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20 pages, 1983 KB  
Article
Experimental Investigation of Surfactant-Assisted Low-Salinity Brine Flooding in Oil-Wet Carbonate Reservoirs for Enhanced Oil Recovery
by Amir Hossein Javadi, Ahmed Fatih Belhaj, Shasanowar Hussain Fakir and Hemanta Kumar Sarma
Processes 2026, 14(7), 1054; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14071054 - 25 Mar 2026
Abstract
Low-salinity water flooding (LSWF) has been widely investigated as an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method for carbonate reservoirs; however, the relative contributions of wettability alteration and oil–brine interfacial tension (IFT) reduction remain poorly understood, particularly under strongly oil-wet conditions. This study systematically investigates [...] Read more.
Low-salinity water flooding (LSWF) has been widely investigated as an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method for carbonate reservoirs; however, the relative contributions of wettability alteration and oil–brine interfacial tension (IFT) reduction remain poorly understood, particularly under strongly oil-wet conditions. This study systematically investigates the physicochemical mechanisms governing oil recovery during hybrid LSWF–surfactant flooding in oil-wet carbonate systems. Oil-wet Indiana limestone cores were used as representative carbonate reservoir rocks. Seawater and its diluted analogs were employed as base brines and combined with anionic and cationic surfactants at varying concentrations. Zeta potential and pH measurements were conducted to characterize electrostatic interactions at the rock–brine and oil–brine interfaces, while dynamic contact angle and pendant-drop IFT measurements were used to quantify wettability evolution and fluid–fluid interactions. Core flooding experiments were subsequently performed to link interfacial phenomena to macroscopic oil recovery behavior. The results demonstrate that brine dilution induces more negative surface charges at both interfaces, promoting double-layer expansion and electrostatic repulsion, which stabilizes the aqueous film and drives wettability alteration toward a water-wet state. The addition of anionic surfactants further amplifies this effect by increasing surface charge negativity, whereas cationic surfactants preferentially adsorb onto the negatively charged rock surface, limiting wettability alteration despite producing greater IFT reduction. Sulfate ions enhance wettability alteration by facilitating divalent cation interactions with adsorbed oil components; however, excessive sulfate concentrations lead to precipitation-induced flow impairment. Core flooding results reveal that diluted seawater combined with an anionic surfactant yields the highest incremental oil recovery. Our findings conclusively demonstrate that wettability alteration—rather than IFT reduction—is the more dominant recovery mechanism in oil-wet carbonate reservoirs under the investigated conditions. These results provide mechanistic guidance for optimized brine and surfactant design in hybrid LSWF–chemical EOR applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Technology of Unconventional Reservoir Stimulation and Protection)
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27 pages, 8176 KB  
Article
Climate and Vegetation Dominate Lake Eutrophication in the Inner Mongolia–Xinjiang Plateau (2000–2024)
by Yuzheng Zhang, Feifei Cao, Yuping Rong, Linglong Wen, Wei Su, Jianjun Wu, Yaling Yin, Zhilin Zi, Shasha Liu and Leizhen Liu
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(7), 988; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18070988 - 25 Mar 2026
Abstract
Lakes on the Inner Mongolia–Xinjiang Plateau (IMXP) are increasingly vulnerable to eutrophication under climate change and human pressure, yet long-term monitoring remains limited by sparse field sampling. Here, we reconstruct multi-decadal trophic dynamics across the IMXP using Landsat time series and temporally transferable [...] Read more.
