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19 pages, 3583 KB  
Article
Facile Synthesis of Modified Single-Crystal NCM811 Cathode Materials and the Electrochemical Performance for Lithium-Ion Batteries
by Zixiang Wang, Binhao Li, Jing Wang, Kemeng Nong and Shuhui Liu
Inorganics 2026, 14(3), 86; https://doi.org/10.3390/inorganics14030086 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
To address the capacity decay of NCM811 caused by microcracks and cation disorder during cycling, La, Al, and F tri-doped micron-sized single-crystal NCM811 material with a LiNbO3 coating was synthesized via a facile co-solvent method. Using a mixed glucose–urea thermal solution as [...] Read more.
To address the capacity decay of NCM811 caused by microcracks and cation disorder during cycling, La, Al, and F tri-doped micron-sized single-crystal NCM811 material with a LiNbO3 coating was synthesized via a facile co-solvent method. Using a mixed glucose–urea thermal solution as the reaction medium, metal salts were incorporated, followed by step-wise sintering, ball-milling, heat treatment, and wet-chemical coating. This approach enables atomic-level precursor mixing and ensures homogeneous element distribution. La3+ enlarges the lithium layer spacing to enhance ion diffusion and Al3+ suppresses Ni3+ reduction to Ni2+, mitigating cation mixing and improving conductivity, while F stabilizes the crystal structure via its strong electronegativity. The LiNbO3 coating protects the interface from electrolyte attack, and the single-crystal morphology effectively suppresses microcracking. Compared to unmodified single-crystal NCM811 prepared identically, the modified material exhibits reduced cation disorder, improved crystallinity, and superior thermal stability. Electrochemical tests in half-cells with 1 M LiPF6/(EC/EMC/DMC) electrolyte (2.8–4.3 V) show an initial discharge capacity of 208.32 mAh/g at 0.1 C and 194.05 mAh/g at 1 C. After 200 cycles at 1 C, the capacity retention remains at 92.21%, exceeding the market average. Rate performance is also notably enhanced, with the 5 C discharge capacity increasing from 141.12 mAh/g (unmodified) to 166.81 mAh/g, demonstrating improved kinetics and structural stability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Inorganic Materials)
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13 pages, 465 KB  
Article
Temporal Stability, Reproducibility and Predictability of Whole-Body Sweat Sodium Concentration During Prolonged Cycling in the Heat with Ad Libitum and Programmed Drinking
by Eric D. B. Goulet, David Jeker, Pascale Claveau, Thomas A. Deshayes, Timothée Pancrate, Mohamed El Fethi Abed, Antoine Jolicoeur Desroches, Martin D. Hoffman, Philippe Gendron, Claude Lajoie and Lisa Lehmann
Nutrients 2026, 18(6), 989; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu18060989 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
Background: Leading sports medicine and nutrition organizations recommend replacing sodium losses during prolonged exercise; however, practical guidance for implementing sodium replacement strategies remains limited. Estimating sodium needs during exercise requires assessment of both whole-body sweat sodium concentration (WBSSC) and sweat rate. Objectives: This [...] Read more.
