Showing 12,901 - 12,920 results of 39,962 for search '(( 5 ((wt decrease) OR (mean decrease)) ) OR ( 100 ((nn decrease) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 1.30s Refine Results
  1. 12901

    Compressive strength of FRP confined CGC. by Qingwen Li (1510687)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>To address the environmental hazards caused by coal gangue waste, coal gangue concrete (CGC) has been proposed as a solution. However, due to its porosity and low strength, CGC faces numerous challenges in practical applications. …”
  2. 12902

    14 Elastic modulus of FRP confined CGC. by Qingwen Li (1510687)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>To address the environmental hazards caused by coal gangue waste, coal gangue concrete (CGC) has been proposed as a solution. However, due to its porosity and low strength, CGC faces numerous challenges in practical applications. …”
  3. 12903

    FRP sheets wrapped specimen. by Qingwen Li (1510687)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>To address the environmental hazards caused by coal gangue waste, coal gangue concrete (CGC) has been proposed as a solution. However, due to its porosity and low strength, CGC faces numerous challenges in practical applications. …”
  4. 12904

    The schematic of the mechanism of action. by Qingwen Li (1510687)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>To address the environmental hazards caused by coal gangue waste, coal gangue concrete (CGC) has been proposed as a solution. However, due to its porosity and low strength, CGC faces numerous challenges in practical applications. …”
  5. 12905

    Coal gangue concrete specimens. by Qingwen Li (1510687)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>To address the environmental hazards caused by coal gangue waste, coal gangue concrete (CGC) has been proposed as a solution. However, due to its porosity and low strength, CGC faces numerous challenges in practical applications. …”
  6. 12906

    Elastic modulus of FRP confined CGC. by Qingwen Li (1510687)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>To address the environmental hazards caused by coal gangue waste, coal gangue concrete (CGC) has been proposed as a solution. However, due to its porosity and low strength, CGC faces numerous challenges in practical applications. …”
  7. 12907

    GFRP confined concrete specimens. by Qingwen Li (1510687)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>To address the environmental hazards caused by coal gangue waste, coal gangue concrete (CGC) has been proposed as a solution. However, due to its porosity and low strength, CGC faces numerous challenges in practical applications. …”
  8. 12908

    13 Compressive strength of FRP confined CGC. by Qingwen Li (1510687)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>To address the environmental hazards caused by coal gangue waste, coal gangue concrete (CGC) has been proposed as a solution. However, due to its porosity and low strength, CGC faces numerous challenges in practical applications. …”
  9. 12909
  10. 12910
  11. 12911
  12. 12912
  13. 12913
  14. 12914

    SRSF5 regulates alternative splicing of <i>DMTF1</i> pre-mRNA through modulating SF1 binding by Jialiang Li (31220)

    Published 2021
    “…Upon SRSF5 knockdown, we observed significantly decreased <i>DMTF1β</i> and <i>γ</i> ratios of endogenous transcripts. …”
  15. 12915
  16. 12916

    Presentation_1_Red Blood Cell Abnormalities as the Mirror of SARS-CoV-2 Disease Severity: A Pilot Study.PPTX by Anthi Bouchla (9748362)

    Published 2022
    “…</p>Results<p>The percentage of males was 50 and 66% and the mean age was 65.16 ± 14.24 and 66.33 ± 13.48 years among patients and controls respectively (mean ± SD, p = 0.78). …”
  17. 12917

    Cleaved caspase-9 of regional brain homogenates obtained at 3, 4, 5, and 9 hours after ROSC by Western blot analysis. by Joo Suk Oh (6090998)

    Published 2021
    “…<p>At four and five hours after ROSC, only the hypothermia + VPA group showed significantly decreased cleaved caspase-9 levels compared to the normothermia group both in the hippocampus (A) and the cerebellar vermis (B). …”
  18. 12918
  19. 12919

    Neural responsivity, selectivity, and reliability in subfields L1 (∼Layer III), L2 (∼Layer IV), and L3 (∼Layer V). by Noopur Amin (405173)

    Published 2013
    “…Comparison of control and wn-reared mean z-scores (pooled over all five stimuli: Con, Pips, Tones, Ripples, and WN) broken down by subdivisions in field L (as assessed by histological analysis). …”
  20. 12920