Lakes on the Inner Mongolia–Xinjiang Plateau (IMXP) are increasingly vulnerable to eutrophication under climate change and human pressure, yet long-term monitoring remains limited by sparse field sampling. Here, we reconstruct multi-decadal trophic dynamics across the IMXP using Landsat time series and temporally transferable machine-learning models and further quantify the underlying natural and anthropogenic drivers. We compiled monthly in situ water-quality observations (chlorophyll-a, Chl-a; total phosphorus, TP; total nitrogen, TN; Secchi depth, SD; and permanganate index, CODMn;) and calculated the trophic level index (TLI). After rigorous quality control and monthly aggregation, we compiled a dataset of 1345 matched lake–month samples spanning 2000–2024, and divided it into a training set (n = 1076; ≤2019) and an independent test set (n = 269; 2020–2024) to evaluate temporal transferability. We utilized Google Earth Engine to generate monthly surface reflectance composites from Landsat 7 ETM+, Landsat 8 OLI, and Landsat 9 OLI-2. Four supervised regression algorithms—ridge regression (RR), support vector regression (SVR), random forest (RF), and eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost)—were trained to estimate TLI. On the independent test period, XGBoost performed best (R2 = 0.780, RMSE = 3.290, MAE = 1.779), followed by RF (R2 = 0.770, RMSE = 3.364), SVR (R2 = 0.700, RMSE = 3.842), and RR (R2 = 0.630, RMSE = 4.267); we then used XGBoost to reconstruct monthly and yearly TLI for 610 perennial grassland lakes from 2000 to 2024. From 2000 to 2024, the annual mean TLI (48–49) across the IMXP exhibited a statistically significant upward trend (slope = 0.0158 TLI yr−1; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.0050–0.0267; p = 0.006). Meanwhile, spatial heterogeneity was distinct (TLI: 41.51–59.70). High values concentrated in endorheic and desert–oasis basins (e.g., Eastern Inner Mongolia Plateau, >51), whereas lower values characterized high-altitude regions (e.g., Yarkant River, <45). Overall, trends ranged from −0.49 to 0.51 yr−1, increasing in 54% of lakes (15.6% significantly) and decreasing in 46% (15.4% significantly). Attribution analyses identified NDVI (33.92%) and temperature (21.67%) as dominant drivers (55.59% combined), followed by precipitation (13.99%) and human proxies (30.42% combined: population 10.66%, grazing 10.31%, built-up 9.45%). Across 53 sub-basins, NDVI was the primary driver in 28, followed by temperature (11), population (7), precipitation (3), grazing (3), and built-up land (1); notably, the top two drivers explained 56.6–87.1% of variations. TWFE estimates revealed bidirectional NDVI effects (significant in 31/53): positive associations in 22 basins were linked to nutrient retention, contrasting with negative effects in nine basins associated with agricultural return flows. Temperature effects were significant in 15 basins and predominantly negative (14/15), except for the Qiangtang Plateau. Overall, eutrophication risk across the IMXP lake region reflects the combined influences of climatic conditions, vegetation conditions, and human activities, with their relative contributions varying among basins. Full article
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26 pages, 12260 KB  
Article
Quantitative Analysis of Wind Erosion Drivers Using Explainable Artificial Intelligence: A Case Study from Inner Mongolia, China
by Yong Mei, Batunacun, Chang An, Yaxin Wang, Yunfeng Hu, Yin Shan and Chunxing Hai
Land 2026, 15(4), 531; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040531 - 25 Mar 2026
Abstract
Wind erosion is a multidimensional, dynamic process driven by natural and anthropogenic factors, but existing statistical methods struggle to capture its complex nonlinear relationships, resulting in incomplete quantification of drivers and their spatial variability. To address this, we integrate the Revised Wind Erosion [...] Read more.
Wind erosion is a multidimensional, dynamic process driven by natural and anthropogenic factors, but existing statistical methods struggle to capture its complex nonlinear relationships, resulting in incomplete quantification of drivers and their spatial variability. To address this, we integrate the Revised Wind Erosion Equation (RWEQ)model with explainable artificial intelligence to disentangle the spatiotemporal positive and negative effects of dominant drivers and their synergistic interactions in Inner Mongolia. Results show that, from 2000–2022, wind erosion has been decreasing on average by 1.1 t·ha−1·yr−1, mainly in the western deserts and locally in Hulunbuir sandy land. Severe erosion is mostly due to nature (78.7%) rather than anthropogenic (21.3%). Normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), clay content (CL), windy days (WD), precipitation (PRE), temperature (TEM), and sand content (SA) were found to be the most important drivers of wind erosion. Critical threshold conditions for severe wind erosion are NDVI < 0.14, CL < 12%, GD > 26, PRE < 73.15 mm, and SA > 66%. When there is a certain combination of variables, wind erosion risk is greatly increased, which mainly happens in the western part of Alxa, Bayannur, and the area near the desert edge. Wind erosion control should shift toward region-specific precision management, including engineering protection, optimized grazing management, and vegetation restoration. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Innovations – Data and Machine Learning)
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32 pages, 2880 KB  
Review
p53 Isoforms as Modifiers of the p53-Dependent Responses: A Hidden Code?
by Laura Bartolomei, Beatrice Pretto, Samuele Brugnara, Alessandra Sontacchi, Vanessa Dassi, Aya Bousrih, Chiara Damaggio, Francesca Flangini, Alessandra Bisio and Yari Ciribilli
Cancers 2026, 18(7), 1057; https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers18071057 - 25 Mar 2026
Abstract
The tumor suppressor protein p53, encoded by the TP53 gene, is known as the “Guardian of the Genome”, and alterations in TP53 are common to more than 50% of human cancers. p53 is a critical regulator of cellular responses to several stress conditions, [...] Read more.
