scispace - formally typeset
R

Rong Wang

Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publications -  1085
Citations -  42153

Rong Wang is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Membrane & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 950 publications receiving 32172 citations. Previous affiliations of Rong Wang include Lanzhou University & Hunan Agricultural University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Design, development and evaluation of nanofibrous composite membranes with opposing membrane wetting properties for extractive membrane bioreactors

TL;DR: Novel nanofibrous composite membranes with a superhydrophobic surface (coded as NC) or a superHydrophilic surface ( coded as M-NC) on the receiving side have been designed, developed and evaluated in EMBRs, demonstrating its feasibility for hostile industrial wastewater treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The coming of age of water channels for separation membranes: from biological to biomimetic to synthetic.

TL;DR: This review outlines the progress of a comprehensive amount of nanochannels, which include aquaporins, pillar[5]arenes, I-quartets, different types of nanotubes and their porins, graphene-based materials, metal- and covalent-organic frameworks, porous organic cages, MoS2, and MXenes, offering a comparative glimpse into where their potential lies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid memristor-CMOS neurons for in situ learning in fully hardware memristive spiking neural networks

TL;DR: In this article, a hybrid spiking neuron combining a memristor with simple digital circuits is designed and implemented in hardware to enhance neuron functions, which not only realizes the basic leaky integrate-and-fire neuron function but also enables the in-situ tuning of the connected synaptic weights.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asiatic acid ameliorates CCl4-induced liver fibrosis in rats: involvement of Nrf2/ARE, NF-κB/IκBα, and JAK1/STAT3 signaling pathways.

TL;DR: AA treatment dramatically ameliorated CCl4-induced oxidative stress, inflammation, and fibrosis in rats by regulating Nrf2/ARE, NF-κB/IκBα, and JAK1/STAT3 signaling pathways, which suggests that AA might be a new antifibrosis agent that improves liver fibrosis.