140 research outputs found
Hydraulic fracturing effect of CBM vertical well and its impact on productivity: a case study of Yaojie Mining Area
CBM reservoir is a typical fracture-controlled gas reservoir, and the scale of fracturing and fracture-filling effect have decisive control on gas well productivity. In order to reveal the influence mechanism of the hydraulic fracturing effect of CBM vertical wells on the productivity effect of gas wells, taking the Haishiwan Mining Area of Yaojie, Gansu as an example, this paper focuses on reporting the fracturing effect of coal reservoirs under the form of vertical well development and its understanding of the constraints on productivity. the result shows: ①The fracture pressure of CBM well mainly feeds back the characteristics of the wellbore cement sheath rather than the mechanical properties of the coal reservoir. From the fracturing curve of this well, the fracture pressure is not obvious, indicating that the thickness of the cement sheath in the wellbore annulus is moderate, and the cement sheath is relatively easy to rupture during hydraulic fracturing. The energy of the injected fracturing fluid is mainly used to prop up the coal cracks; ② It can be seen from the fracturing curve that the propagation pressure of the hydraulic fractures(HF) in this well is relatively high, indicating that the structure of coal reservoir is relatively fragmented and coal fines are developed. In addition, there are multiple wave morphological features in the fracture propagation stage of the fracturing curve, indicating that multiple secondary fractures are propped up. On the whole, the HF in this well are relatively complex, and it is speculated that branched secondary fractures develop on both sides of the main HF. ③ Serious sand plugging occurred after sand injection in this well. The main reason was that the fracturing fluid in the coal reservoir was lost due to the loss of the fracturing fluid in the near-wellbore area, resulting in the formation of wedges by proppant de-sanding in the HF, which made subsequent proppant injection difficult. It is related to the coal fines of primary fractures and the development of a small amount of tectonic coal fines; ④ The fracturing microseismic monitoring data show that the main HF of the coal reservoir in this well are NE 50°, and the coal rock microseismic events are more active in the northeast direction, indicating that the natural fracture (NF) of the coal reservoir is more developed in this direction; Based on the observation results of fracturing and mineback, this paper proposes a division plan for the effective propped area, the actual fracture area and the rock mass disturbance area of HF. It is believed that the actual half-length of the HF in the coal reservoir of this well is less than 20 m, the half-length of the effectively propped HF is less than 5 m, and The small amount of fracturing fluid injected, the formation of wedges by proppant de-sanding induced by fracturing fluid-loss, and the sand plugging caused by coal fines accumulation are the main factors for the short fractures in the coal reservoir of this well; ⑤ Combined with the law of coalbed methane productivity, it is considered that the gas reservoir management and drainage system in this well is reasonable,However, the effective propped HF in the coal reservoir are too short, and the coal fines migration in the coal reservoir leads to the rapid decline of the conductivity of the near-well HF, which is the key restricting mechanism for the productivity of gas wells.It is recommended to increase the injection volume of fracturing fluid, appropriately increase the flow rate of fracturing fluid, reduce the proppant-sand ratio, and focus on controlling fracturing fluid leak-off and the formation of screenout wedges in the hydraulic fracturing of coal reservoirs in the later stage.The coal seam in this area has a large burial depth and high stress, and the realization of large-scale fracture propped is the key to coal reservoir fracturing. Meanwhile, the reservoir is dry and the fracturing fluid is seriously leak-off, the CO2 pre-fracturing test can be carried out
Towards Full Automated Drive in Urban Environments: A Demonstration in GoMentum Station, California
Each year, millions of motor vehicle traffic accidents all over the world
cause a large number of fatalities, injuries and significant material loss.