The tumor suppressor protein p53, encoded by the TP53 gene, is known as the “Guardian of the Genome”, and alterations in TP53 are common to more than 50% of human cancers. p53 is a critical regulator of cellular responses to several stress conditions, such as DNA damage, oncogene activation, and nutrient starvation. p53 was traditionally described as a single transcription factor; however, now it is recognized as a complex family of isoforms generated through alternative promoter usage, alternative splicing, and alternative initiation of translation. These processes give rise to at least 12 distinct p53 isoforms in humans, including p53α (the canonical full-length isoform), p53β, p53γ, Δ40p53, Δ133p53, and Δ160p53, each with unique structural and functional properties. p53 isoforms differ in the presence or absence of specific and fundamental domains located both at N- and C-terminal ends, determining an altered DNA-binding potential, transcriptional activity, and protein–protein interactions. For instance, Δ133p53 isoforms lack part of the N-terminal domains and can exert dominant-negative effects over full-length p53α or modulate alternative transcriptional programs. Similarly, p53β and p53γ isoforms, which have a unique C-termini, influence cellular senescence. The expression patterns of p53 isoforms are tissue-specific and dynamically regulated under both physiological as well as pathological conditions. Alterations of isoform balance have been involved in tumor progression, metastasis, and therapy resistance. Importantly, specific isoforms can either enhance or limit canonical p53 tumor suppressor functions, thereby contributing to the functional diversity of the p53 network. Overall, the p53 isoform landscape adds a critical layer of complexity to p53 biology. In this review, we summarize the mechanisms underlying the production of p53 isoforms, their functions, and their expression in cancer, with the idea that a better understanding of the differential regulation and functional interplay of p53 isoforms may provide novel biomarkers and therapeutic targets in cancer. Full article
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23 pages, 5651 KB  
Article
Sustainable Urban Renewal: Non-Linear Coupling Mechanism Between Green View Index and Thermal Comfort in High-Density Streets of Shenyang, China
by Lei Fan, Yixuan Sha, Zixian Li and Yan Zhou
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3187; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073187 - 24 Mar 2026
Abstract
As urbanization intensifies, improving street thermal comfort has become a critical issue in urban renewal. While existing studies generally assume that increasing the Green View Index (GVI) linearly improves pedestrian thermal comfort, this study identifies a significant “Decoupling Effect” in high-density commercial areas [...] Read more.
As urbanization intensifies, improving street thermal comfort has become a critical issue in urban renewal. While existing studies generally assume that increasing the Green View Index (GVI) linearly improves pedestrian thermal comfort, this study identifies a significant “Decoupling Effect” in high-density commercial areas through field measurements and numerical simulations of three typical street types (commercial–service, ecological–recreational, and historical–cultural) in Shenyang. Integrating DeepLab V3 semantic segmentation with ENVI-met version 5.1.1 microclimate simulation, the results demonstrate a robust monotonic negative correlation between GVI and Physiological Equivalent Temperature (PET) in ecological streets (Spearman’s ρ = −0.692, p < 0.001), confirming the consistent cooling benefit of greenery in nature-dominated environments. However, a distinct “Threshold Effect” was identified in commercial streets using Piecewise Linear Regression (PLR). A critical breakpoint was detected at GVI = 22.08%. Below this threshold, visual greenery effectively contributes to cooling (slope = −0.454); yet, once GVI exceeds 22.08%, the cooling efficacy diminishes significantly (slope = −0.109), marking the onset of a “decoupling” phase. Specifically, despite Wenhua Road