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Bin Deng

Researcher at Chengdu University of Technology

Publications -  70
Citations -  1653

Bin Deng is an academic researcher from Chengdu University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Thermochronology & Plateau. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 59 publications receiving 1230 citations. Previous affiliations of Bin Deng include University of Vermont & University of Tübingen.

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Aptamer binding assays for proteins: The thrombin example-A review

TL;DR: This paper critically reviews more than one hundred assays that are based on aptamer binding to thrombin, focusing on homogeneous binding assays, electrochemical aptasensors, and affinity separation techniques.
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A Target-Triggered DNAzyme Motor Enabling Homogeneous, Amplified Detection of Proteins

TL;DR: The concept of a self-powered, target-triggered DNA motor constructed by engineering a DNAzyme to adapt into binding-induced DNA assembly, enabling amplified detection of proteins at room temperature without the need for separation is reported.
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Tectonic evolution of the Sichuan Basin, Southwest China

TL;DR: The Sichuan basin is characterized by two episodes of weak extension and compression which influenced the architecture of the marine platform during Palaeozoic to Middle Triassic times as mentioned in this paper.
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Spatial variation in Meso-Cenozoic exhumation history of the Longmen Shan thrust belt (eastern Tibetan Plateau) and the adjacent western Sichuan basin: Constraints from fission track thermochronology

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used zircon (ZFT) and apatite (AFT) fission track analyses for samples collected from three transects and three boreholes covering the northern, central and southern Longmen Shan and the western Sichuan basin to investigate the Cenozoic exhumation history of the eastern Tibetan Plateau.
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Architecture of basin-mountain systems and their influences on gas distribution: A case study from the Sichuan basin, South China

TL;DR: The margin-plate basin-mountain systems in the Sichuan basin exert major control on today's oil/gas distribution, chiefly through their controlling influence on petroleum reservoirs preservation, the thickness of deposited terrestrial formations and degree of uplift and denudation as mentioned in this paper.