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Institution

Henan Normal University

EducationXinxiang, China
About: Henan Normal University is a education organization based out in Xinxiang, China. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Ionic liquid. The organization has 10863 authors who have published 11077 publications receiving 166773 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Low catalytic platinum-palladium nanowires with a subtle lattice strain and Boerdijk-Coxeter helix type morphology are synthesized through a surfactant-free, thermal single phase solvent method and exhibit significantly improved electrocatalytic activity and stability for the oxygen reduction reaction.
Abstract: Electrocatalytic activity of alloy nanocatalytsts can be manipulated effectively by tuning their physical properties (ensemble, geometric, and ligand effects) to afford optimal surface structure and compositions for proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) application. Herein, highly catalytic platinum-palladium nanowires (PtnPd100-n NWs) with a subtle lattice strain and Boerdijk-Coxeter helix type morphology are synthesized through a surfactant-free, thermal single phase solvent method. X-ray diffraction results show that PtnPd100-n NWs are exposed through the (111) facets and their shrinking or expanding lattice parameters can be modulated by the alloy compositions. Electrochemical results reveal that their high catalytic activity correlates with the lattice shrinking, facets, and bimetallic compositions, showing higher activity when the ratio of Pt and Pd is ∼78:22, which is further supported by DFT results. Compared to the nanoparticle type platinum-palladium alloyed catalysts with similar metal compositions (PtnPd100-n NPs), the PtnPd100-n NWs exhibit significantly improved electrocatalytic activity and stability for the oxygen reduction reaction. These findings open new strategies to design the highly active and stable alloy nanocatalysts with controllable compositions.

62 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
24 Oct 2017-Genes
TL;DR: The possible connections between evolution and epigenetic alterations in chromosome structure and repatterning, such as heterochromatin formation, centromere function, and epigenetically-associated transposable element inactivation are discussed.
Abstract: Chromosome evolution is a fundamental aspect of evolutionary biology. The evolution of chromosome size, structure and shape, number, and the change in DNA composition suggest the high plasticity of nuclear genomes at the chromosomal level. Repetitive DNA sequences, which represent a conspicuous fraction of every eukaryotic genome, particularly in plants, are found to be tightly linked with plant chromosome evolution. Different classes of repetitive sequences have distinct distribution patterns on the chromosomes. Mounting evidence shows that repetitive sequences may play multiple generative roles in shaping the chromosome karyotypes in plants. Furthermore, recent development in our understanding of the repetitive sequences and plant chromosome evolution has elucidated the involvement of a spectrum of epigenetic modification. In this review, we focused on the recent evidence relating to the distribution pattern of repetitive sequences in plant chromosomes and highlighted their potential relevance to chromosome evolution in plants. We also discussed the possible connections between evolution and epigenetic alterations in chromosome structure and repatterning, such as heterochromatin formation, centromere function, and epigenetic-associated transposable element inactivation.

62 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a homogeneous cellulose/polylactic acid (C/PLA) composite material was fabricated by dissolving PLA in N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF), followed by the successive addition of cellulose and an ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate ([bmim]Ac).

62 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A BN membrane with distinct nanoconfinement effect toward efficient ethylene/ethane separation is reported, outperforming reported state-of-the-art membranes and may stimulate novel perspectives on the design of high-performance molecular separation membranes.
Abstract: A BN membrane with a distinct nanoconfinement effect toward efficient ethylene/ethane separation is presented. The horizontal and inclined self-assembly of 2D BN nanosheets endow the BN membrane with abundant percolating nanochannels, and these nanochannels are further decorated by reactive ionic liquids (RILs) to tailor their sizes as well as to achieve nanoconfinement effect. The noncovalent interactions between RIL and BN nanosheets favor the ordered alignment of the cations and anions of RIL within BN nanochannels, which contributes to a fast and selective ethylene transport. The resultant membranes exhibit an unprecedented separation performance with superhigh C2 H4 permeance of 138 GPU and C2 H4 /C2 H6 selectivity of 128 as well as remarkably improved long-term stability for 180 h, outperforming reported state-of-the-art membranes.

62 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Jul 2013-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The screening results showed that the 3′UTR of one gene can be targeted by multiple miRNAs, and a relatively high conservation level was shown at the miRNA 3′ end targeted regions, as well as the 5′ end (seed region) binding sites.
Abstract: Animal microRNA (miRNA) target prediction is still a challenge, although many prediction programs have been exploited. MiRNAs exert their function through partially binding the messenger RNAs (mRNAs; likely at 3′ untranslated regions [3′UTRs]), which makes it possible to detect the miRNA-mRNA interactions in vitro by co-transfection of miRNA and a luciferase reporter gene containing the target mRNA fragment into mammalian cells under a dual-luciferase assay system. Here, we constructed a human miRNA expression library and used a dual-luciferase assay system to perform large-scale screens of interactions between miRNAs and the 3′UTRs of seven genes, which included more than 3,000 interactions with triplicate experiments for each interaction. The screening results showed that the 3′UTR of one gene can be targeted by multiple miRNAs. Among the prediction algorithms, a Bayesian phylogenetic miRNA target identification algorithm and a support vector machine (SVM) presented a relatively better performance (27% for EIMMo and 24.7% for miRDB) against the average precision (17.3%) of the nine prediction programs used here. Additionally, we noticed that a relatively high conservation level was shown at the miRNA 3′ end targeted regions, as well as the 5′ end (seed region) binding sites.

62 citations


Authors

Showing all 10953 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Hua Zhang1631503116769
Jie Wu112153756708
Peng Wang108167254529
Lei Liu98204151163
Lixia Zhang9335147817
Zhongwei Chen9251133700
Wei Chen9093835799
Zhiguo Ding8881735162
Xiaolong Wang8196631455
Junhua Li7748021626
Jiujun Zhang7627639624
Lei Liao7527618815
Peng Xu75115125005
Wei Wang75116723558
Tony D. James7343521605
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202349
2022173
20211,281
20201,042
2019987
2018818