achieving a GVI of ~24.5% with a complex “three-board, four-belt” structure, its PET peak reaches 46.15 °C, approximately 5.5 °C higher than ecological streets. Mechanism analysis reveals that under peak thermal stress (Traffic Heat ≈ 75 W/m2), the high-intensity anthropogenic heat and hardscape radiation exceed the evaporative cooling threshold of vegetation. This study reveals the non-linear relationship between visual greenery and the physical thermal environment, suggesting that simply pursuing visual green quantity is ineffective in commercial canyon renewal; instead, a threshold-based synergistic optimization of canopy shading and pavement thermal performance is required. These findings provide a quantitative basis for sustainable street landscape planning and urban climate adaptation strategies in high-density cities. Full article
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24 pages, 2867 KB  
Article
Application of Renewable Energies: Effects of Oxyhydrogen Negative Pressure Indraft on Combustion and Emission of Biobutanol/Gasoline Combined Supply Engine Under Exhaust Gas Recirculation Coupled Lean–Burn
by Jingyi Hu, Fangxi Xie, Zhe Zhao, Yan Su, Yu Liu, Xiaoping Li, Beiping Jiang, Zhaohui Jin, Xiangyang Wang, Ziheng Zhao, Yi Lin and Hengfu Guo
Energies 2026, 19(6), 1544; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19061544 - 20 Mar 2026
Viewed by 185
Abstract
Combining biobutanol and oxyhydrogen in an SI engine can reduce fossil-fuel use and improve power, but oxyhydrogen increases NOx. Without sacrificing combustion stability, this work investigates lean–burn coupled with exhaust gas recirculation for a gasoline port injection + biobutanol direct injection + oxyhydrogen [...] Read more.
Combining biobutanol and oxyhydrogen in an SI engine can reduce fossil-fuel use and improve power, but oxyhydrogen increases NOx. Without sacrificing combustion stability, this work investigates lean–burn coupled with exhaust gas recirculation for a gasoline port injection + biobutanol direct injection + oxyhydrogen in-cylinder negative pressure indraft engine, across five oxyhydrogen flow levels, four exhaust gas recirculation ratios, and three excess air ratios. Results show that with lean–burn + exhaust gas recirculation, oxyhydrogen more effectively lowers the coefficient of variation of indicated mean effective pressure and increases indicated mean effective pressure, peak cylinder pressure, and peak heat release rate. With 16 L/min oxyhydrogen, the negative effects of 6–12% exhaust gas recirculation on CA 0–10 and CA 10–90 are mitigated for all excess air ratios, and the crank angle corresponding to peak pressure remains optimal under lean conditions when 6% ≤ exhaust gas recirculation ≤ 12%. Oxyhydrogen reduces CO and HC after exhaust gas recirculation, while lean–burn dominates CO reduction. Exhaust gas recirculation suppresses NO more than lean–burn. At 1.1 ≤ excess air ratios ≤ 1.2, the optimal exhaust gas recirculation is 12%, ensuring favorable in-cylinder conditions. Overall, lean–burn + exhaust gas recirculation effectively controls NO and maximizes thermal efficiency and renewable-fuel substitution. The optimal strategy is “oxyhydrogen = 16 L/min, exhaust gas recirculation = 12%, 1.1 ≤ excess air ratios ≤ 1.2”. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Carbon-Neutral Fuel High-Efficiency Clean Combustion)
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17 pages, 1213 KB  
Article
Mycorrhizal Fungi Funneliformis mosseae Mitigates Cadmium Bioavailability in Pepper Rhizosphere via Glomalin Production and pH Elevation
by Yanlong Jia, Peng Zhou, Dehui Tu, Xiaolong Lan, Wenjie Lin, Dan Xing and Zengping Ning
Plants 2026, 15(6), 952; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants15060952 - 20 Mar 2026
Viewed by 167
Abstract
Cadmium (Cd) contamination in agricultural soils, especially in regions with a naturally high geochemical background such as Southwest China, poses a serious threat to food safety and the health of terrestrial ecosystems. Although arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMFs) are known to enhance plant tolerance [...] Read more.