Background: Leading sports medicine and nutrition organizations recommend replacing sodium losses during prolonged exercise; however, practical guidance for implementing sodium replacement strategies remains limited. Estimating sodium needs during exercise requires assessment of both whole-body sweat sodium concentration (WBSSC) and sweat rate. Objectives: This study focused on WBSSC by examining its temporal stability, reproducibility, and predictability during prolonged cycling exercise while drinking according to two hydration strategies. Methods: Using a randomized, crossover, counterbalanced design, eight highly trained men completed two 5 h cycling sessions (183 ± 14 W, 30 °C) while consuming fluids either in a programmed (P) or ad libitum (AL) fashion. Sweat was collected with patches applied on the forearm for ~20 min before sampling, which occurred at ~40, 130, 220, and 290 min. Local sweat sodium concentration was converted to WBSSC using a validated equation. Results: A main effect of time was observed for WBSSC (p < 0.05), with only the 40 min time point differing from later measurements; no condition or interaction effects were detected. The within-trial typical variation in WBSSC was 7.2 mmol·L−1 for P and 6.1 mmol·L−1 for AL, while the between-trial typical variation was 5.6 mmol·L−1. The WBSSC measured at 40 min predicted mean exercise WBSSC with good precision and moderate stability (y = 0.2738 + 1.3397x, R2 = 0.87, standard error of the estimate = 5.4 mmol·L−1, 95% confidence interval slope = 0.82–1.86 mmol·L−1). Conclusions: These findings indicate that during prolonged cycling exercise, WBSSC (1) varies trivially within and between trials; (2) can reasonably be predicted using a single sweat sample and; (3) is not influenced by P or AL drinking. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nutrition and Supplements for Athletic Training and Racing)
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20 pages, 407 KB  
Article
Five Hundred Monks in Crisis: Meditation-Related Difficulties and Prescriptive Responses in the Pāli Commentarial Tradition
by Byoungjai Lee
Religions 2026, 17(3), 390; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17030390 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
Meditation-related difficulties have been systematically documented in contemporary contemplative science, yet the prescriptive resources preserved in the ancient Buddhist commentarial literature remain underutilized in comparative research. This study analyzes the case of five hundred monks in the Paramatthajotikā I’s commentary on the [...] Read more.
Meditation-related difficulties have been systematically documented in contemporary contemplative science, yet the prescriptive resources preserved in the ancient Buddhist commentarial literature remain underutilized in comparative research. This study analyzes the case of five hundred monks in the Paramatthajotikā I’s commentary on the Karaṇīya-metta-sutta. During intensive practice, these monks experienced complex psychosomatic symptoms—perceptual disturbances, fear, somatic distress, and cognitive impairment—and received from the Buddha an integrated prescription of five protective practices (pañca rakkhā). Through Pāli textual and comparative analysis with Lindahl et al.’s taxonomy of meditation-related difficulties, this study demonstrates that the monks’ symptoms correspond systematically to the perceptual, affective, somatic, and cognitive domains of the modern taxonomy, with the critical difference residing in interpretive frameworks rather than in the phenomena themselves. The five practices—loving-kindness meditation, protective chant recitation, contemplation of impurity, mindfulness of death, and the arousal of religious urgency—constitute a sequentially structured system progressing from the emotional reframing of fear to the deconstruction of bodily and existential attachment, culminating in the restoration of soteriological motivation. This study argues that Paramatthajotikā I’s prescriptive system provides a historically grounded, soteriologically oriented complement to contemporary contemplative science, particularly in bridging the gap between phenomenological classification and meaning-centered intervention. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Buddhist Meditation: Culture, Mindfulness, and Rationality)
1 pages, 138 KB  
Correction
Correction: Arango Pastrana et al. (2025). The Communication of Fear: Factors of Crime News Impacting Engagement on Social Networks. Journalism and Media, 6(3), 132
by Carlos Arango Pastrana, Stella Vallejo-Trujillo and Carlos Fernando Osorio-Andrade
Journal. Media 2026, 7(1), 68; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia7010068 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
There was an error in the original publication (Arango Pastrana et al [...] Full article
2 pages, 142 KB  
Correction
Correction: Kay et al. Effects of Water and Wind Stress on Phytochemical Diversity, Cannabinoid Composition, and Arthropod Diversity in Hemp. Plants 2025, 14, 474
by Ericka R. Kay, Casey S. Philbin, Lora A. Richards, Matthew L. Forister, Christopher Jeffrey and Lee A. Dyer
Plants 2026, 15(6), 956; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants15060956 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
