16 results on '"Xufeng, XIAO"'
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2. Effect of sulfur content on precipitation behaviour of MnS-containing inclusions in X70 pipeline steel
- Author
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Hua Zhang, Xufeng Xiao, Yong Wang, Chengsong Liu, and Hongwei Ni
- Subjects
Heterogeneous nucleation ,Density functional theory (DFT) ,Inclusions ,Mg treatment ,X70 pipeline steel ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
The presence of oxide-MnS complex inclusions is beneficial for the improvement of hydrogen resistance in pipeline steel. The effect of S and Mg contents on the generation mechanism of MnS, MgAl2O4, and MgO inclusions, and the heterogeneous nucleation principle of MnS on the surfaces of MgAl2O4 and MgO were revealed using laboratory experiments, thermodynamic calculations, and density functional theory (DFT) computations. The inclusion characteristics in steel were evaluated by using a Scanning Electron Microscope in combination with an Energy Dispersive Spectrometer (SEM + EDS). It has been found that as the Mg content increased, MgAl2O4 transformed into MgO, which can be well predicted by thermodynamic calculations. It was found that MnS exhibited the ability to nucleate heterogeneously on the surfaces of MgO and MgAl2O4 inclusions. Furthermore, proper S content (approximately 30 ppm) can facilitate the formation of oxide-MnS complex inclusions, excess S content was not desired. The smaller the oxide inclusion, the easier to form wrapped MnS on the oxides. The nucleation ability of MnS and MgAl2O4 was identified by DFT calculations and found that they followed the order of (111)MnS//(111)MgAl2O4>(100)MnS//(100)MgAl2O4>(110)MnS//(110)MgAl2O4. Furthermore, the heterogeneous nucleation ability of MnS and MgO followed in the order of (111)MnS//(111)MgO > (100)MnS//(111)MgO > (100)MnS//(100)MgO. This study provides theoretical evidence supporting the heterogeneous nucleation ability of MnS on the surfaces of MgO and MgAl2O4. Moreover, it helps bridge the disparity between the calculation of MnS and MgO nucleation using the two-dimensional mismatch degree and the experimental findings.
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- 2023
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3. Transcriptome profiling reveals the genes involved in tuberous root expansion in Pueraria (Pueraria montana var. thomsonii)
- Author
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Xufeng, Xiao, Yuanfeng, Hu, Ming, Zhang, Shucheng, Si, Haonan, Zhou, Weifeng, Zhu, Fei, Ge, Caijun, Wu, and Shuying, Fan
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- 2023
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4. Sensing antibody functions with a novel CCR8-responsive engineered cell
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Jianyu Hao, Yitong Lv, Xufeng Xiao, Lidan Li, and Changyuan Yu
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monoclonal antibody ,CCR8 ,engineered cell line ,functional evaluation ,HEK293-cAMP-biosensor-CCR8 ,Biochemistry ,QD415-436 ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 ,Science - Abstract
Human chemokine receptor 8 (CCR8) is a promising drug target for immunotherapy of cancer and autoimmune diseases. Monoclonal antibody-based CCR8 targeted treatment shows significant inhibition in tumor growth. The inhibition of CCR8 results in the improvement of antitumor immunity and patient survival rates by regulating tumor-resident regulatory T cells. Recently monoclonal antibody drug development targeting CCR8 has become a research hotspot, which also promotes the advancement of antibody evaluation methods. Therefore, we constructed a novel engineered customized cell line HEK293-cAMP-biosensor-CCR8 combined with CCR8 and a cAMP-biosensor reporter. It can be used for the detection of anti-CCR8 antibody functions like specificity and biological activity, in addition to the detection of antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity and antibody-dependent-cellular-phagocytosis. We obtained a new CCR8 mAb 22H9 and successfully verified its biological activities with HEK293-cAMP-biosensor-CCR8. Our reporter cell line has high sensitivity and specificity, and also offers a rapid kinetic detection platform for evaluating anti-CCR8 antibody functions.
