly M. Groeniger, and Sisi Wang
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Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Biomedical Engineering ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Bioengineering ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Polymer ,equipment and supplies ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Immunofluorescence ,01 natural sciences ,Fluorescence ,0104 chemical sciences ,Quantum dot ,medicine ,Clickable ,0210 nano-technology ,Preclinical imaging ,Biotechnology - Abstract
We detail the preparation of highly fluorescent quantum dots (QDs), surface-engineered with multifunctional polymer ligands that are compact and readily compatible with strain-promoted click conjug...
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- 2020
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449. Noncooperative Social Welfare Optimization With Resiliency Against Network Anomaly
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Jin Ye, Liang Du, Lina He, and Shengyi Wang
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Computer Science::Computer Science and Game Theory ,Mathematical optimization ,Computer science ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,Economic dispatch ,02 engineering and technology ,Computer Science Applications ,Demand response ,symbols.namesake ,Strategic game ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Distributed algorithm ,Nash equilibrium ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Benchmark (computing) ,symbols ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Potential game ,Information Systems ,Integer (computer science) - Abstract
This article presents a noncooperative game-theoretic framework to model the social welfare optimization (SWO) problem with load aggregators participating in integrated economic dispatch and demand response. In the proposed framework, distribution system operators interact with generation units and load aggregators to maximize the overall social welfare. The proposed SWO problem addresses practical system constraints and falls into the scope of mixed integer nonlinear programs, which cannot be well handled by existing distributed algorithms. The proposed SWO problem is formulated by a special noncooperative strategic game, known as the potential game, and solved by a revised version of the spatial adaptive play under network anomaly. It is shown that the proposed framework has guaranteed convergence to a Nash equilibrium that is also a global optimizer. Simulations on a 15-generator benchmark distribution network have been conducted to validate the proposed framework.
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- 2020
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450. Evaluation and Analysis of Battery Technologies Applied to Grid-Level Energy Storage Systems Based on Rough Set Theory
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Fu Tianyi, Jianglei Huang, Qing Wang, Xiaojun Lv, Shengyue Li, Liang Du, and Zhiyuan Xie
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Battery (electricity) ,Multidisciplinary ,Work (electrical) ,Software deployment ,Computer science ,Power grid ,Rough set ,Grid ,Energy storage ,Power (physics) ,Reliability engineering - Abstract
Interest in the development of grid-level energy storage systems has increased over the years. As one of the most popular energy storage technologies currently available, batteries offer a number of high-value opportunities due to their rapid responses, flexible installation, and excellent performances. However, because of the complexity, multifunctionality, and wide deployment of power grids, trade-offs in battery performance exist, especially when considering economics, environmental effects, and safety. Therefore, establishing a comprehensive assessment of battery technologies is an urgent undertaking. In this work, we present an analysis of rough sets to evaluate the integration of battery systems (e.g., lead–acid batteries, lithium-ion batteries, nickel/metal–hydrogen batteries, zinc–air batteries, and Na–S batteries) into a power grid. Specifically, technological properties, economic significance, environmental effects, and safety of these battery systems are evaluated on the basis of rough set theory. In addition, some perspectives are provided to promote the development of battery technologies for grid-level energy storage.
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- 2020
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