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Yi Cui

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  1109
Citations -  245406

Yi Cui is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anode & Lithium. The author has an hindex of 220, co-authored 1015 publications receiving 199725 citations. Previous affiliations of Yi Cui include KAIST & University of California, Berkeley.

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Designing hierarchical nanoporous membranes for highly efficient gas adsorption and storage.

TL;DR: This work designed hierarchical nanoporous membranes (HNMs), a class of nanocomposites combined with a carbon sphere and graphene oxide that contain micropores that are dominated by a combination of ultramicropores and mesopores, resulting in high VOCs/H2 adsorption capacity.
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Multiple Myeloma DREAM Challenge reveals epigenetic regulator PHF19 as marker of aggressive disease.

TL;DR: The Multiple Myeloma DREAM Challenge, a crowdsourced effort to develop models of rapid progression in newly diagnosed myeloma patients and to benchmark these against previously published models, found that incorporating specific demographic and clinical features improved gene expression-based models of high risk.
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Electrochemical Control of Copper Intercalation into Nanoscale Bi2Se3.

TL;DR: A general electrochemical intercalation method to efficaciously regulate the concentration of zerovalent copper atoms into layered Bi2Se3, followed by comprehensive experimental characterization and analyses that demonstrates a new methodology to study fundamentally new and unexpected physical behaviors in intercalated metastable materials.
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Nanosecond in situ transmission electron microscope studies of the reversible Ge2Sb2Te5 crystalline ⇔ amorphous phase transformation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used nanosecond-scale time-resolved diffraction with intense electron pulses to study Ge2Sb2Te5 during laser crystallization, enabling in situ transmission electron microscope (TEM) study of both microstructural and crystallographic changes caused by repeated switching.
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Dissecting the behavior and function of MBD3 in DNA methylation homeostasis by single-molecule spectroscopy and microscopy

TL;DR: It is revealed that a proportion of MBD3 and MBD2 would co-localize with DNMT1 during DNA maintenance methylation, providing a proofreading and protective mechanism against a possible excessive methylation byDNMT1.