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- 2024
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5. Epigenetic modifications of 45S rDNA associates with the disruption of nucleolar organisation during Cd stress response in Pakchoi
- Author
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Yan Xiang, Ming Zhang, Yuanfeng Hu, Liangdeng Wang, Xufeng Xiao, Fengrui Yin, Xiaoqun Cao, Meilan Sui, and Yuekeng Yao
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Epigenetic modification ,45 S rDNA ,Nucleolus disruption ,Pakchoi ,Cd stress ,Environmental pollution ,TD172-193.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
The role of the nucleolus in Pakchoi response to Cd stress remains largely unknown. In this work, we focus on exploring the underling mechanism between nucleolus disruption and epigenetic modification in Cd stressed-Pakchoi. Our results indicated that the proportion of nucleolus disruption, decondensation of 45 S rDNA chromatin, and a simultaneous increase in 5' external transcribed spacer region (ETS) transcription were observed with increasing Cd concentration, accompanied by genome-wide alterations in the levels of histone acetylation and methylation. Further results showed that Cd treatment exhibited a significant increase in H3K9ac, H4K5ac, and H3K9me2 levels occurred in promoter regions of the 45 S rDNA. Additionally, DNA methylation assays in the 45 S rDNA promoter region revealed that individual site-specific hypomethylation may be engaged in the activation of 45 S rDNA transcription. Our study provides some molecular mechanisms for the linkage between Cd stress, rDNA epigenetic modifications, and nucleolus disintegration in plants.
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- 2024
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6. Depth‐Dependent Post‐Treatment for Reducing Voltage Loss in Printable Mesoscopic Perovskite Solar Cells
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Xufeng Xiao, Wenhao Zhang, Jiale Liu, Jiankang Du, Cheng Qiu, Ranjun Meng, Anyi Mei, Hongwei Han, and Yue Hu
- Subjects
hole‐conductor‐free ,mesoscopic ,perovskite solar cells ,printable ,voltage loss ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The printable mesoscopic perovskite solar cells consisting of a double layer of metal oxides covered by a porous carbon film have attracted attention due to their industrialization advantages. However, the tens‐of‐micrometer thickness of the triple scaffold leads to a challenge for perovskite to crystallize and for the charge carriers to separate and travel to the electrode, which limits the open circuit voltage (VOC) of such devices. In this work, a depth‐dependent post‐treatment strategy is demonstrated to synergistically passivate defects and tune interfacial energy band alignment. Two thiophene derivatives, namely 3‐chlorothiophene (3‐CT) and 3‐thiophene ethylenediamine (3‐TEA), are selected for the post‐treatment. Energy‐dispersive X‐ray spectroscopy proves that 3‐CT is uniformly distributed throughout the triple scaffold and effectively passivates the defects of the bulky perovskite, while 3‐TEA reacts rapidly with the loose perovskite in the carbon layer to form 2D perovskite, forming a type II energy band alignment at the perovskite/carbon interface. As a result, the defect‐assisted recombination is suppressed and the interfacial energy band is regulated, increasing the VOC to 1012 mV. The PCE of the devices is enhanced from 16.26% to 18.49%. This depth‐dependent post‐treatment strategy takes advantage of the unique structure and provides a new insight for reducing the voltage loss.
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- 2023
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7. Efficient Numerical Simulation of Biochemotaxis Phenomena in Fluid Environments
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Xingying Zhou, Guoqing Bian, Yan Wang, and Xufeng Xiao
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biochemotaxis ,dimension splitting method ,finite difference method ,Science ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
A novel dimension splitting method is proposed for the efficient numerical simulation of a biochemotaxis model, which is a coupled system of chemotaxis–fluid equations and incompressible Navier–Stokes equations. A second-order pressure correction method is employed to decouple the velocity and pressure for the Navier–Stokes equations. Then, the alternating direction implicit scheme is used to solve the velocity equation, and the operator with dimension splitting effect is used instead of the traditional elliptic operator to solve the pressure equation. For the chemotactic equation, the operator splitting method and extrapolation technique are used to solve oxygen and cell density to achieve second-order time accuracy. The proposed dimension splitting method splits the two-dimensional problem into a one-dimensional problem by splitting the spatial derivative, which reduces the computation and storage costs. Finally, through interesting experiments, we show the evolution of the cell plume shape during the descent process. The effect of changing specific parameters on the velocity and plume shape during the descent process is also studied.
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- 2023
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8. Enhanced perovskite electronic properties via A-site cation engineering
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Xufeng Xiao, Yanmeng Chu, Chunyu Zhang, Zhihui Zhang, Zexiong Qiu, Cheng Qiu, Huaixing Wang, Anyi Mei, Yaoguang Rong, Gengzhao Xu, Yue Hu, and Hongwei Han
- Subjects
Perovskite ,Perovskite solar cell ,Printable mesoscopic solar cell ,Electronic properties ,A-site cation ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Organic-inorganic halide perovskites have emerged as excellent candidates for low-cost photovoltaics and optoelectronics. While the predominant recent trend in designing perovskites for efficient and stable solar cells has been to mix different A-site cations, the role of A-site cations is still limited to tune the lattice and bandgap of perovskites. Herein we compare the optoelectronic properties of acetamidinum (Ace) and guanidinium (Gua) mixed methylammonium lead iodide perovskites and shed a light on the hidden role of A-site cation on the carrier mobility of mixed-cation lead iodide perovskites. The cations do not affect the bandgap of the perovskites since the orbitals from Ace and Gua do not contribute to the band edges of the material. However, the mobility of the Ace mixed perovskite is significantly enhanced to be an order of magnitude higher than that of the pristine perovskite. We apply the Ace mixed perovskite in hole-conductor-free printable mesoscopic perovskite solar cells and obtain a stabilized PCE of over 18% (certified 17.7%), which is the highest certified efficiency so far.
