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Lei Yang

Researcher at Dalian University of Technology

Publications -  345
Citations -  10291

Lei Yang is an academic researcher from Dalian University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Clathrate hydrate & Hydrate. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 257 publications receiving 6671 citations. Previous affiliations of Lei Yang include Aalto University & Florida Museum of Natural History.

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Highly fractionated granites: Recognition and research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that granites are an important sign indicating compositional maturity of the continental crust, and they are also closely related to the rare-elemental (metal) mineralization of W, Sn, Nb, Ta, Li, Be, Rb, Cs, REEs, etc.
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Endogenous Arabidopsis messenger RNAs transported to distant tissues

TL;DR: The comprehensive identification of 2,006 genes producing mobile RNAs in Arabidopsis thaliana allowed the identification of mRNAs moving between various organs under normal or nutrient-limiting conditions and suggests that a postulated tissue-specific gene expression profile might not be predictive for the actual plant body part in which a transcript exerts its function.
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Two-Dimensional Water-Coupled Metallic MoS2 with Nanochannels for Ultrafast Supercapacitors

TL;DR: It is suggested that multilayered M-MoS2-H2O system with ion accessible large nanochannels and efficient charge transport provide an efficient energy storage strategy for ultrafast supercapacitors.
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CYP76AH1 catalyzes turnover of miltiradiene in tanshinones biosynthesis and enables heterologous production of ferruginol in yeasts.

TL;DR: The results and the approaches that were described here provide a solid foundation to further elucidate the biosynthesis of tanshinones and related diterpenoids and should facilitate the construction of microbial cell factories for the production of phytoterpenoids.
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Toxicological effects of TiO2 and ZnO nanoparticles in soil on earthworm Eisenia fetida.

TL;DR: The results from response of the antioxidant system combined with DNA damage endpoint (comet assay) indicated that both TiO2 and ZnO NPs could induce significant damage to earthworms when doses were greater than 1.0 ǫ g kg−1 as mentioned in this paper.