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Institution

Sichuan University

EducationChengdu, China
About: Sichuan University is a education organization based out in Chengdu, China. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catalysis. The organization has 107623 authors who have published 102844 publications receiving 1612131 citations. The organization is also known as: Sìchuān Dàxué.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Several interesting applications of QD-based ratiometry are presented for the determination of metal ions, temperature, and biomolecules, with specific emphasis on the design principles and photophysical mechanisms of these probes.
Abstract: Ratiometric fluorescent sensors, which can provide built-in self-calibration for correction of a variety of analyte-independent factors, have attracted particular attention for analytical sensing and optical imaging with the potential to provide a precise and quantitative analysis. A wide variety of ratiometric sensing probes using small fluorescent molecules have been developed. Compared with organic dyes, exploiting semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) in ratiometric fluorescence sensing is even more intriguing, owing to their unique optical and photophysical properties that offer significant advantages over organic dyes. In this review, the main photophysical mechanism for generating dual-emission from QDs for ratiometry is discussed and categorized in detail. Typically, dual-emission can be obtained either with energy transfer from QDs to dyes or with independent dual fluorophores of QDs and dye/QDs. The recent discovery of intrinsic dual-emission from Mn-doped QDs offers new opportunities for ratiometric sensing. Particularly, the signal transduction of QDs is not restricted to fluorescence, and electrochemiluminescence and photoelectrochemistry from QDs are also promising for sensing, which can be made ratiometric for correction of interferences typically encountered in electrochemistry. All these unique photophysical properties of QDs lead to a new avenue of ratiometry, and the recent progress in this area is addressed and summarized here. Several interesting applications of QD-based ratiometry are presented for the determination of metal ions, temperature, and biomolecules, with specific emphasis on the design principles and photophysical mechanisms of these probes.

247 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the piezoelectric and ferroelectric properties of [Bi0.5(Na1−x−yKxLiy) 0.5]TiO3 (BNKLT-x∕y) lead-free piezeloric ceramics were studied.
Abstract: The piezoelectric and ferroelectric properties of [Bi0.5(Na1−x−yKxLiy)0.5]TiO3 (BNKLT-x∕y) lead-free piezoelectric ceramics were studied. The ceramics show excellent piezoelectric and ferroelectric properties, and the optimum properties measured are as follows: piezoelectric constant d33=231pC∕N, planar and thickness electromechanical coupling factors kP=41.0% and kt=50.5%, remanent polarization Pr=40.2μC∕cm2, and coercive field Ec=2.47kV∕mm, respectively. Polarization versus electric (P-E) hysteresis loops of the ceramics are well rectangle shaped, and the dependence of P-E loops on temperature reveals that the depolarization temperature Td of BNKLT-0.15∕0.075 ceramics, which simultaneously have good piezoelectric properties (d33=164pC∕N,kp=36.3%,kt=48.6%) and strong ferroelectricity (Pr=38.8μC∕cm2,Ec=3.73kV∕mm) at room temperature, is about 195 °C.

247 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a hydroxyapatite-CS (HAp-CS) composite was developed via embedding of HAp into CS and used for removal of Congo red (CR) dye from aqueous solution.

247 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Ji Wang1, Tianqiang Qin1, Jianrong Chen1, Yulin Li, Ling Wang, He Huang1, Jing Li1 
01 Dec 2014-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the association and consistency between uric acid levels and the risk of hypertension development, and found that hyperuricemia was associated with a higher risk of incident hypertension, regardless of whether the effect size was adjusted or not.
Abstract: Background Observational studies of the relationship between hyperuricemia and the incidence of hypertension are controversial. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the association and consistency between uric acid levels and the risk of hypertension development. Methods We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, CBM (Chinese Biomedicine Database) through September 2013 and reference lists of retrieved studies to identify cohort studies and nested case-control studies with uric acid levels as exposure and incident hypertension as outcome variables. Two reviewers independently extracted data and assessed study quality using Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Extracted information included study design, population, definition of hyperuricemia and hypertension, number of incident hypertension, effect sizes, and adjusted confounders. Pooled relative risks (RRs) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the association between hyperuricemia and risk of hypertension were calculated using a random-effects model. Results We included 25 studies with 97,824 participants assessing the association between uric acid and incident hypertension in our meta-analysis. The quality of included studies is moderate to high. Random-effects meta-analysis showed that hyperuricemia was associated with a higher risk of incident hypertension, regardless of whether the effect size was adjusted or not, whether the data were categorical or continuous as 1 SD/1 mg/dl increase in uric acid level (unadjusted: RR = 1.73, 95% CI 1.46∼2.06 for categorical data, RR = 1.22, 95% CI 1.03∼1.45 for a 1 SD increase; adjusted: RR = 1.48, 95% CI 1.33∼1.65 for categorical data, RR = 1.15, 95% CI 1.06∼1.26 for a 1 mg/dl increase), and the risk is consistent in subgroup analyses and have a dose-response relationship. Conclusions Hyperuricemia may modestly increase the risk of hypertension incidence, consistent with a dose-response relationship.

247 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive Multiple Criteria Group Decision Making (MCGDM) method with probabilistic linguistic information based on a new consensus measure and a novel outranking method, Gained and Lost Dominance Score (GLDS), validated by a case study of selecting optimal green enterprises.

247 citations


Authors

Showing all 108474 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Jie Zhang1784857221720
Robin M. Murray1711539116362
Xiang Zhang1541733117576
Rui Zhang1512625107917
Xiaoyuan Chen14999489870
Yi Yang143245692268
Xinliang Feng13472173033
Chuan He13058466438
Lei Zhang130231286950
Jian Zhou128300791402
Shaobin Wang12687252463
Yi Xie12674562970
Pak C. Sham124866100601
Wei Chen122194689460
Bo Wang119290584863
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023339
20221,712
202113,846
202011,702
20199,714
20187,906