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- 2021
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9. Prediction of Failure Modes and Minimum Characteristic Value of Transverse Reinforcement of RC Beams Based on Interpretable Machine Learning
- Author
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Sixuan Wang, Cailong Ma, Wenhu Wang, Xianlong Hou, Xufeng Xiao, Zhenhao Zhang, Xuanchi Liu, and JinJing Liao
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reinforced concrete beam ,interpretable machine-learning technique ,failure modes ,the minimum characteristic value of transverse reinforcement ,accumulated local effects ,Building construction ,TH1-9745 - Abstract
Shear failure of reinforced concrete (RC) beams is a form of brittle failure and has always been a concern. This study adopted the interpretable machine-learning technique to predict failure modes and identify the boundary value between different failure modes to avoid diagonal splitting failure. An experimental database consisting of 295 RC beams with or without transverse reinforcements was established. Two features were constructed to reflect the design characteristics of RC beams, namely, the shear–span ratio and the characteristic value of transverse reinforcement. The characteristic value of transverse reinforcement has two forms: (i) λsv,ft=ρstpfsv/ft, from the China design code of GB 50010-2010; and (ii) λsv,fc′=ρstpfsv/fc′0.5, from the America design code of ACI 318-19 and Canada design code of CSA A23.3-14. Six machine-learning models were developed to predict failure modes, and gradient boosting decision tree and extreme gradient boosting are recommended after comparing the prediction performance. Then, shapley additive explanations (SHAP) indicates that the characteristic value of transverse reinforcement has the most significant effect on failure mode, follow by the shear–span ratio. The characteristic value of transverse reinforcement is selected as the form of boundary value. On this basis, an accumulated local effects (ALE) plot describes how this feature affects model prediction and gives the boundary value through numerical simulation, that is, the minimum characteristic value of transverse reinforcement. Compared with the three codes, the suggested value for λsv,fc′,min has higher reliability and security for avoiding diagonal splitting failure. Accordingly, the research approach in this case is feasible and effective, and can be recommended to solve similar tasks.
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- 2023
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10. Enhancing anti-angiogenic immunotherapy for melanoma through injectable metal-organic framework hydrogel co-delivery of combretastatin A4 and poly(I:C).
- Author
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Xufeng Xiao, Yunuo Zheng, Tianlong Wang, Xiaoqing Zhang, Gaochuan Fang, Zhonghai Zhang, Zhengkui Zhang, and Jiaojiao Zhao
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- 2024
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11. Genome-Wide Identification and Expression Analysis of BrATGs and Their Different Roles in Response to Abiotic Stresses in Chinese Cabbage
- Author
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Yuanfeng Hu, Ming Zhang, Fengrui Yin, Xiaoqun Cao, Shuying Fan, Caijun Wu, and Xufeng Xiao
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autophagy ,genome-wide analysis ,abiotic stress response ,Chinese cabbage ,Agriculture - Abstract
Autophagy is an important degradation pathway that maintains cellular homeostasis in living organisms and plays a key role in plant fitness and immunity. To date, more than 30 autophagy-related genes (ATGs) have been identified in model plants such as Arabidopsis. However, autophagy in Chinese cabbage, the largest cultivated vegetable crop in China, has scarcely been studied. We identified 64 Chinese cabbage autophagy-associated genes, named BrATGs, at the genome-wide level. The majority of the BrATGs were highly conserved over a long evolutionary period, and the expression patterns indicated that BrATGs were most highly expressed in the healing tissues and flowers. Furthermore, BrATGs responded to the stresses of the heavy metal Cd, drought, salt, and low and high temperatures to varying degrees. Among them, BrATG8c/8j was specifically induced in response to drastic temperature changes; BrATG4c was upregulated only in response to drought and salt stress; and BrATG8f/10/VTI12C was highly expressed only in response to Cd stress. This work will advance the understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the abiotic stress response in Chinese cabbage.
