160 research outputs found

    Oil Saturation Boundary for Partial Oil and Partial Water Recognition in the Oil-Water Transition Zone

    Get PDF
    With the development of oilfield, the oil reserves in oil-water transition zone has become a significant part of comprehensive reserves gradually. Especially the partial oil layer of oil-water transition zone has potential exploitation. But how to identify partial oil layer has become a difficulty in the development planning of the oil-water transition zone. Over the years, there has been little research on the oil-water transition. The oil saturation boundaries for partial oil and partial water recognition are mainly studied in this paper. Two major approaches, theoretical calculation methods and cumulative probability curve have been applied to the study. That will provide the basis for further perforation development and dynamic adjustment.Key words: The oil-water transition zone; Partial oil layer; Oil saturation; Theoretical calculation methods; Cumulative probability curv

    Anisotropic nanomechanical properties of bovine horn using modulus mapping

    Get PDF
    Bovine horns are durable that they can withstand an extreme loading force which with special structures and mechanical properties. In this paper, we apply quasi-static nanoindentation and modulus mapping techniques to research the nanomechanical properties of bovine horn in the transverse direction (TD) and longitudinal direction (LD). In quasi-static nanoindentation, the horn’s modulus and hardness in the inner layer and the outer layer demonstrated a gradual increase in both TD and LD. Laser scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM) revealed microstructure in the horn with wavy morphology in the TD cross-section and laminate in the LD cross-section. When using tensile tests or quasi-static nanoindentation tests alone, the anisotropy of the mechanical properties of bovine horn were not obvious. However, when using modulus mapping, storage modulus (E′), loss modulus (E″) and loss ratio (tan δ) are clearly different depending on the position in the TD and LD. Modulus mapping is proposed as accurately describing the internal structures of bovine horn and helpful in understanding the horn’s energy-absorption, stiffness and strength that resists forces during fighting

    Forage Genomics Accelerate the Germplasm Resource Innovation

    Get PDF
    To achieve sustainability and food security we need expand the germplasm base and access novel genetic diversity to accelerate breeding. For developing new forage cultivars, the availability of a high-quality genome facilitates accurate characterization of new germplasm, and an understanding of the genetics underlying important traits. Here, we sequenced and assembled three high-quality chromosome-level forage genomes. The contig-level assembly of Cleistogenes songorica (2n = 4x = 40) comprised 540.12 Mb of the genome, with a contig N50 of 21.28 Mb. Complete assemblies of all telomeres, and of ten chromosomes were derived. The chromosome-scale genome size of elephant grass (2n = 4x = 28) was 1.97 Gb and heterozygosity rate was 1.5%. The chromosome-scale genome size of Melilotus albus (2n = 2x = 16) was 1.04 Gb, containing 71.42% repetitive elements. This study provides implementation pathways to study genome evolution, adaptation to stress and genetic basis of unique or complex traits in three species. The genomic resources that we developed in this study offer valuable information that will facilitate efficient germplasm exploration and genetic improvement of the three species for pasture uses

    Challenges and Solutions for Automotive OTA Testing

    Get PDF
    OTA (Over-The-Air) Testing is Essential for Developing Assisted and Autonomous Driving Systems in Vehicles, as It Plays a Crucial Role in the Localization, Perception, and Intelligent Driving Capabilities of ICVs (Intelligent Connected Vehicles). Automotive Antennas, Typically Much Smaller in Size Than the Vehicle itself and Can Be Located in Various Positions, Require Spherical Near-Field Measurement for OTA Testing. While There Are Established Standards for OTA Testing Methods and Uncertainties for Mobile Devices, Base Stations, and Satellite Components, There Are Still Many Challenges in the OTA Testing of Automotive Systems. These Challenges, specifically in SISO (Single Input Single Output) and MIMO (Multiple Input Multiple Output) Configurations, Are Discussed Along with Potential Solutions in This Article

