98 research outputs found
Structure maps for MAX phases formability revisited
The extraordinary chemical diversity of MAX phases raises the question of how
many and which novel ones are yet to be discovered. The conventional schemes
rely either on executions of well designed experiments or elaborately crafted
calculations; both of which have been key tactics within the past several
decades that have yielded many of important new materials we are studying and
using today. However, these approaches are expensive despite the emergence of
high throughput automations or evolution of high speed computers. In this work,
we have revisited the in prior proposed light duty strategy, i.e. structure
mapping, for describing the genomic conditions under which one MAX phase could
form; that allow us to make successful formability and non formability
separation of MAX phases with a fidelity of 95.5%. Our results suggest that the
proposed coordinates, and further the developed structure maps, are able to
offer a useful initial guiding principles for systematic screenings of
potential MAX phases and provide untapped opportunities for their structure
prediction and materials design
Correlation between serum esterase polymorphism and production performance of Yuxi fat-tailed sheep
The polymorphism of serum esterase (Es) of Henan Yuxi fat-tailed sheep was detected through polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), and the correlation between serum esterase and productivity was analyzed. The research result indicated that there are two alleles on the Es loci of Henan Yuxi fat-tailed sheep: Es+ and Es-. The gene frequencies of Es+ and Es- were 0.55 and 0.45, respectively. Besides, the frequencies of three genotypes (Es++, Es+- and Es--) are 0.425, 0.250 and 0.325, respectively. The recommended height of Es++ genotype is significantly higher than that of Es+- genotype (P<0.05), but the above two produce indistinctive difference in recommended height with Es-- genotype (P>0.05). The chest circumference of Es++ genotype is significantly higher than that of Es-- (P<0.05), but the above two produce indistinctive difference in chest circumference with Es+- genotype (P>0.05). Es exerts no significant impact on other indexes (P>0.05).Keywords: Henan Yuxi fat-tailed sheep, serum esterase (Es), polymorphismAfrican Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 12(9), pp. 986-98
LF-ViT: Reducing Spatial Redundancy in Vision Transformer for Efficient Image Recognition
The Vision Transformer (ViT) excels in accuracy when handling high-resolution
images, yet it confronts the challenge of significant spatial redundancy,
leading to increased computational and memory requirements. To address this, we
present the Localization and Focus Vision Transformer (LF-ViT). This model
operates by strategically curtailing computational demands without impinging on
performance. In the Localization phase, a reduced-resolution image is
processed; if a definitive prediction remains elusive, our pioneering
Neighborhood Global Class Attention (NGCA) mechanism is triggered, effectively
identifying and spotlighting class-discriminative regions based on initial
findings. Subsequently, in the Focus phase, this designated region is used from
the original image to enhance recognition. Uniquely, LF-ViT employs consistent
parameters across both phases, ensuring seamless end-to-end optimization. Our
empirical tests affirm LF-ViT's prowess: it remarkably decreases Deit-S's FLOPs
by 63\% and concurrently amplifies throughput twofold. Code of this project is
at https://github.com/edgeai1/LF-ViT.git
Element Replacement Approach by Reaction with Lewis Acidic Molten Salts to Synthesize Nanolaminated MAX Phases and MXenes
Nanolaminated materials are important because of their exceptional properties
and wide range of applications. Here, we demonstrate a general approach to
synthesize a series of Zn-based MAX phases and Cl-terminated MXenes originating
from the replacement reaction between the MAX phase and the late transition
metal halides. The approach is a top-down route that enables the late
transitional element atom (Zn in the present case) to occupy the A site in the
pre-existing MAX phase structure. Using this replacement reaction between Zn
element from molten ZnCl2 and Al element in MAX phase precursors (Ti3AlC2,
Ti2AlC, Ti2AlN, and V2AlC), novel MAX phases Ti3ZnC2, Ti2ZnC, Ti2ZnN, and V2ZnC
were synthesized. When employing excess ZnCl2, Cl terminated MXenes (such as
Ti3C2Cl2 and Ti2CCl2) were derived by a subsequent exfoliation of Ti3ZnC2 and
Ti2ZnC due to the strong Lewis acidity of molten ZnCl2. These results indicate
that A-site element replacement in traditional MAX phases by late transition
metal halides opens the door to explore MAX phases that are not
thermodynamically stable at high temperature and would be difficult to
synthesize through the commonly employed powder metallurgy approach. In
addition, this is the first time that exclusively Cl-terminated MXenes were
obtained, and the etching effect of Lewis acid in molten salts provides a green
and viable route to prepare MXenes through an HF-free chemical approach.Comment: Title changed; experimental section and discussion revise
Chemical-scissor-mediated structural editing of layered transition metal carbides
Intercalation of non-van der Waals (vdW) layered materials can produce new 2D
and 3D materials with unique properties, but it is difficult to achieve. Here,
we describe a structural editing protocol for 3D non-vdW layered ternary
carbides and nitrides (MAX phases) and their 2D vdW derivatives (MXenes).
