7 research outputs found

    Attraction of Spiral Waves by Localized Inhomogeneities with Small-World Connections in Excitable Media

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    Trapping and un-trapping of spiral tips in a two-dimensional homogeneous excitable medium with local small-world connections is studied by numerical simulation. In a homogeneous medium which can be simulated with a lattice of regular neighborhood connections, the spiral wave is in the meandering regime. When changing the topology of a small region from regular connections to small-world connections, the tip of a spiral waves is attracted by the small-world region, where the average path length declines with the introduction of long distant connections. The "trapped" phenomenon also occurs in regular lattices where the diffusion coefficient of the small region is increased. The above results can be explained by the eikonal equation and the relation between core radius and diffusion coefficient.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Distortional Buckling Analysis of Steel-Concrete Composite Girders in Negative Moment Area

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    Distortional buckling is one of the most important buckling modes of the steel-concrete composite girder under negative moment. In this study, the equivalent lateral and torsional restraints of the bottom flange of a steel-concrete composite girder under negative moments due to variable axial forces are thoroughly investigated. The results show that there is a coupling effect between the applied forces and the lateral and torsional restraint of the bottom flange. Based on the calculation formula of lateral and torsional restraints, the critical buckling stress of I-steel-concrete composite girders and steel-concrete composite box girders under variable axial force is obtained. The critical bending moment of the steel-concrete composite girders can be further calculated. Compared to the traditional calculation methods of elastic foundation beam, the paper introduces an improved method, which considers coupling effect of the external loads and the foundation spring constraints of the bottom flange. Fifteen examples of the steel-concrete composite girders in different conditions are calculated. The calculation results show a good match between the hand calculation and the ANSYS finite element method, which validated that the analytic calculation method proposed in this paper is practical

    Transcriptomic Analysis of Spleen Revealed Mechanism of Dexamethasone-Induced Immune Suppression in Chicks

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    Stress-induced immunosuppression is a common problem in the poultry industry, but the specific mechanism of its effect on the immune function of chicken has not been clarified. In this study, 7-day-old Gushi cocks were selected as subjects, and a stress-induced immunosuppression model was successfully established via daily injection of 2.0 mg/kg (body weight) dexamethasone. We characterized the spleen transcriptome in the control (B_S) and model (D_S) groups, and 515 significant differentially expressed genes (SDEGs) (Fragments Per Kilobase of transcript sequence per Millions base pairs sequenced (FPKM) > 1, adjusted p-value (padj) < 0.05 and Fold change (|FC|) ≥ 2) were identified. The cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction signaling pathway was identified as being highly activated during stress-induced immunosuppression, including the following SDEGs—CXCL13L2, CSF3R, CSF2RB, CCR9, CCR10, IL1R1, IL8L1, IL8L2, GHR, KIT, OSMR, TNFRSF13B, TNFSF13B, and TGFBR2L. At the same time, immune-related SDEGs including CCR9, CCR10, DMB1, TNFRSF13B, TNFRSF13C and TNFSF13B were significantly enriched in the intestinal immune network for the IgA production signaling pathway. The SDEG protein-protein interaction module analysis showed that CXCR5, CCR8L, CCR9, CCR10, IL8L2, IL8L1, TNFSF13B, TNFRSF13B and TNFRSF13C may play an important role in stress-induced immunosuppression. These findings provide a background for further research on stress-induced immunosuppression. Thus, we can better understand the molecular genetic mechanism of chicken stress-induced immunosuppression

    Molecular-Level Interfacial Chemistry Regulation of MXene Enables Energy Storage beyond Theoretical Limit

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    Ti3C2Tx MXene often suffers from poor lithium storage behaviors due to its electrochemically unfavorable OH terminations. Herein, we propose molecular-level interfacial chemistry regulation of Ti3C2Tx MXene with phytic acid (PA) to directly activate its OH terminations. Through constructing hydrogen bonds (H-bonds) between oxygen atoms of PA and OH terminations on Ti3C2Tx surface, interfacial charge distribution of Ti3C2Tx has been effectively regulated, thereby enabling sufficient ion-storage sites and expediting ion transport kinetics for high-performance energy storage. The results show that Li ions preferably bind to H-bond acceptors (oxygen atoms from PA), and the flexibility of H-bonds therefore renders their interactions with adsorbed Li ions chemically ā€œtunableā€, thus alleviating undesirable localized geometric changes of the OH terminations. Meanwhile the H-bond-induced microscopic dipoles can act as directional Li-ion pumps to expedite ion diffusion kinetics with lower energy barrier. As a result, the as-designed Ti3C2Tx/PA achieves a 2.4-fold capacity enhancement compared with pristine Ti3C2Tx (even beyond theoretical capacity), superior long-term cyclability (220.0 mAh gā€“1 after 2000 cycles at 2.0 A gā€“1), and broad temperature adaptability (āˆ’20 to 50 Ā°C). This work offers a promising interface engineering strategy to regulate microenvironments of inherent terminations for breaking through the energy storage performance of MXenes
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