Institution
Zhejiang Gongshang University
Education•Hangzhou, China•
About: Zhejiang Gongshang University is a education organization based out in Hangzhou, China. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Adsorption & Supply chain. The organization has 8258 authors who have published 7670 publications receiving 90296 citations. The organization is also known as: Zhèjiāng Gōngshāng Dàxué.
Topics: Adsorption, Supply chain, Population, Wireless sensor network, Catalysis
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: This paper proposes two different distributed protocols for the heterogeneous continuous-time EL agents to achieve the optimization task and proves the global convergence to the optimal coordination of the EL systems in the case with parametric uncertainties, and the global exponential convergence in the cases without parametric uncertainty.
187 citations
••
TL;DR: A comprehensive assessment of ammonia (NH(3), nitrogen oxides (NO(x), and nitrous oxide (N(2)O) emissions in China based on a full cycle analysis provides policy makers an integrated view of Nr sources and health damage to address the significant challenges associated with the reduction of air pollution.
Abstract: Human activities have intensely altered the global nitrogen cycle and produced nitrogenous gases of environmental significance, especially in China where the most serious atmospheric nitrogen pollution worldwide exists. We present a comprehensive assessment of ammonia (NH3), nitrogen oxides (NOx), and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions in China based on a full cycle analysis. Total reactive nitrogen (Nr) emission more than doubled over the past three decades, during which the trend of increase slowed for NH3 emissions after 2000, while the trend of increase continued to accelerate for NOx and N2O emissions. Several hotspots were identified, and their Nr emissions were about 10 times higher than others. Agricultural sources take 95% of total NH3 emission; fossil fuel combustion accounts for 96% of total NOx emission; agricultural (51%) and natural sources (forest and surface water, 39%) both contribute to the N2O emission in China. Total atmospheric Nr emissions related health damage in 2008 in China reached US...
182 citations
••
TL;DR: It is proposed that ACP, KAS, and FATA in H. pluvialis may play an important role in FA synthesis and may be rate limiting genes, which probably could be modified for the further study of metabolic engineering to improve microalgal biofuel quality and production.
Abstract: Background
Biofuel has been the focus of intensive global research over the past few years. The development of 4th generation biofuel production (algae-to-biofuels) based on metabolic engineering of algae is still in its infancy, one of the main barriers is our lacking of understanding of microalgal growth, metabolism and biofuel production. Although fatty acid (FA) biosynthesis pathway genes have been all cloned and biosynthesis pathway was built up in some higher plants, the molecular mechanism for its regulation in microalgae is far away from elucidation.
178 citations
••
TL;DR: Wenzhou Municipality in Zhejiang Province is spearheading China's marketization and development of private enterprises as mentioned in this paper, and its successful development trajectory, centered on family-owned small businesses embedded in thick local insti- tutions, resembles Marshallian industrial districts.
Abstract: The Wenzhou Municipality in Zhejiang Province is spearheading China's marketization and development of private enterprises. Its successful development trajectory, centered on family-owned small businesses embedded in thick local insti- tutions, resembles Marshallian industrial districts (MIDs). However, with China's changing institutional environment and intensifying competition, Wenzhou has been facing challenges. Since the late 1980s, Wenzhou has gone through two major rounds of restructuring (from family enterprises to shareholding cooperatives to shareholding enterprises), that have included four major types of strategic response: institutional change, technological upgrading, industrial diversification, and spatial restructuring. Firms in Wenzhou have gone through localization and delocalization, and locational choices reflect the dual destinations of globalizing cities and interior cities. The formation of new firms and clusters has been accompanied by mergers, acquisitions, and the emergence of multiregional enterprises (MREs), some of which have relo- cated their headquarters and specialized functions to metropolitan areas, espe- cially Shanghai and Hangzhou. More recently, Wenzhou's growth has slowed, leading some to question the sustainability of the Wenzhou model. We argue that Wenzhou's development is in danger of regional lock-ins—relational, intergenerational, and structural. Wenzhou's experience challenges the orthodox concept of MIDs and calls for "scaling up" regional development.
178 citations
••
TL;DR: Compared with the regular MAE and conventional heat-reflux extraction (HRE), the proposed approach exhibited higher efficiency and shorter extraction time, which indicated ILMAE was an efficient, rapid and simple sample preparation technique.
178 citations
Authors
Showing all 8318 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
David Julian McClements | 131 | 1137 | 71123 |
Sajal K. Das | 85 | 1124 | 29785 |
Ye Wang | 85 | 466 | 24052 |
Xun Wang | 84 | 606 | 32187 |
Tao Jiang | 82 | 940 | 27018 |
Yueming Jiang | 79 | 452 | 20563 |
Mo Wang | 61 | 274 | 13664 |
Robert J. Linhardt | 58 | 1190 | 53368 |
Jiankun Hu | 57 | 493 | 11430 |
Xuming Zhang | 56 | 384 | 10788 |
Yuan Li | 50 | 352 | 8771 |
Chunping Yang | 49 | 173 | 8604 |
Duo Li | 48 | 329 | 9060 |
Matthew Campbell | 48 | 236 | 13448 |
Aiqian Ye | 48 | 163 | 6120 |