In the original publication [...] Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Phytochemical Diversity and Interactions with Herbivores)
2 pages, 1837 KB  
Correction
Correction: Tong et al. Reduced Apoptotic Injury by Phenothiazine in Ischemic Stroke Through the NOX-Akt/PKC Pathway. Brain Sci. 2019, 9, 378
by Yanna Tong, Kenneth B. Elkin, Changya Peng, Jiamei Shen, Fengwu Li, Longfei Guan, Yu Ji, Wenjing Wei, Xiaokun Geng and Yuchuan Ding
Brain Sci. 2026, 16(3), 331; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci16030331 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
In our article “Reduced Apoptotic Injury by Phenothiazine in Ischemic Stroke Through the NOX-Akt/PKC Pathway” [...] Full article
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2 pages, 144 KB  
Retraction
RETRACTED: Cataldi et al. Neutral Sphingomyelinase Modulation in the Protective/Preventive Role of rMnSOD from Radiation-Induced Damage in the Brain. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2019, 20, 5431
by Samuela Cataldi, Antonella Borrelli, Maria Rachele Ceccarini, Irina Nakashidze, Michela Codini, Oleg Belov, Alexander Ivanov, Eugene Krasavin, Ivana Ferri, Carmela Conte, Federica Filomena Patria, Giovanna Traina, Tommaso Beccari, Aldo Mancini, Francesco Curcio, Francesco Saverio Ambesi-Impiombato and Elisabetta Albi
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(6), 2812; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27062812 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
The journal retracts the article titled “Neutral Sphingomyelinase Modulation in the Protective/Preventive Role of rMnSOD from Radiation-Induced Damage in the Brain” [...] Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Endocrinology and Metabolism)
4 pages, 129 KB  
Correction
Correction: Davis et al. Nutraceuticals in the Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder. Nutraceuticals 2025, 5, 27
by Allyson Davis, Jacquelyn Pence and Richard J. Bloomer
Nutraceuticals 2026, 6(1), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/nutraceuticals6010020 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
There was an error in the original publication [...] Full article
12 pages, 1624 KB  
Article
Association Between Serum Vitamin D Levels and Colorectal Carcinoma: Insights from a Case Control Study in Northern Saudi Arabia
by Anass M. Abbas, Ashok Kumar Sah, Reef A. Alodhayd, Shahad A. Alblehed, Aryaf M. Almaeen, Saja T. Almadhor, Hala E. Sabaa, Rania Z. Alghafil, Nasir A. Nour, Abdulkhakov Ikhtiyor Umarovich, Ranjay Kumar Choudhary, Rabab H. Elshaikh and Manar G. Shalabi
Life 2026, 16(3), 512; https://doi.org/10.3390/life16030512 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
Background: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a major global health concern and a leading cause of cancer-related mortality. In Saudi Arabia, it is the most common cancer among men and the third most common among women. The disease affects predominantly older adults, with an [...] Read more.
Background: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a major global health concern and a leading cause of cancer-related mortality. In Saudi Arabia, it is the most common cancer among men and the third most common among women. The disease affects predominantly older adults, with an increasing number of cases reported in younger populations. Emerging evidence suggests a potential association between Vitamin D deficiency and CRC risk and progression. Aim: This study aimed to investigate the relationship between serum Vitamin D levels and colorectal cancer, and to evaluate its association with clinicopathological characteristics. Methodology: A retrospective case–control study was conducted on newly diagnosed CRC patients between January 2021 and August 2024 at King Abdul-Aziz Specialist Hospital, Prince Muteb Hospital, and the Oncology Center in Al Jouf, Saudi Arabia. A total of 100 CRC cases and 50 healthy controls were included. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels were measured and categorized as deficient (<20 ng/mL), insufficient (21–29 ng/mL), and normal (≥30 ng/mL). Histopathological features and tumor characteristics were analyzed. Statistical analyses included independent t-test, one-way ANOVA, and chi-square tests. Results: During the four-year period, 5399 gastrointestinal specimens were analyzed, of which 2111 (39.1%) were colorectal specimens. CRC was diagnosed in 107 cases (5.1%), and 100 patients met the inclusion criteria. The mean age of patients was 53.07 ± 13.3 years, and 69% were older than 50 years. Males represented 58% of cases (male-to-female ratio 1.4:1). Invasive adenocarcinoma was the predominant histological subtype (81%), with the sigmoid colon being the most common tumor site (39%). Vitamin D deficiency was significantly more prevalent in CRC patients (59%) compared to controls (22%). The mean serum Vitamin D level was significantly lower in cases (18.7 ± 11.3 ng/mL) than in controls (34.9 ± 15.6 ng/mL) (p < 0.001). No significant difference in Vitamin D levels was observed between males and females. Lower Vitamin D levels were significantly associated with advanced tumor grade (p = 0.004), lymphovascular invasion (p < 0.001), lymph node involvement (p = 0.001), and distant metastasis (p < 0.001). Representative histopathological images confirmed invasive moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma with characteristic malignant glandular architecture. Conclusions: Vitamin D deficiency was highly prevalent among colorectal cancer patients and was significantly associated with advanced tumor characteristics, including higher grade and metastatic features. These findings suggest a strong inverse relationship between serum Vitamin D levels and CRC development and progression. Further large-scale prospective and interventional studies are warranted to clarify the causal role of Vitamin D and its potential therapeutic implications in colorectal cancer prevention and management. Full article