    Polarization-independent liquid crystal phase modulator using a thin polymer-separated double-layered structure

    Get PDF
    A polarization-independent phase-only liquid crystal (LC) phase modulator using a double-layered structure is demonstrated. Two orthogonal LC layers are separated by two ultra-thin anisotropic polymer films. The anisotropic polymeric films not only separate the LC layers but also provide good molecular alignment. As a result, a polarization-independent phase modulator with 2 pi phase shift is achieved at 9V(rms) and 8.1 pi at 40V(rms) using a 12-mu m-thick E7 LC layers. This operating voltage is similar to 10X lower than that using a conventional 0.3-mm-thick glass separator

    Electrically tunable wettability of liquid crystal/polymer composite films

    Get PDF
    An electrically tunable wettability in a liquid crystal/polymer composite film is demonstrated, in which liquid crystal molecules are anchored among polymer grains. The tunable wettability of the composite films originates from the reorientation of the anchored liquid-crystal molecules, which is switched by an in-plane electric field with squared pulses of voltages. These liquid crystal/polymer composite films with electrically tunable wettability have potential applications in polarizer-free displays, ink-jet printing, microfluidic devices, and lab-on-a-chip

    Genome-Wide Transcriptional Profiling of the Response of Staphylococcus aureus to Cryptotanshinone

    Get PDF
    Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) strains with multiple antibiotic resistances are increasingly widespread, and new agents are required for the treatment of S. aureus. Cryptotanshinone (CT), a major tanshinone of medicinal plant Salvia miltiorrhiza Bunge, demonstrated effective in vitro antibacterial activity against all 21 S. aureus strains tested in this experiment. Affymetrix GeneChips were utilized to determine the global transcriptional response of S. aureus ATCC 25923 to treatment with subinhibitory concentrations of CT. Transcriptome profiling indicated that the antibacterial action of CT may be associated with its action as active oxygen radical generator; S. aureus undergoes an oxygen-limiting state upon exposure to CT

    Bio-inspirations for the Development of Light Materials based on the Nanomechanical Properties and Microstructures of Beetle Dynastes tityus

    Get PDF
    Dynastes tityus (D. tityus) is a typical beetle whose elytra are light and strong. The primary function of elytra is to protect beetle’s hindwings. In this paper, D. tityus elytra were selected as the biological prototype for the investigation to obtain bio-inspirations for the design and development of light materials with high ratio of strength to mass. Firstly, the microstructure investigation and quasi-static nanoindentation tests have been carried out on the ten samples of the selected elytra of D. tityus to reveal their mechanical properties and microstructures. Secondly, based on the findings from the microstructure investigation and nanoindentation tests, three models of bio-inspired materials have been proposed for further study to gain the deep understanding of the relationships between the special mechanical characteristics and microstructures. Then Finite Element Analysis (FEA) simulations have been performed on the three models for harvesting the bio-inspirations for the initial design of light materials. Finally, through comparative analysis of the findings from the microstructure investigation, the nanoindentation tests and the simulations, some meaningful bio-inspirations have been reaped for the future optimization of the design and development of light materials with high ratio of strength to mass

    Agents: An Open-source Framework for Autonomous Language Agents

    Full text link
    Recent advances on large language models (LLMs) enable researchers and developers to build autonomous language agents that can automatically solve various tasks and interact with environments, humans, and other agents using natural language interfaces. We consider language agents as a promising direction towards artificial general intelligence and release Agents, an open-source library with the goal of opening up these advances to a wider non-specialist audience. Agents is carefully engineered to support important features including planning, memory, tool usage, multi-agent communication, and fine-grained symbolic control. Agents is user-friendly as it enables non-specialists to build, customize, test, tune, and deploy state-of-the-art autonomous language agents without much coding. The library is also research-friendly as its modularized design makes it easily extensible for researchers. Agents is available at https://github.com/aiwaves-cn/agents.Comment: Code available at https://github.com/aiwaves-cn/agent
    corecore