科研成果 by Year: 2014

2014
Li Z, Lu H, Yang W, Yong J, Zhang Z-N, Zhang K, Deng H, Xu Y. Mouse SCNT ESCs have lower somatic mutation load than syngeneic iPSCs. Stem Cell Reports. 2014;(4):399-405.
Chen G, Wang XQ, Fu K, Rong X, Hashimoto H, Zhang BS, Xu FJ, Tang N, Yoshikawa A, Ge WK, et al. Multi-bands photoconductive response in AlGaN/GaN multiple quantum wells. Applied Physics Letters. 2014;104:172108.
Hao Z, Lou H, Zhu R, Zhu J, Zhang D, Zhao BS, Zeng S, Chen X, Chan J, He C, et al. The multiple antibiotic resistance regulator MarR is a copper sensor in Escherichia coli. Nature Chemical Biology [Internet]. 2014;(1):21-28. 访问链接
Hao Z, Lou H, Zhu R, Zhu J, Zhang D, Zhao BS, Zeng S, Chen X, Chan J, He C, et al. The multiple antibiotic resistance regulator MarR is a copper sensor in Escherichia coli. Nature Chemical Biology [Internet]. 2014;(1):21-28. 访问链接
Nanoscale all-optical devices based on surface plasmon polaritons
Chen J, Sun C, Hu X. Nanoscale all-optical devices based on surface plasmon polaritons. CHINESE SCIENCE BULLETIN. 2014;59:2661-2665.Abstract
Surface plasmon polariton, a kind of surface electromagnetic wave propagating along the interface between metals and dielectrics, provides an excellent platform for the realization of integrated photonic devices due to its unique properties of confining light into subwavelength scales. Our recent research progresses of nanoscale integrated photonic devices based on surface plasmon polaritons, including all-optical switches, all-optical logic discriminator, and all-optical routers, are introduced in detail.
Bai P, Kao J, Chen J-H, Mickelson W, Zettl A, Xu T. Nanostructures on graphene using supramolecule and supramolecular nanocomposites. Nanoscale. 2014;(9):4503-4507.
Wu P, Shi H-S, Luo Y-xiao, Zhang R-X, Li J-L, Shi J, Lu L, Zhu W-L. Neuropeptide trefoil factor 3 attenuates naloxone-precipitated withdrawal in morphine-dependent mice. Psychopharmacology. 2014.
Wang J-T, Chen C, Wang E, Kawazoe Y. A new carbon allotrope with six-fold helical chains in all-sp 2 bonding networks. Scientific Reports. 2014.
Song K, Ren J, Reinert G, Deng M, Waterman MS, Sun F. New developments of alignment-free sequence comparison: Measures, statistics and next-generation sequencing. Briefings in Bioinformatics. 2014;(3):343-353.
Zhou F, Shang ZY, Ciais P, Tao S, Piao SL, Raymond P, He CF, Li BG, Wang R, Wang XH, et al. A New High-Resolution N2O Emission Inventory for China in 2008. Environmental Science & Technology. 2014;48:8538-8547.Abstract
The amount and geographic distribution of N2O emissions over China remain largely uncertain. In this study, county-level and 0.1 degrees x 0.1 degrees gridded anthropogenic N2O emission inventories for China (PKU-N2O) in 2008 are developed based on high-resolution activity data and regional emission factors (EFs) and parameters. These new estimates are compared with previous inventories, and with two sensitivity tests: one that uses high-resolution activity data but the default IPCC methodology (S1) and the other that uses regional EFs and parameters but starts from coarser-resolution activity data. The total N2O emissions are 2150 GgN(2)O/yr (interquartile range from 1174 to 2787 GgN(2)O/yr). Agriculture contributes 64% of the total, followed by energy (17%), indirect emissions (12%), wastes (5%), industry (2.896), and wildfires (0.2%). Our national emission total is 17% greater than that of the EDGAR v4.2 global product sampled over China and is also greater than the GAINS-China, NDRC, and SI estimates by 10%, 50%, and 17%, respectively. We also found that using uniform EFs and parameters or starting from national/provincial data spatial biases compared to PKU-N2O. Spatial analysis shows nonlinear relationships between N2O emission intensities and urbanization. Per-capita and per-GDP N2O emissions increase gradually with an increase in the urban population fraction from 0.3 to 0.9 among 2884 counties, and N2O emission density increases with urban expansion.
