99 research outputs found

    Performance comparison of models that are trained with or without NetExpress score.

    No full text
    Spearman correlation metric is measured to test models performance on three negative selection experiment datasets. A) K562 cell line dataset. B) A549 cell line dataset. C) NB4 cell line dataset.</p

    Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Supercritical CO<sub>2</sub> Injection Rate and Surface Wettability on Salt Precipitation

    No full text
    Injectivity is one of the most important factors to evaluate the feasibility of CO2 geological storage. Salt precipitation due to the mass of dry CO2 injected into a saline reservoir may cause a significant decrease in injectivity. However, the coupling effect of injection parameters and reservoir conditions on salt precipitation is not clear. Here, we conducted pore-scale visualization experiments to study the morphology and distribution of salt precipitation in porous structures and their effects on permeability reduction. The experimental results are achieved by controlling the supercritical CO2 injection rate and the surface wettability at the reservoir temperature and pressure. It is found that for hydrophilic and neutral porous surfaces, ex situ precipitation occurs and blocks the entirety of pore throats and bodies, which results in a significant reduction in permeability. Increasing the CO2 injection rate can suppress the capillary reflow and prevent the permeability reduction. For a hydrophobic porous surface, in situ precipitation occurs and occupies much smaller pore volume, which has a slight effect on permeability reduction compared to the hydrophilic samples at the same injection rate. Increasing the CO2 injection rate and dewetting the injection well and formation nearby reduce the possibility of salt accumulation, which has less effect on CO2 injectivity

    Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Supercritical CO<sub>2</sub> Injection Rate and Surface Wettability on Salt Precipitation

    No full text
    Injectivity is one of the most important factors to evaluate the feasibility of CO2 geological storage. Salt precipitation due to the mass of dry CO2 injected into a saline reservoir may cause a significant decrease in injectivity. However, the coupling effect of injection parameters and reservoir conditions on salt precipitation is not clear. Here, we conducted pore-scale visualization experiments to study the morphology and distribution of salt precipitation in porous structures and their effects on permeability reduction. The experimental results are achieved by controlling the supercritical CO2 injection rate and the surface wettability at the reservoir temperature and pressure. It is found that for hydrophilic and neutral porous surfaces, ex situ precipitation occurs and blocks the entirety of pore throats and bodies, which results in a significant reduction in permeability. Increasing the CO2 injection rate can suppress the capillary reflow and prevent the permeability reduction. For a hydrophobic porous surface, in situ precipitation occurs and occupies much smaller pore volume, which has a slight effect on permeability reduction compared to the hydrophilic samples at the same injection rate. Increasing the CO2 injection rate and dewetting the injection well and formation nearby reduce the possibility of salt accumulation, which has less effect on CO2 injectivity

    Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Supercritical CO<sub>2</sub> Injection Rate and Surface Wettability on Salt Precipitation

    No full text
    Injectivity is one of the most important factors to evaluate the feasibility of CO2 geological storage. Salt precipitation due to the mass of dry CO2 injected into a saline reservoir may cause a significant decrease in injectivity. However, the coupling effect of injection parameters and reservoir conditions on salt precipitation is not clear. Here, we conducted pore-scale visualization experiments to study the morphology and distribution of salt precipitation in porous structures and their effects on permeability reduction. The experimental results are achieved by controlling the supercritical CO2 injection rate and the surface wettability at the reservoir temperature and pressure. It is found that for hydrophilic and neutral porous surfaces, ex situ precipitation occurs and blocks the entirety of pore throats and bodies, which results in a significant reduction in permeability. Increasing the CO2 injection rate can suppress the capillary reflow and prevent the permeability reduction. For a hydrophobic porous surface, in situ precipitation occurs and occupies much smaller pore volume, which has a slight effect on permeability reduction compared to the hydrophilic samples at the same injection rate. Increasing the CO2 injection rate and dewetting the injection well and formation nearby reduce the possibility of salt accumulation, which has less effect on CO2 injectivity

    Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Supercritical CO<sub>2</sub> Injection Rate and Surface Wettability on Salt Precipitation

    No full text
    Injectivity is one of the most important factors to evaluate the feasibility of CO2 geological storage. Salt precipitation due to the mass of dry CO2 injected into a saline reservoir may cause a significant decrease in injectivity. However, the coupling effect of injection parameters and reservoir conditions on salt precipitation is not clear. Here, we conducted pore-scale visualization experiments to study the morphology and distribution of salt precipitation in porous structures and their effects on permeability reduction. The experimental results are achieved by controlling the supercritical CO2 injection rate and the surface wettability at the reservoir temperature and pressure. It is found that for hydrophilic and neutral porous surfaces, ex situ precipitation occurs and blocks the entirety of pore throats and bodies, which results in a significant reduction in permeability. Increasing the CO2 injection rate can suppress the capillary reflow and prevent the permeability reduction. For a hydrophobic porous surface, in situ precipitation occurs and occupies much smaller pore volume, which has a slight effect on permeability reduction compared to the hydrophilic samples at the same injection rate. Increasing the CO2 injection rate and dewetting the injection well and formation nearby reduce the possibility of salt accumulation, which has less effect on CO2 injectivity

    Model performances of negative experiment data in HL60, HCT116, and HeLa cell lines with 5-fold cross-validation.

    No full text
    Model performances of negative experiment data in HL60, HCT116, and HeLa cell lines with 5-fold cross-validation.</p

    Comparison of model performances on Crispr-Cas9 dataset.

    No full text
    Model performance was evaluated with the leave-one cell line-out method. Spearman correlation, Pearson correlation, and MSE metrics are compared.</p

    Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Supercritical CO<sub>2</sub> Injection Rate and Surface Wettability on Salt Precipitation

    No full text
    Injectivity is one of the most important factors to evaluate the feasibility of CO2 geological storage. Salt precipitation due to the mass of dry CO2 injected into a saline reservoir may cause a significant decrease in injectivity. However, the coupling effect of injection parameters and reservoir conditions on salt precipitation is not clear. Here, we conducted pore-scale visualization experiments to study the morphology and distribution of salt precipitation in porous structures and their effects on permeability reduction. The experimental results are achieved by controlling the supercritical CO2 injection rate and the surface wettability at the reservoir temperature and pressure. It is found that for hydrophilic and neutral porous surfaces, ex situ precipitation occurs and blocks the entirety of pore throats and bodies, which results in a significant reduction in permeability. Increasing the CO2 injection rate can suppress the capillary reflow and prevent the permeability reduction. For a hydrophobic porous surface, in situ precipitation occurs and occupies much smaller pore volume, which has a slight effect on permeability reduction compared to the hydrophilic samples at the same injection rate. Increasing the CO2 injection rate and dewetting the injection well and formation nearby reduce the possibility of salt accumulation, which has less effect on CO2 injectivity

    Schematic representation of the off-target specificity prediction model, AttnToMismatch_CNN.

    No full text
    Schematic representation of the off-target specificity prediction model, AttnToMismatch_CNN.</p
    corecore