Cadmium (Cd) contamination in agricultural soils, especially in regions with a naturally high geochemical background such as Southwest China, poses a serious threat to food safety and the health of terrestrial ecosystems. Although arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMFs) are known to enhance plant tolerance to heavy metals, the specific mechanisms by which dominant AMF species in karst soils—such as Funneliformis mosseae (Fm) and Rhizophagus intraradices (Ri)—immobilize Cd are not yet fully understood. In this study, a pot experiment with pepper plants was conducted to investigate the effects of Fm and Ri inoculation on Cd geochemistry in both the rhizosphere and bulk soil. Key results showed that AMF inoculation, especially with Fm, significantly reduced total Cd (by up to 33.8%) and bioavailable Cd (by up to 36.3%) concentrations in the soil, with a more pronounced effect within the rhizosphere. Accordingly, Cd content in pepper shoots was reduced by up to 15.0%. Inoculation also increased soil pH, organic matter, available phosphorus, and glomalin-related soil protein (GRSP) content. Redundancy analysis identified soil pH and total extractable GRSP as primary factors negatively correlated with Cd bioavailability. The study concludes that AMFs, particularly Fm, represent a potent bioremediation strategy by effectively immobilizing Cd in contaminated soils through mechanisms linked to GRSP production and pH elevation, thereby reducing its phytoavailability and translocation to edible plant parts. Full article
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16 pages, 4023 KB  
Article
Does Vegetation Recovery Limit the Habitat Use of Herbivore? Decadal Evidence of a Potential Ecological Mismatch
by Zhiwei Liu, Zhangfeng Cheng, Rui Guo, Qian Lei, Liulin Guan, Xiao Song, Shanshan Zhao and Aichun Xu
Biology 2026, 15(6), 491; https://doi.org/10.3390/biology15060491 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 156
Abstract
Large-scale forest ecological restoration is commonly expected to improve habitat quality and promote population growth of forest-dependent herbivores. Yet, whether vegetation recovery facilitates or constrains herbivore growth and habitat use at local scales within nature reserves remains unclear, as vegetation recovery and canopy [...] Read more.
Large-scale forest ecological restoration is commonly expected to improve habitat quality and promote population growth of forest-dependent herbivores. Yet, whether vegetation recovery facilitates or constrains herbivore growth and habitat use at local scales within nature reserves remains unclear, as vegetation recovery and canopy closure might alter forage availability and lead to ecological mismatch between vegetation features and population dynamic. Here, we used the endangered species South China sika deer as the study species, and its dominant distribution region—Qingliangfeng Biosphere Reserve—as the study area. Using decadal camera-trapping data (2015–2024) and extracted vegetation and other environmental variables, we quantified decadal trends in sika deer activity intensity and interannual variation in vegetation (leaf area index, LAI, and normalized difference vegetation index, NDVI). We incorporated topographic and anthropogenic disturbance variables and applied generalized linear mixed models and generalized linear models to analyze its habitat use. We found that: (1) Numbers of independent photographs and the relative abundance index of sika deer increased significantly and consistently from 2015 to 2024. (2) LAI exhibited substantial interannual variability without a stable trend. In contrast, segmented regression identified a clear temporal breakpoint in NDVI, with a significant increasing trend before 2021 followed by a pronounced decline thereafter. (3) In all years, distance to settlement had a significant and negative effect on activity intensity, whereas distance to road, elevation, and year had significant positive effects. LAI and NDVI showed negative and weak effects on sika deer activity intensity. In specific years, LAI had a significantly negative effect in early periods whereas NDVI became significantly negative in mid and late periods. Other environmental variables exhibited interannual heterogeneity. Our findings demonstrate that vegetation recovery within the reserve does not automatically improve habitats for forest-dependent herbivores and could lead to a potential ecological mismatch. Full article
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19 pages, 5883 KB  
Article
Contrasting Climatic and Land-Use Controls Structure Nutrient and Turbidity Regimes Across Mediterranean River Basins
by Alessio Polvani, Bruna Gumiero, Francesco Di Grazia, Luisa Galgani, Amedeo Boldrini, Xinyu Liu, Riccardo Gaetano Cirrone, Costanza Ottaviani and Steven Arthur Loiselle
Water 2026, 18(6), 728; https://doi.org/10.3390/w18060728 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 178
Abstract
Understanding how climate and land use interact to shape freshwater quality remains challenging across heterogeneous river basins. This study analysed monthly citizen-science measurements of nitrate (NO3), phosphate (PO4), and turbidity, collected between 2016 and 2024, across seven Italian river [...] Read more.
