165 research outputs found
Research progress and scientific challenges in the depressurization exploitation mechanism of clayey-silt natural gas hydrates in the northern South China Sea
Natural gas hydrate reservoirs in the northern South China Sea primarily comprise clayey silt, making exploitation more challenging relative to sandy reservoirs in other countries and regions. This paper provides an overview of the latest research developments in the exploitation mechanism covering the past five years, focusing on hydrate phase transition, multiphase flow in the decomposition zone, the seepage regulation of reservoir stimulation zone, and production capacity simulation, all of which are relevant to the previously conducted two rounds of hydrate trial production in offshore areas of China. The results indicate that the phase transition of clayey-silt hydrate remains in a dynamic equilibrium, with the decomposition efficiency mainly controlled by the coupling of heat and flow and high heat consumption during decomposition. The decomposition zone exhibits strong hydrophilicity, easy adsorption, and sudden permeability changes. A temperature drop is present that is concentrated near the wellbore, and once a water lock has formed, the gas-phase flow capacity significantly decreases, leading to potential secondary hydrate formation. To enhance permeability and increase production, it is imperative to implement reservoir and temperature field reconstruction based on initial formation alterations, which will further optimize and improve the transport capacity of the reservoir.Document Type: Current minireviewCited as: Lu, C., Qin, X., Sun, J., Wang, R., Cai, J. Research progress and scientific challenges in the depressurization exploitation mechanism of clayey-silt natural gas hydrates in the northern South China Sea. Advances in Geo-Energy Research, 2023, 10(1): 14-20. https://doi.org/10.46690/ager.2023.10.0
The impact of mineral compositions on hydrate morphology evolution and phase transition hysteresis in natural clayey silts
The authors are grateful to the National Natural Science Foundation of China, China [51991365]; China Geological Survey Project, China [DD20211350]; Guangdong Major Project of Basic and Applied Basic Research, China [2020B0301030003]; Key Program of Marine Economy Development (Six Marine Industries) of Special Foundation of Department of Natural Resources of Guangdong Province, China [2021]56.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
A GPU-based finite-size pencil beam algorithm with 3D-density correction for radiotherapy dose calculation
Targeting at the development of an accurate and efficient dose calculation
engine for online adaptive radiotherapy, we have implemented a finite size
pencil beam (FSPB) algorithm with a 3D-density correction method on GPU. This
new GPU-based dose engine is built on our previously published ultrafast FSPB
computational framework [Gu et al. Phys. Med. Biol. 54 6287-97, 2009].
Dosimetric evaluations against Monte Carlo dose calculations are conducted on
10 IMRT treatment plans (5 head-and-neck cases and 5 lung cases). For all
cases, there is improvement with the 3D-density correction over the
conventional FSPB algorithm and for most cases the improvement is significant.
Regarding the efficiency, because of the appropriate arrangement of memory
access and the usage of GPU intrinsic functions, the dose calculation for an
IMRT plan can be accomplished well within 1 second (except for one case) with
this new GPU-based FSPB algorithm. Compared to the previous GPU-based FSPB
algorithm without 3D-density correction, this new algorithm, though slightly
sacrificing the computational efficiency (~5-15% lower), has significantly
improved the dose calculation accuracy, making it more suitable for online IMRT
replanning
Extracranial Artery Stenosis Is Associated With Total MRI Burden of Cerebral Small Vessel Disease in Ischemic Stroke Patients of Suspected Small or Large Artery Origins
Background and Purpose: Extracranial artery stenosis (ECAS) is related to individual imaging markers of cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD). However, little has been reported on the association between ECAS and the total burden of cSVD as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between ECAS and cSVD burden in patients with ischemic stroke of suspected small or large artery origin.Methods: We reviewed consecutive patients with ischemic stroke of suspected small or large artery origin who underwent color Doppler ultrasonography and brain MRI. Bilateral extracranial cerebral arteries including common carotid artery, internal carotid artery (ICA), and proximal vertebral artery (VA, ostium, V2–3 segments) were assessed using color Doppler ultrasonography. ECAS severity was classified as no/mild stenosis, moderate