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- 2022
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12. Characterization of Phytochrome-Interacting Factor Genes in Pepper and Functional Analysis of CaPIF8 in Cold and Salt Stress
- Author
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Youxin Yang, Yelan Guang, Feng Wang, Yue Chen, Wenting Yang, Xufeng Xiao, Sha Luo, and Yong Zhou
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pepper ,phytochrome-interacting factor (PIF) ,expression profile ,salt stress ,cold stress ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
As a subfamily of basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors, phytochrome-interacting factors (PIFs) participate in regulating light-dependent growth and development of plants. However, limited information is available about PIFs in pepper. In the present study, we identified six pepper PIF genes using bioinformatics-based methods. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the PIFs from pepper and some other plants could be divided into three distinct groups. Motif analysis revealed the presence of many conserved motifs, which is consistent with the classification of PIF proteins. Gene structure analysis suggested that the CaPIF genes have five to seven introns, exhibiting a relatively more stable intron number than other plants such as rice, maize, and tomato. Expression analysis showed that CaPIF8 was up-regulated by cold and salt treatments. CaPIF8-silenced pepper plants obtained by virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) exhibited higher sensitivity to cold and salt stress, with an obvious increase in relative electrolyte leakage (REL) and variations in the expression of stress-related genes. Further stress tolerance assays revealed that CaPIF8 plays different regulatory roles in cold and salt stress response by promoting the expression of the CBF1 gene and ABA biosynthesis genes, respectively. Our results reveal the key roles of CaPIF8 in cold and salt tolerance of pepper, and lay a solid foundation for clarifying the biological roles of PIFs in pepper and other plants.
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- 2021
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13. Numerical Study on an RBF-FD Tangent Plane Based Method for Convection–Diffusion Equations on Anisotropic Evolving Surfaces
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Nazakat Adil, Xufeng Xiao, and Xinlong Feng
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convection–diffusion equation ,Lagrangian ,evolving surface ,radial basis function–finite difference ,anisotropic radial basis function ,Science ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
In this paper, we present a fully Lagrangian method based on the radial basis function (RBF) finite difference (FD) method for solving convection–diffusion partial differential equations (PDEs) on evolving surfaces. Surface differential operators are discretized by the tangent plane approach using Gaussian RBFs augmented with two-dimensional (2D) polynomials. The main advantage of our method is the simplicity of calculating differentiation weights. Additionally, we couple the method with anisotropic RBFs (ARBFs) to obtain more accurate numerical solutions for the anisotropic growth of surfaces. In the ARBF interpolation, the Euclidean distance is replaced with a suitable metric that matches the anisotropic surface geometry. Therefore, it will lead to a good result on the aspects of stability and accuracy of the RBF-FD method for this type of problem. The performance of this method is shown for various convection–diffusion equations on evolving surfaces, which include the anisotropic growth of surfaces and growth coupled with the solutions of PDEs.
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- 2022
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14. The complete chloroplast genome sequence of the Apium graveolens L. (Apiaceae)
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Qianglong Zhu, Yelan Guang, Xufeng Xiao, Nan Shan, Chunpeng Wan, and Youxin Yang
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apium graveolens l. ,chloroplast genome ,celery ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Apium graveolens L. is a worldwide popular vegetable with pharmacological efficacy. The complete chloroplast genome of A. graveolens was determined in this study. The total genome size was 152,050 bp in length, containing a pair of inverted repeats (IRs) of 24,743 bp, which were separated by large single copy (LSC) and small single copy (SSC) of 85,441 bp and 17,123 bp, respectively. The GC content is 37.64%. A total of 129 genes were predicted including 84 protein-coding genes, eight rRNA genes and 37 tRNA genes. Phylogenetic tree analysis of 30 species in the family Apiaceae indicated that A. graveolens was closer to Anethum, Foeniculum and Petroselinum.
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- 2019
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15. THE STABILIZED SEMI-IMPLICIT FINITE ELEMENT METHOD FOR THE SURFACE ALLEN-CAHN EQUATION.
- Author
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XUFENG XIAO, XINLONG FENG, and JINYUN YUAN
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FINITE element method ,MATHEMATICAL models ,DISCRETIZATION methods ,NUMERICAL analysis ,PHASE separation - Abstract
Two semi-implicit numerical methods are proposed for solving the surface Allen-Cahn equation which is a general mathematical model to describe phase separation on general surfaces. The spatial discretization is based on surface finite element method while the temporal discretization methods are first- and second-order stabilized semi-implicit schemes to guarantee the energy decay. The stability analysis and error estimate are provided for the stabilized semi-implicit schemes. Furthermore, the first- and second-order operator splitting methods are presented to compare with stabilized semi-implicit schemes. Some numerical experiments including phase separation and mean curvature flow on surfaces are performed to illustrate stability and accuracy of these methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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16. Development of a PID controller for a novel robotic catheter system.
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Xu Ma, Shuxiang Guo, Nan Xiao, Jian Guo, Xufeng Xiao, Yoshida, S., Tamiya, T., and Kawanishi, M.
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- 2011
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