Zheng H, Xiao D, Li X, Liu Y, Wu Y, Wang J, Jiang K, Chen C, Gu L, Wei X, et al. New Insight in Understanding Oxygen Reduction and Evolution in Solid-State Lithium Oxygen Batteries Using an in Situ Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope. Nano Letters. 2014;14:4245-4249.
Sun H-qiang, Bao Y-P, Zhou S-J, Meng S-Q, Lu L. The new pattern of drug abuse in China. Current Opinion in Psychiatry. 2014;(4):251-255.
Shao L. New pulsar limit on local Lorentz invariance violation of gravity in the standard-model extension. Phys. Rev. D. 2014;90:122009.
Yang F, Zhou L, Wang Q, You X, Li Y, Zhao Y, Han X, Chang Z, He X, Cheng C, et al. NEXN inhibits GATA4 and leads to atrial septal defects inmice and humans. Cardiovascular Research. 2014;(2):228-237.
Yang F, Zhou L, Wang Q, You X, Li Y, Zhao Y, Han X, Chang Z, He X, Cheng C, et al. NEXN inhibits GATA4 and leads to atrial septal defects inmice and humans. Cardiovascular Research. 2014;(2):228-237.
Lu KD, Rohrer F, Holland F, Fuchs H, Brauers T, Oebel A, Dlugi R, Hu M, Li X, Lou SR, et al. Nighttime observation and chemistry of HOx in the Pearl River Delta and Beijing in summer 2006. Atmospheric Chemistry and PhysicsAtmospheric Chemistry and PhysicsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics. 2014;14:4979-4999.Abstract
Nighttime HOx chemistry was investigated in two ground-based field campaigns (PRIDE-PRD2006 and CAREBEIJING2006) in summer 2006 in China by comparison of measured and modeled concentration data of OH and HO2. The measurement sites were located in a rural environment in the Pearl River Delta (PRD) under urban influence and in a suburban area close to Beijing, respectively. In both locations, significant nighttime concentrations of radicals were observed under conditions with high total OH reactivities of about 40-50 s(-1) in PRD and 25 s(-1) near Beijing. For OH, the nocturnal concentrations were within the range of (0.5-3) x 10(6) cm(-3), implying a significant nighttime oxidation rate of pollutants on the order of several ppb per hour. The measured nighttime concentration of HO2 was about (0.2-5) x 10(8) cm(-3), containing a significant, model-estimated contribution from RO2 as an interference. A chemical box model based on an established chemical mechanism is capable of reproducing the measured nighttime values of the measured peroxy radicals and k(OH), but underestimates in both field campaigns the observed OH by about 1 order of magnitude. Sensitivity studies with the box model demonstrate that the OH discrepancy between measured and modeled nighttime OH can be resolved, if an additional ROx production process (about 1 ppb h(-1)) and additional recycling (RO2 -> HO2 -> OH) with an efficiency equivalent to 1 ppb NO is assumed. The additional recycling mechanism was also needed to reproduce the OH observations at the same locations during daytime for conditions with NO mixing ratios below 1 ppb. This could be an indication that the same missing process operates at day and night. In principle, the required primary ROx source can be explained by ozonolysis of terpenoids, which react faster with ozone than with OH in the nighttime atmosphere. However, the amount of these highly reactive biogenic volatile organic compounds (VOCs) would require a strong local source, for which there is no direct evidence. A more likely explanation for an additional ROx source is the vertical downward transport of radical reservoir species in the stable nocturnal boundary layer. Using a simplified one-dimensional two-box model, it can be shown that ground-based NO emissions could generate a large vertical gradient causing a downward flux of peroxy acetic nitrate (PAN) and peroxymethacryloyl nitrate (MPAN). The downward transport and the following thermal decomposition of these compounds can produce up to 0.3 ppb h(-1) radicals in the atmospheric layer near the ground. Although this rate is not sufficient to explain the complete OH discrepancy, it indicates the potentially important role of vertical transport in the lower nighttime atmosphere.