Understanding how climate and land use interact to shape freshwater quality remains challenging across heterogeneous river basins. This study analysed monthly citizen-science measurements of nitrate (NO3), phosphate (PO4), and turbidity, collected between 2016 and 2024, across seven Italian river basins representing contrasting climatic and land-use contexts. A non-parametric analytical framework combining Kruskal–Wallis tests, aligned rank transform analyses, principal component analysis (PCA), and basin-specific Somers’ D statistics was applied to ordinal concentration data. Significant differences among basins revealed persistent spatial structuring of water-quality regimes. PCA identified two largely independent gradients: a dominant nutrient axis defined by NO3 and PO4, and a secondary turbidity axis. Urban and industrial land use aligned with higher nutrient categories, while vegetated landscapes were associated with lower concentrations. Climatic effects were basin specific. Precipitation showed opposing relationships with NO3, suggesting both mobilisation and dilution processes, whereas temperature was positively associated with PO4 in several basins and negatively related to NO3. Turbidity displayed variable links with precipitation and temperature, reflecting hydrological and seasonal controls. Overall, results indicate that land use represents the primary structural driver of nutrient variability, while climatic factors modulate basin-specific responses. The integration of citizen science observations with robust non-parametric approaches provides a scalable framework for detecting environmental drivers and supporting the targeted management of Mediterranean river systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Water Quality and Contamination)
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28 pages, 7581 KB  
Article
Fuel Switching Strategies for Decarbonising the Glass Industry Using Renewable Energy and Hydrogen-Based Solutions
by Lorenzo Miserocchi and Alessandro Franco
Energies 2026, 19(6), 1529; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19061529 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 151
Abstract
This study addresses the decarbonisation of the glass industry from an integrated energy system perspective, analysing the role of renewable electricity, furnace electrification, and hydrogen in meeting the high and continuous thermal demands of glass melting. While direct electrification represents the most energy-efficient [...] Read more.
This study addresses the decarbonisation of the glass industry from an integrated energy system perspective, analysing the role of renewable electricity, furnace electrification, and hydrogen in meeting the high and continuous thermal demands of glass melting. While direct electrification represents the most energy-efficient option, its implementation is challenged by the intermittent nature and limited operating hours of renewable generation, scale constraints, and technological limitations in replacing fossil-based processes, highlighting a potential complementary role for hydrogen. A general methodological framework is first developed and then applied to a representative oxyfuel glass furnace using mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) optimisation that minimises melting costs while accounting for variable solar and wind generation, battery storage, and hydrogen production and storage. The results show that high levels of furnace electrification combined with wind-dominated renewable supply yield the lowest decarbonisation costs, which can become negative at moderate decarbonisation levels. Under the current solar–wind capacity expansion mix, the integration of battery and hydrogen storage extends achievable emission reductions from around 50% to 80%, with hydrogen acting as a complementary solution to electrification. Sensitivity analysis of energy and carbon prices, as well as technology investment costs, identifies the economic conditions in which storage-based solutions become cost-effective, highlighting the strategic role of hydrogen under conditions of low electricity prices and high fuel prices. The findings demonstrate viable pathways for deep decarbonisation of the glass sector and provide a transferable methodological framework for optimal renewable energy integration in other hard-to-abate industrial sectors facing similar constraints. Full article
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36 pages, 3324 KB  
Article
Rand, Rates, and Returns: Unravelling the Volatility Nexus in South Africa’s Financial Markets
by Kazeem Abimbola Sanusi and Zandri Dickason-Koekemoer
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(3), 230; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19030230 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 266
Abstract
This study investigates the volatility nexus between exchange rates, interest rates, and stock market returns in South Africa, an emerging economy characterised by deep financial integration and exposure to global capital flows. Using monthly data from January 2003 to February 2025, the analysis [...] Read more.