Gap-opening and species-intercalating stages were mediated by chemical scissors
and guest intercalants, creating a large family of layered materials with
unconventional elements and structures in MAX phases, as well as MXenes with
versatile termination species. Removal of surface terminations by metal
scissors and stitching of carbide layers by metal atoms leads to a reverse
transformation from MXenes to MAX phases, and metal-intercalated 2D carbides.
This scissor-mediated structural editing may enable structural and chemical
tailoring of other layered ceramics
A body map of super-enhancers and their function in pig
IntroductionSuper-enhancers (SEs) are clusters of enhancers that act synergistically to drive the high-level expression of genes involved in cell identity and function. Although SEs have been extensively investigated in humans and mice, they have not been well characterized in pigs.MethodsHere, we identified 42,380 SEs in 14 pig tissues using chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing, and statistics of its overall situation, studied the composition and characteristics of SE, and explored the influence of SEs characteristics on gene expression.ResultsWe observed that approximately 40% of normal enhancers (NEs) form SEs. Compared to NEs, we found that SEs were more likely to be enriched with an activated enhancer and show activated functions. Interestingly, SEs showed X chromosome depletion and short interspersed nuclear element enrichment, implying that SEs play an important role in sex traits and repeat evolution. Additionally, SE-associated genes exhibited higher expression levels and stronger conservation than NE-associated genes. However, genes with the largest SEs had higher expression levels than those with the smallest SEs, indicating that SE size may influence gene expression. Moreover, we observed a negative correlation between SE gene distance and gene expression, indicating that the proximity of SEs can affect gene activity. Gene ontology enrichment and motif analysis revealed that SEs have strong tissue-specific activity. For example, the CORO2B gene with a brain-specific SE shows strong brain-specific expression, and the phenylalanine hydroxylase gene with liver-specific SEs shows strong liver-specific expression.DiscussionIn this study, we illustrated a body map of SEs and explored their functions in pigs, providing information on the composition and tissue-specific patterns of SEs. This study can serve as a valuable resource of gene regulatory and comparative analyses to the scientific community and provides a theoretical reference for genetic control mechanisms of important traits in pigs
Accelerating the SCE-UA Global Optimization Method Based on Multi-Core CPU and Many-Core GPU
The famous global optimization SCE-UA method, which has been widely used in the field of environmental model parameter calibration, is an effective and robust method. However, the SCE-UA method has a high computational load which prohibits the application of SCE-UA to high dimensional and complex problems. In recent years, the hardware of computer, such as multi-core CPUs and many-core GPUs, improves significantly. These much more powerful new hardware and their software ecosystems provide an opportunity to accelerate the SCE-UA method. In this paper, we proposed two parallel SCE-UA methods and implemented them on Intel multi-core CPU and NVIDIA many-core GPU by OpenMP and CUDA Fortran, respectively. The Griewank benchmark function was adopted in this paper to test and compare the performances of the serial and parallel SCE-UA methods. According to the results of the comparison, some useful advises were given to direct how to properly use the parallel SCE-UA methods
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