Lu K, Rohrer F, Holland F, Fuchs H, Brauers T, Oebel A, Dlugi R, Hu M, Li X, Lou S, et al. Nighttime observation and chemistry of HOx in the Pearl River Delta and Beijing in summer 2006. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. 2014;14(10):4979–4999.Abstract
Nighttime HOx chemistry was investigated in two ground-based field campaigns (PRIDE-PRD2006 and CAREBEIJING2006) in summer 2006 in China by comparison of measured and modeled concentration data of OH and HO2. The measurement sites were located in a rural environment in the Pearl River Delta (PRD) under urban influence and in a suburban area close to Beijing, respectively. In both locations, significant nighttime concentrations of radicals were observed under conditions with high total OH reactivities of about 40-50 s(-1) in PRD and 25 s(-1) near Beijing. For OH, the nocturnal concentrations were within the range of (0.5-3) x 10(6) cm(-3), implying a significant nighttime oxidation rate of pollutants on the order of several ppb per hour. The measured nighttime concentration of HO2 was about (0.2-5) x 10(8) cm(-3), containing a significant, model-estimated contribution from RO2 as an interference. A chemical box model based on an established chemical mechanism is capable of reproducing the measured nighttime values of the measured peroxy radicals and k(OH), but underestimates in both field campaigns the observed OH by about 1 order of magnitude. Sensitivity studies with the box model demonstrate that the OH discrepancy between measured and modeled nighttime OH can be resolved, if an additional ROx production process (about 1 ppb h(-1)) and additional recycling (RO2 -> HO2 -> OH) with an efficiency equivalent to 1 ppb NO is assumed. The additional recycling mechanism was also needed to reproduce the OH observations at the same locations during daytime for conditions with NO mixing ratios below 1 ppb. This could be an indication that the same missing process operates at day and night. In principle, the required primary ROx source can be explained by ozonolysis of terpenoids, which react faster with ozone than with OH in the nighttime atmosphere. However, the amount of these highly reactive biogenic volatile organic compounds (VOCs) would require a strong local source, for which there is no direct evidence. A more likely explanation for an additional ROx source is the vertical downward transport of radical reservoir species in the stable nocturnal boundary layer. Using a simplified one-dimensional two-box model, it can be shown that ground-based NO emissions could generate a large vertical gradient causing a downward flux of peroxy acetic nitrate (PAN) and peroxymethacryloyl nitrate (MPAN). The downward transport and the following thermal decomposition of these compounds can produce up to 0.3 ppb h(-1) radicals in the atmospheric layer near the ground. Although this rate is not sufficient to explain the complete OH discrepancy, it indicates the potentially important role of vertical transport in the lower nighttime atmosphere.
Cai K, Xie J, Zhao D*. NIR J-Aggregates of Hydroazaheptacene Tetraimides. J. Am. Chem. Soc. [Internet]. 2014;136(1):28-31. [Read Online]Abstract
Hydroazaacene dicarboximide derivatives with red to NIR absorptions are designed and synthesized, which exhibit well-defined J-aggregation behaviors in both solution and thin films. The absorption and emission of an aggregate extend well into the NIR regime (lambda(max) = 902 nm), manifesting particularly narrow bandwidth (fwhm = 152 cm(-1)) and is nearly transparent in the visible region.
Yang C, Cai X-C, Keyes DE, Pernice M. NKS method for the implicit solution of a coupled Allen-Cahn/Cahn-Hilliard system. In: Erhel J, Gander MJ, Halpern L, Pichot G, Sassi T, Widlund O Proc. 21st International Conference on Domain Decomposition Methods, Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering. Vol. 98. Rennes, France: Springer; 2014. pp. 819–827. 访问链接
Robinson JR, Yadav J, Fan XY, Stanton GR, Schelter EJ, Pericas MA, Walsh PJ. Non-Covalent Immobilization of Rare Earth Heterobimetallic Frameworks and their Reactivity in an Asymmetric Michael Addition. Advanced Synthesis & CatalysisAdvanced Synthesis & Catalysis. 2014;356:1243-1254.Abstract
Heterobimetallic Lewis acid catalysts are broadly useful and methods to recycle them have immediate applications. However, their immobilization through covalent binding can be challenging. Non-covalent immobilization of supported asymmetric catalysts is attractive due to ease of preparation and potential for reversible binding. We report a novel non-covalent binding strategy for Shibasaki's REMB framework {RE=rare earth metal; M=Li, Na, K; B=BINOL; RE:M:B=1:3:3, [M-3(sol)(n)][(BINOLate)(3)RE]} and explore the reactivity of the supported catalyst.

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