Institution
University of Udine
Education•Udine, Italy•
About: University of Udine is a education organization based out in Udine, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Large Hadron Collider. The organization has 6745 authors who have published 20530 publications receiving 669088 citations. The organization is also known as: Università degli Studi di Udine & Universita degli Studi di Udine.
Topics: Population, Large Hadron Collider, Transplantation, Lepton, Higgs boson
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the thermal and structural stability of a series of CeO2/Al2O3 supports with a range of composition containing 2-25% CeO 2 was examined.
Abstract: The thermal and structural stability under different atmospheres of a series of CeO2/Al2O3 supports with a range of composition containing 2–25% CeO2 was examined. It is shown that treatment under reducing conditions strongly affects stability in terms of surface area and phase distribution. Under oxidizing conditions at 1473 K, ceria is almost totally ineffective as a stabilizing agent for alumina whereas under reducing and redox conditions, its effects are remarkably enhanced, and surface area in the order of 60 m2/g can be retained after treatment at 1473 K for several hours. This is directly related to the formation of Ce3+ present mainly as CeAlO3, which inhibits crystal growth and prevents formation of the α-alumina responsible for decrease in surface area.
150 citations
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TL;DR: A series of ceria and ceria-zirconia catalysts with varying composition and surface area have been systematically investigated in the oxidation of soot in the range of temperature 600-K as discussed by the authors.
150 citations
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TL;DR: Chronopharmacokinetics can explain individual differences in drug levels revealed by therapeutic drug monitoring and can be used to optimise the management of patients receiving drug therapy.
Abstract: In clinical practice, it is important to consider circadian rhythms in pharmacokinetics and cell responses to therapy in order to design proper protocols for drug administration. Scientists have arrived at this conclusion after several experiments in animals and in humans have clearly demonstrated that all organisms are highly organised according to circadian rhythms. These temporal cycles influence different physiological functions and, consequently, can influence the pharmacokinetic phases of drugs. A drug's pharmacokinetics can be modified according to the time of drug administration. In fact, the circadian changes of > 100 different compounds have been documented. The results obtained have led several scientific societies to provide guidelines concerning the timing of drug dosing for anticancer, cardiovascular, respiratory, anti-ulcer, anti-inflammatory, immunosuppressive and antiepileptic drugs. Absorption may be influenced by circadian rhythms and most lipophilic drugs seem to be absorbed faster when the drug is taken in the morning compared with the evening; for water-soluble compounds, no circadian variation in the absorption of drugs has been found. Concerning drug distribution, the higher the blood flow fraction an organ receives, the higher the rate constant for transferring drugs out of the capillaries. This drug pharmacokinetic phase may be influenced by circadian variations in the protein binding of acidic and basic drugs. Drug metabolism may be influenced by daily modifications of blood flow. For drugs with a high extraction ratio, metabolism depends on hepatic blood flow, while that of drugs with a low extraction ratio depends on liver enzyme activity. Hepatic blood flow has been shown to be greatest at 8 am and metabolism seems to be reduced during the night. Finally, concerning drug elimination, the clearance of 'flow-limited' drugs that present a high extraction rate is affected by the blood flow delivered to the organ, independent of the cardiac output fraction supplied. Chronopharmacokinetics can explain individual differences in drug levels revealed by therapeutic drug monitoring and can be used to optimise the management of patients receiving drug therapy.
150 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors systematically reviewed the literature on corruption in international business (137 articles) for the last 17 years between 1992 and 2019 and identified seven research streams in this growing literature: (1) the legislation against corruption, (2) the determinants of corruption, combating corruption, 4) the effect of corruption on firms, 5) the political environment and corruption, 6) corruption as a challenge to existing theories of management, and 7) the impact of corruption in foreign direct investment and trade.
150 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that triple-stranded polynucleotides can be formed by a duplex-to-triplex transition with an average change in enthalpy of −73(±5) kcal/mol of triplex.
150 citations
Authors
Showing all 6857 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
M.-Marsel Mesulam | 150 | 558 | 90772 |
Francesco Longo | 142 | 745 | 89859 |
Georges Aad | 135 | 1121 | 88811 |
Bobby Samir Acharya | 133 | 1121 | 100545 |
G. Della Ricca | 133 | 1598 | 92678 |
Marina Cobal | 132 | 1078 | 85437 |
Fernando Barreiro | 130 | 1082 | 83413 |
Saverio D'Auria | 129 | 1142 | 83684 |
Jean-Francois Grivaz | 128 | 1322 | 97758 |
Evgeny Starchenko | 128 | 864 | 75913 |
Muhammad Alhroob | 127 | 880 | 71982 |
Michele Pinamonti | 126 | 846 | 69328 |
Reisaburo Tanaka | 126 | 967 | 69849 |
Kerim Suruliz | 126 | 795 | 69456 |
Kate Shaw | 125 | 841 | 70087 |