stenosis, severe stenosis, or occlusion. The total cSVD score was assessed by awarding one point according to the load of each of these cSVD markers as determined using MRI; lacunar infarction, white matter hyperintensities, cerebral microbleeds, and enlarged perivascular spaces. The relationship between ECAS severity and cSVD burden according to MRI was examined.Results: Two hundred and twenty one patients were included in this study (mean age 61 ± 12 years, 75.6% male). Hypertension, current smoking, hyperlipidaemia, and diabetic mellitus were frequent among the patients (67.4, 45.7, 43.9, and 36.7%, respectively), while the other vascular risk factors including previous stroke or TIA and alcohol excess were less frequent (19.0 and 15.4%, respectively). Patients with higher total cSVD burden was significantly older and had severer ECAS. The frequency of hypertension was significantly higher in patients with higher total cSVD burden. This analysis indicated that that increasing ECAS severity (from no stenosis through to 100%) was independently associated with increasing total cSVD score after adjusting for other vascular risk factors (odds ratio 1.76, 95% CI [1.16–2.69]).Conclusions: In this study, high levels of ECAS from ultrasound evidence were associated with coexisting advanced cerebral cSVD in ischemic stroke patients of suspected small or large artery origin. Further studies are required to determine if and how extracranial arterial imaging helps reduce cSVD burden or improves cognitive function
Combined linkage and association mapping reveals candidates for Scmv1, a major locus involved in resistance to sugarcane mosaic virus (SCMV) in maize
Background
Sugarcane mosaic virus (SCMV) disease causes substantial losses of grain yield and forage biomass in susceptible maize cultivars. Maize resistance to SCMV is associated with two dominant genes, Scmv1 and Scmv2, which are located on the short arm of chromosome 6 and near the centromere region of chromosome 3, respectively. We combined both linkage and association mapping to identify positional candidate genes for Scmv1. Results
Scmv1 was fine-mapped in a segregating population derived from near-isogenic lines and further validated and fine-mapped using two recombinant inbred line populations. The combined results assigned the Scmv1 locus to a 59.21-kb interval, and candidate genes within this region were predicted based on the publicly available B73 sequence. None of three predicted genes that are possibly involved in the disease resistance response are similar to receptor-like resistance genes. Candidate gene–based association mapping was conducted using a panel of 94 inbred lines with variable resistance to SCMV. A presence/absence variation (PAV) in the Scmv1 region and two polymorphic sites around the Zmtrx-h gene were significantly associated with SCMV resistance. Conclusion
Combined linkage and association mapping pinpoints Zmtrx-h as the most likely positional candidate gene for Scmv1. These results pave the way towards cloning of Scmv1 and facilitate marker-assisted selection for potyvirus resistance in maize
NEOLAF, an LLM-powered neural-symbolic cognitive architecture
This paper presents the Never Ending Open Learning Adaptive Framework
(NEOLAF), an integrated neural-symbolic cognitive architecture that models and
constructs intelligent agents. The NEOLAF framework is a superior approach to
constructing intelligent agents than both the pure connectionist and pure
symbolic approaches due to its explainability, incremental learning,
efficiency, collaborative and distributed learning, human-in-the-loop
enablement, and self-improvement. The paper further presents a compelling
experiment where a NEOLAF agent, built as a problem-solving agent, is fed with
complex math problems from the open-source MATH dataset. The results
demonstrate NEOLAF's superior learning capability and its potential to
revolutionize the field of cognitive architectures and self-improving adaptive
instructional systems
Spin-glass ground state in a triangular-lattice compound YbZnGaO
We report on comprehensive results identifying the ground state of a
triangular-lattice structured YbZnGaO to be spin glass, including no
long-range magnetic order, prominent broad excitation continua, and absence of
magnetic thermal conductivity. More crucially, from the ultralow-temperature
a.c. susceptibility measurements, we unambiguously observe frequency-dependent
peaks around 0.1 K, indicating the spin-glass ground state. We suggest this
conclusion to hold also for its sister compound YbMgGaO, which is confirmed
by the observation of spin freezing at low temperatures. We consider disorder
and frustration to be the main driving force for the spin-glass phase.Comment: Version as accepted to PR
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