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Institution

University of Wollongong

EducationWollongong, New South Wales, Australia
About: University of Wollongong is a education organization based out in Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Graphene. The organization has 15674 authors who have published 46658 publications receiving 1197471 citations. The organization is also known as: UOW & Wollongong University.
Topics: Population, Graphene, Mental health, Anode, Lithium


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study demonstrates that the eyes-closed and eyes-open conditions provide EEG measures differing in topography as well as power levels, and should be recognised when evaluating EEG research, and considered when choosing eyes- Open or eyes- closed baseline conditions for different paradigms.

759 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, carbon nanocomposites are prepared by confining sulfur in double-shelled hollow carbon spheres, which are obtained from SnO2 hollow spheres dispersed in aqueous glucose solution.
Abstract: New sulfur—carbon nanocomposites are prepared by confining sulfur in double-shelled hollow carbon spheres, which are obtained from SnO2 hollow spheres dispersed in aqueous glucose solution (autoclave, 180 °C, 4 h).

757 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This research provides a new paradigm for designing material properties through engineering local structural heterogeneity, expected to benefit a wide range of functional materials.
Abstract: Piezoelectric materials, which respond mechanically to applied electric field and vice versa, are essential for electromechanical transducers. Previous theoretical analyses have shown that high piezoelectricity in perovskite oxides is associated with a flat thermodynamic energy landscape connecting two or more ferroelectric phases. Here, guided by phenomenological theories and phase-field simulations, we propose an alternative design strategy to commonly used morphotropic phase boundaries to further flatten the energy landscape, by judiciously introducing local structural heterogeneity to manipulate interfacial energies (that is, extra interaction energies, such as electrostatic and elastic energies associated with the interfaces). To validate this, we synthesize rare-earth-doped Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3-PbTiO3 (PMN-PT), as rare-earth dopants tend to change the local structure of Pb-based perovskite ferroelectrics. We achieve ultrahigh piezoelectric coefficients d33 of up to 1,500 pC N-1 and dielectric permittivity e33/e0 above 13,000 in a Sm-doped PMN-PT ceramic with a Curie temperature of 89 °C. Our research provides a new paradigm for designing material properties through engineering local structural heterogeneity, expected to benefit a wide range of functional materials.

756 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results illuminate the significant moderating impact of analytics capability–business strategy alignment on the BDAC–FPER relationship and the value of the entanglement conceptualization of the higher-order BDAC model and its impact on FPER.

754 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2007-Oikos
TL;DR: It is suggested that selection typically acts on maternal effects to maximise maternal rather than (or in addition to) offspring fitness, and many maternal effects will have an adaptive basis for mothers, regardless of whether these effects increase or decrease survival or reproductive success of individual offspring.
Abstract: Maternal effects have become an important field of study in evolutionary ecology and there is an ongoing debate regarding their adaptive significance. Some maternal effects can act to increase offspring fitness and are called 'adaptive maternal effects'. However, other maternal effects decrease offspring fitness and there is confusion regarding whether certain maternal effects are indeed adaptive or merely physiological inevitabilities. Here we suggest that the focus on the consequences of maternal effects for offspring fitness only and the use of 'snapshot' estimates of fitness have misdirected our effort to understand the evolution of maternal effects. We suggest that selection typically acts on maternal effects to maximise maternal rather than (or in addition to) offspring fitness. We highlight the importance of considering how maternal effects influence maternal fitness across a mother's lifetime and describe four broad types of maternal effects using an outcome-based approach. Overall, we suggest that many maternal effects will have an adaptive basis for mothers, regardless of whether these effects increase or decrease survival or reproductive success of individual offspring.

753 citations


Authors

Showing all 15918 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Lei Jiang1702244135205
Menachem Elimelech15754795285
Yoshio Bando147123480883
Paul Mitchell146137895659
Jun Chen136185677368
Zhen Li127171271351
Neville Owen12770074166
Chao Zhang127311984711
Jay Belsky12444155582
Shi Xue Dou122202874031
Keith A. Johnson12079851034
William R. Forman12080053717
Yang Li117131963111
Yusuke Yamauchi117100051685
Guoxiu Wang11765446145
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
202388
2022483
20212,897
20203,018
20192,784