This study investigates the volatility nexus between exchange rates, interest rates, and stock market returns in South Africa, an emerging economy characterised by deep financial integration and exposure to global capital flows. Using monthly data from January 2003 to February 2025, the analysis employs a multi-layered econometric framework combining asymmetric GARCH models (EGARCH and GJR-GARCH), an Asymmetric Dynamic Conditional Correlation (ADCC-GARCH) specification, and a GARCH-MIDAS–DCC approach that decomposes volatility into long-run and short-run components while modelling time-varying cross-market dependence. The findings indicate that exchange rate volatility is the dominant and most persistent driver of financial market risk, highlighting the central role of the South African rand in transmitting global shocks to domestic markets. Equity market volatility is largely shock driven and mean reverting, with sharp increases during major crisis episodes such as the Global Financial Crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic. Dynamic correlations across markets are persistent but predominantly negative between stock returns and exchange rates, while linkages involving interest rates are weaker and more episodic. Overall, the results suggest that South Africa’s financial volatility nexus operates primarily through exchange rate-driven transmission rather than short-run contagion effects. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Financial Markets)
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15 pages, 2361 KB  
Article
Frequency and Polarizing Magnetic Field Dependence of the Clausius–Mossotti Factor of a Kerosene-Based Ferrofluid with Mn-Fe Nanoparticles in a Microwave Field
by Iosif Malaescu, Paul C. Fannin, Catalin Nicolae Marin, Ioana Marin and Corneluta Fira-Mladinescu
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(6), 2945; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16062945 - 18 Mar 2026
Viewed by 121
Abstract
We present frequency- and magnetic field-dependent measurements of the complex dielectric permittivity ε*(f, H) of a kerosene-based ferrofluid, containing Mn0.6Fe0.4Fe2O4 nanoparticles, over 0.8–5 GHz and static fields up to ~91 kA/m. The [...] Read more.
We present frequency- and magnetic field-dependent measurements of the complex dielectric permittivity ε*(f, H) of a kerosene-based ferrofluid, containing Mn0.6Fe0.4Fe2O4 nanoparticles, over 0.8–5 GHz and static fields up to ~91 kA/m. The imaginary part, εF, shows a peak at a characteristic frequency that shifts towards higher frequencies with increasing H, revealing a magnetic field-dependent relaxation process, interpreted using the Maxwell–Wagner–Sillars model. The dielectrophoretic extraction of nanoparticles was evaluated via the squared electric field gradient, and a threshold, E2min, dependent on particle size was determined. Below that threshold, Brownian forces dominate, so the ferrofluid acts as a homogeneous dielectric. For this case, the Clausius–Mossotti factor (CM) was calculated for ferrofluid droplets in air and in water as a function of frequency and magnetic field. In air, CM exhibits modest but systematic magnetic field dependence, indicating a magnetically modulated dielectric response at GHz frequencies. In contrast, when water is used as the reference medium, CM remains negative and essentially independent of H across the entire frequency range, suggesting that the high permittivity of water masks the magneto-dielectric effects in the ferrofluid. These findings provide insight into the interplay between the magnetic field and the permittivity of ferrofluids, with implications for high-frequency applications. Moreover, using a λ/4 antenna connected to a network analyzer, the existence of the dielectrophoretic force acting on a ferrofluid-impregnated textile thread at microwave frequencies was experimentally demonstrated. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Magnetic Nanoparticles)
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22 pages, 5994 KB  
Review
Revisiting the Genetics of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: From Sarcomeres to Polygenic Modulation and Clinical Translation
by Maria Cristina Carella, Marco Maria Dicorato, Paolo Basile, Ilaria Dentamaro, Daniela Santoro, Eugenio Carulli, Michele Davide Latorre, Eduardo Urgesi, Francesco Monitillo, Nicoletta Resta, Gianluca Pontone, Marco Matteo Ciccone, Andrea Igoren Guaricci and Cinzia Forleo
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(6), 2327; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15062327 - 18 Mar 2026
Viewed by 183
Abstract
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), the most common inherited cardiomyopathy, represents a paradigmatic condition for precision cardiovascular medicine. Once regarded as a monogenic autosomal dominant disorder driven by rare sarcomeric variants, HCM is now recognized as a genetically complex disease characterized by incomplete penetrance, variable [...] Read more.