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1 pages, 125 KB  
Correction
Correction: Jiang et al. Surface Charge and Size Evolution of Silica–Iron Colloidal Particles in Simulated Late-Archaean Seawater. Minerals 2025, 15, 1123
by Weiming Jiang, Xiao Wu, Hongmei Yang, Juan Fu, Qirui Zeng, Sizhe Li, Ruiyao Luo, Yiping Yang, Xiaoju Lin and Jianxi Zhu
Minerals 2026, 16(3), 327; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16030327 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
In the published publication [...] Full article
2 pages, 618 KB  
Correction
Correction: Alhajlah et al. Overexpression of Reticulon 3 Enhances CNS Axon Regeneration and Functional Recovery After Traumatic Injury. Cells 2021, 10, 2015
by Sharif Alhajlah, Adam M Thompson and Zubair Ahmed
Cells 2026, 15(6), 556; https://doi.org/10.3390/cells15060556 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
In the original manuscript [...] Full article
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2 pages, 186 KB  
Correction
Correction: Christodoulou et al. A Common Origin of the H0 and S8 Cosmological Tensions and a Resolution Within a Modified ΛCDM Framework. Galaxies 2026, 14, 16
by Dimitris M. Christodoulou, Demosthenes Kazanas and Silas G. T. Laycock
Galaxies 2026, 14(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies14020025 (registering DOI) - 20 Mar 2026
Abstract
In the original publication [...] Full article
18 pages, 8163 KB  
Article
Study on EV Traction Motors for Life Cycle Assessment Considering Changes in Winding Material and Magnet Configuration
by Daichi Washio and Kan Akatsu
World Electr. Veh. J. 2026, 17(3), 157; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj17030157 - 19 Mar 2026
Abstract
Reducing the life-cycle CO2 emissions of electric vehicle (EV) traction motors requires a comprehensive evaluation of material selection, magnet configuration, and structural design. In this study, six motors—including a benchmark NdFeB-based PMSM—are designed under unified constraints of identical outer diameter, ampere-turns, and [...] Read more.
Reducing the life-cycle CO2 emissions of electric vehicle (EV) traction motors requires a comprehensive evaluation of material selection, magnet configuration, and structural design. In this study, six motors—including a benchmark NdFeB-based PMSM—are designed under unified constraints of identical outer diameter, ampere-turns, and target torque (163 Nm), enabling a fair comparison of environmental performance. Electromagnetic field simulations are conducted to optimize each design, and life-cycle CO2 emissions are quantified using emission factors from IEEJ-IAS and standard material databases. The results show that manufacturing-stage emissions vary significantly depending on magnet and winding materials: the benchmark PMSM exhibits the highest manufacturing CO2 (42.1 kg-CO2), while the rare-earth-free PMaSyn.RM achieves the lowest value (28.4 kg-CO2). In contrast, use-stage emissions over 150,000 km are dominated by motor efficiency, ranging from 1820 kg-CO2 (PMSM-Cu) to 2030 kg-CO2 (Al-wound PMSM). Consequently, the total life-cycle CO2 spans from 1848 kg-CO2 (PMaSyn.RM) to 2072 kg-CO2 (Al-wound PMSM), indicating that rare-earth-free motors minimize manufacturing impact, whereas high-efficiency PMSMs reduce use-stage emissions. Furthermore, the study evaluates the practical feasibility of aluminum windings and rare-earth-free designs, identifying structural requirements such as dual-rotor configurations for aluminum conductors and flux-barrier optimization for ferrite-based motors. These findings provide quantitative insights into the trade-offs between material sustainability and operational efficiency, offering guidance for future EV motor development toward carbon neutrality. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy Supply and Sustainability)
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33 pages, 2221 KB  
Review
Review of the Pathology of Muscle in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
by Matthew Katz, Thomas Robertson, Shyuan T. Ngo, Sai Yarlagadda, Robert D. Henderson, Pamela A. McCombe and Peter G. Noakes
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(6), 2802; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27062802 - 19 Mar 2026
Abstract
In amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a central event is the withdrawal of the motor nerve terminal from its target muscle. Whether this defect is driven by faults in the motor neuron or faults that originate within the muscle remains an area of investigation. [...] Read more.
In amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a central event is the withdrawal of the motor nerve terminal from its target muscle. Whether this defect is driven by faults in the motor neuron or faults that originate within the muscle remains an area of investigation. In this review, we focus on the pathological abnormalities that are found in skeletal muscle, focusing, when possible, on human ALS, with support from ALS animal models. We begin with an overview of skeletal muscle, including a review of muscle fiber type, motor units and the neuromuscular synapse. Next, we provide a description of the clinical and biomarker changes that occur in the muscles of patients with ALS. We provide an extensive account of the histopathological changes that are evident in ALS muscle, such as fiber type grouping, muscle inflammation, protein misfolding, mitochondrial dysfunction, and alterations in neuromuscular junctions and muscle satellite cells. Our review then concludes with an update of metabolic and molecular–genetic changes that are found in ALS muscle. The evidence shows that muscle can be an additional target for therapy in ALS, in combination with therapies targeting neurons and glia within the central nervous system (CNS). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS): Pathogenesis and Treatments)
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19 pages, 3132 KB  
Article
Inorganic–Organic Hybrid Polymer for Fine-Rich Coal Slime Water Treatment: Performance and Interfacial Adsorption Mechanism on Kaolinite Aluminol Surface
by Jing Chang, Hang Zhao, Shizhen Liang, Xihao Feng, Jia Xue and Wei Zhao
Separations 2026, 13(3), 99; https://doi.org/10.3390/separations13030099 - 19 Mar 2026
Abstract
High-ash coal slime water, characterized by its stable colloidal suspension of fine kaolinite particles, poses a significant challenge in the coal preparation industry because it is hard to achieve efficient solid–liquid separation. While traditional coagulants and flocculants often suffer from limited bridging capabilities [...] Read more.
High-ash coal slime water, characterized by its stable colloidal suspension of fine kaolinite particles, poses a significant challenge in the coal preparation industry because it is hard to achieve efficient solid–liquid separation. While traditional coagulants and flocculants often suffer from limited bridging capabilities and distinct pH sensitivity, novel molecular architectures offer potential solutions. In this study, a star-shaped inorganic–organic hybrid flocculant (Al-PAM) was synthesized via in situ polymerization. Its flocculation performance and interfacial adsorption mechanism on the specifically targeted aluminol basal plane of kaolinite were systematically investigated and compared with Polyaluminum Chloride (PAC), Non-ionic Polyacrylamide (NPAM), and their combination (PAC + NPAM). Settling tests revealed that Al-PAM exhibited superior performance at a significantly lower dosage (10 mg∙L−1) compared to the PAC + NPAM binary reagent system. It achieved a rapid initial settling velocity and reduced the supernatant turbidity to 48.45 NTU, while maintaining a near-neutral pH favorable for water recycling. Furthermore, Quartz Crystal Microbalance with Dissipation (QCM-D) monitoring confirmed that Al-PAM forms a thick, viscoelastic, and irreversible adsorption layer on the Al2O3 substrate. The dissipation shifts (ΔD) revealed that the star-shaped architecture promotes distinct bridging and electrostatic adsorption, overcoming the limitation of linear polymers. This work elucidates the specific contribution of the alumina-surface interaction with flocculants and proposes an efficient strategy for treating refractory coal slime water. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Separation Technology in Mineral Processing)
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