Automated Driving (AD) has potential to drastically reduce such accidents. In
this work, we focus on the technical challenges that arise from AD in urban
environments. We present the overall architecture of an AD system and describe
in detail the perception and planning modules. The AD system, built on a
modified Acura RLX, was demonstrated in a course in GoMentum Station in
California. We demonstrated autonomous handling of 4 scenarios: traffic lights,
cross-traffic at intersections, construction zones and pedestrians. The AD
vehicle displayed safe behavior and performed consistently in repeated
demonstrations with slight variations in conditions. Overall, we completed 44
runs, encompassing 110km of automated driving with only 3 cases where the
driver intervened the control of the vehicle, mostly due to error in GPS
positioning. Our demonstration showed that robust and consistent behavior in
urban scenarios is possible, yet more investigation is necessary for full scale
roll-out on public roads.Comment: Accepted to Intelligent Vehicles Conference (IV 2017
Detecting GPC3-Expressing Hepatocellular Carcinoma with L5 Peptide-Guided Pretargeting Approach: An In Vitro MRI Experiment
Background and Aim: Glypican-3 (GPC3) is a novel molecular target for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). This study investigated the potential of an L5 peptide-guided pretargeting approach to identify GPC3-expressing HCC cells using ultra-small super-paramagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) as the MRI probe.Methods: Immunofluorescence with carboxyfluorescein (FAM)-labeled L5 peptide was performed in HepG2 and HL-7702 cells. Polyethylene glycol-modified ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (PEG-USPIO) and its conjugates with streptavidin (SA-PEG-USPIO) were synthesized, and hydrodynamic diameters, zeta potential, T2 relaxivity, and cytotoxicity were measured. MR T2-weighted imaging of HepG2 was performed to observe signal changes in the pretargeting group, which was first incubated with biotinylated L5 peptide and then with SA-PEG-USPIO. Prussian blue staining of cells was used to assess iron deposition.Results: Immunofluorescence assays showed high specificity of L5 peptide for GPC3. SA-PEG-USPIO nanoparticles had ≈36 nm hydrodynamic diameter, low toxicity, negative charge and high T2 relaxivity. MR imaging revealed that a significant negative enhancement was only observed in HepG2 cells from the pretargeting group, which also showed significant iron deposition with Prussian blue staining.Conclusion: MR imaging with USPIO as the probe has potential to identify GPC3-expressing HCC through L5 peptide-guided pretargeting approach
Backdoor Attacks on Crowd Counting
Crowd counting is a regression task that estimates the number of people in a
scene image, which plays a vital role in a range of safety-critical
applications, such as video surveillance, traffic monitoring and flow control.
In this paper, we investigate the vulnerability of deep learning based crowd
counting models to backdoor attacks, a major security threat to deep learning.
A backdoor attack implants a backdoor trigger into a target model via data
poisoning so as to control the model's predictions at test time. Different from
image classification models on which most of existing backdoor attacks have
been developed and tested, crowd counting models are regression models that
output multi-dimensional density maps, thus requiring different techniques to
manipulate.
In this paper, we propose two novel Density Manipulation Backdoor Attacks
(DMBA and DMBA) to attack the model to produce arbitrarily large or
small density estimations. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness
of our DMBA attacks on five classic crowd counting models and four types of
datasets. We also provide an in-depth analysis of the unique challenges of
backdooring crowd counting models and reveal two key elements of effective
attacks: 1) full and dense triggers and 2) manipulation of the ground truth
counts or density maps. Our work could help evaluate the vulnerability of crowd
counting models to potential backdoor attacks.Comment: To appear in ACMMM 2022. 10pages, 6 figures and 2 table
Privacy and Robustness in Federated Learning: Attacks and Defenses
As data are increasingly being stored in different silos and societies
becoming more aware of data privacy issues, the traditional centralized
training of artificial intelligence (AI) models is facing efficiency and
privacy challenges. Recently, federated learning (FL) has emerged as an
alternative solution and continue to thrive in this new reality. Existing FL
protocol design has been shown to be vulnerable to adversaries within or
outside of the system, compromising data privacy and system robustness. Besides
training powerful global models, it is of paramount importance to design FL
systems that have privacy guarantees and are resistant to different types of
adversaries. In this paper, we conduct the first comprehensive survey on this
topic. Through a concise introduction to the concept of FL, and a unique
taxonomy covering: 1) threat models; 2) poisoning attacks and defenses against
robustness; 3) inference attacks and defenses against privacy, we provide an
accessible review of this important topic. We highlight the intuitions, key
techniques as well as fundamental assumptions adopted by various attacks and
defenses. Finally, we discuss promising future research directions towards
robust and privacy-preserving federated learning.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2003.02133; text overlap
with arXiv:1911.11815 by other author
Hepatotoxicity induced by zoledronic acid in an aged woman with primary osteoporosis
Zoledronic acid, a bisphosphonate, has been approved for treatment and prevention of osteoporosis. This case describes a 73-year-old woman with primary osteoporosis who developed transient hepatotoxicity after zoledronic acid (ZOL) treatment. Three days after ZOL infusion, aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) were increased by 9.9, 8.1, and 3.7 times, respectively, compared with pretreatment values. Liver protective agents were administered. The aminotransferase returned within normal ranges 12 days post-infusion. Currently, the relationship of ZOL and liver damage is not quite clear, which cannot be explained by its pharmacokinetics. The aim of this
case report is to increase the clinician’s awareness of the possible adverse effect on the liver, and ZOL should be cautiously administered in patients with liver disease
Numerical investigation of cycle performance in compressed air energy storage in aquifers
Compressed air energy storage (CAES) is one of the promising technologies to store the renewable energies such as surplus solar and wind energy in a grid scale. Due to the widespread of aquifers in the world, the compressed air energy storage in aquifers (CAESA) has advantages compared with the compressed air energy storage in caverns and air tanks. The feasibility of aquifers as storage media in CAES system has been demonstrated by numerical models and field tests. This study proposes a numerical model by Transport of Unsaturated Groundwater and Heat Version 3.0/Equation-of-State 3 (TOUGH3/EOS3) to simulate a field-scale study of a novel CAES by storing the compressed air in aquifers. The feasibility of the model has been demonstrated by comparison of simulation results and monitoring data. After that, three types of cycles, which are daily cycle, weekly cycle and monthly cycle, are designed to study their performance within a month working cycle. Their gas saturation show small differences after one month cycle. When the air with temperature of 50 °C injected into aquifers with temperature of 20 °C, after the cycle finished, the air temperature in aquifer of daily cycle are 5.4 °C higher than that of weekly cycle and 10.8 °C higher than that of monthly cycle. It is indicated that during the same cycle periods, the more cycle times, the higher air temperature in aquifers after the cycle. The energy recovery efficiencies for daily cycle, weekly cycle and monthly cycle are 96.96%, 96.27% and 93.15%, respectively. The slight increase of energy recovery efficiencies from daily cycle to monthly cycle indicate that with the same energy storage scales, the energy produced by daily cycle has slight competitiveness. The simulation results can provide references for engineering application in future
The KLF4–p62 axis prevents vascular endothelial cell injury via the mTOR/S6K pathway and autophagy in diabetic kidney disease
Introduction: Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is a complication of systemic diabetic microangiopathy, which has a high risk of developing into end-stage renal disease and death. This study explored the mechanism underlying autophagy in DKD vascular endothelial cell injury.
Material and methods: DKD and vascular endothelial cell injury models were established using Sprague Dawley rats and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). HUVECs overexpressing Kruppel-like factor 4 (KLF4) were constructed by transient transfection of plasmids. Biochemical determination of urinary protein and blood urea nitrogen (BUN), superoxide dismutase (SOD), and creatinine (Scr) levels was performed. Renal pathology was observed by periodic acid–Schiff (PAS) staining. Cell Counting Kit-8 (CCK8), terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labelling (TUNEL), and immunocytochemistry (ICC) were used to analyse the growth and apoptosis of HUVECs. Microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 (LC3) expression was observed by immunofluorescence (IF). The reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels were measured using flow cytometry. Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), KLF4, and tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) levels were detected using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The expression of KLF4, p62 protein, and LC3 was analysed using reverse transcription quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). S6 kinase (S6K), p70 ribosomal S6 kinase (p-S6K), Beclin1, ATG5, LC3, p62, Caspase-3, mammalian target of rapamycine (mTOR), and phsophorylated mTOR (p-mTOR) expressions were detected by western blotting.
Results: PAS-positive substances (polysaccharide and glycogen) and S6K protein levels increased, and LC3 protein expression decreased in DKD rats. The levels of urinary protein, BUN, and Scr increased, and KLF4 decreased in DKD rats. High glucose (HG) levels decreased the proliferation and increased the apoptosis rate of HUVECs. The expression of ROS, TNF-α, MCP-1, and p62 increased, while the expression of SOD, KLF4, Beclin1, ATG5, and LC3 decreased in HG-induced HUVECs. KLF4 overexpression significantly increased Beclin1, ATG5, and LC3 protein expression and decreased p62 protein expression compared to the oe-NC group in HG-induced HUVECs. KLF4 overexpression inhibits the expression of Caspase-3, p-mTOR, and p-S6K in HG-induced HUVECs.
Conclusions: KLF4–p62 axis improved vascular endothelial cell injury by regulating inflammation and the mTOR/S6K pathway in DKD
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