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), the most common inherited cardiomyopathy, represents a paradigmatic condition for precision cardiovascular medicine. Once regarded as a monogenic autosomal dominant disorder driven by rare sarcomeric variants, HCM is now recognized as a genetically complex disease characterized by incomplete penetrance, variable expressivity, and heterogeneous clinical trajectories. This review summarizes current evidence on the evolving genetic architecture of HCM, emphasizing the predominant role of definitively validated sarcomeric genes, particularly MYBPC3 and MYH7, and the clinical value of gene panel expansion. Phenotypic variability reflects interactions among variant classes, gene-specific mechanisms, and modifying factors. Differences between missense and truncating variants, haploinsufficiency and poison-peptide effects, allelic imbalance, and age-dependent penetrance contribute to diverse disease expression. Emerging data further support oligogenic inheritance and polygenic modulation, with genome-wide association studies and polygenic risk scores elucidating their contribution to disease susceptibility and variability, especially in genotype-negative patients and carriers of rare variants. We also address genes with emerging evidence and underrecognized pathogenic mechanisms, including deep intronic and splice-altering variants that may explain part of the missing heritability. The importance of distinguishing phenocopies is highlighted, advocating for phenotype-anchored diagnostic pathways integrating clinical assessment, multimodality imaging, and targeted genetic testing. Overall, contemporary data support a targeted, gene-validity-driven approach to genetic testing, where molecular findings primarily inform diagnosis and cascade screening, while risk stratification remains phenotype-led and longitudinal. Future progress will depend on integrative models combining rare variants, polygenic background, imaging, and biomarkers to translate genetic complexity into actionable precision care. Full article
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22 pages, 7059 KB  
Article
Toward Carbon-Negative Construction Materials: CO2-Storing Alkali-Activated Waste-Based Binder
by Aleksandar Nikolov, Nadia Petrova, Miryana Raykovska, Ivan Georgiev and Alexander Karamanov
Buildings 2026, 16(6), 1179; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16061179 - 17 Mar 2026
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Abstract
This study examines the carbonation behavior and CO2 storage potential of a Ca-rich alkali-activated binder produced entirely from industrial residues-ladle furnace slag (LFS), coal ash (CA), and cement kiln dust (CKD). The system was designed as a one-part alkali-activated material (AAM), with [...] Read more.
This study examines the carbonation behavior and CO2 storage potential of a Ca-rich alkali-activated binder produced entirely from industrial residues-ladle furnace slag (LFS), coal ash (CA), and cement kiln dust (CKD). The system was designed as a one-part alkali-activated material (AAM), with CKD acting as an internal activator, and subjected to ambient curing, water curing, and accelerated CO2 curing at ambient pressure. Phase evolution, microstructural development, and pore-structure characteristics were investigated using X-ray diffraction, FTIR spectroscopy, DSC–TG analysis, scanning electron microscopy, and X-ray micro-computed tomography, together with measurements of density, water absorption, and compressive strength. Loss-on-ignition measurements combined with chemical analysis were further used to quantify CO2 uptake and evaluate the degree of carbonation of the binder system. CO2 curing fundamentally altered the reaction pathway of the binder, shifting it from hydration-dominated to carbonation-controlled phase evolution, leading to the decomposition of calcium-bearing hydrates and complete carbonation of non-hydraulic γ-belite with the formation of vaterite, aragonite, and calcite. These transformations induced pronounced microstructural densification, reflected in a near-doubling of compressive strength (>48 MPa), increased apparent density, reduced water absorption, and simplified pore-network topology. A preliminary carbon footprint assessment indicates that the production of 1 m3 of the developed LFS–CA–CKD concrete generates about 14.36 kg CO2-eq, while the carbonation process enables significant CO2 sequestration, resulting in a net negative carbon balance. The results demonstrate that controlled carbonation is an effective post-treatment strategy for waste-derived alkali-activated binders, enabling simultaneous performance enhancement and permanent CO2 sequestration. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Trends and Prospects in Sustainable Green Building Materials)
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32 pages, 1204 KB  
Systematic Review
A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of EEG, fMRI, and fNIRS Studies on the Psychological Impact of Nature on Well-Being
by Alexandra Daube, Yoshua E. Lima-Carmona, Diego Gabriel Hernández Solís and Jose L. Contreras-Vidal
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(3), 377; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23030377 - 17 Mar 2026
Viewed by 725
Abstract
Exposure to nature has been associated with benefits to human well-being, commonly evaluated using standardized psychological assessments and, more recently, neuroimaging modalities such as Electroencephalography (EEG), functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), and functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS). This systematic review and meta-analysis addresses the [...] Read more.
Exposure to nature has been associated with benefits to human well-being, commonly evaluated using standardized psychological assessments and, more recently, neuroimaging modalities such as Electroencephalography (EEG), functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), and functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS). This systematic review and meta-analysis addresses the following questions. (1) How is the impact of nature on well-being studied using psychological and neuroimaging modalities and what does it reveal? (2) What are the challenges and opportunities for the deployment of wearable neuroimaging modalities to understand the impact of nature on the brain’s health and well-being? A search on PubMed, IEEE Xplore, and ClinicalTrials.gov (March 2024) identified 33 studies combining neuroimaging and psychological assessments during exposure to real, virtual or imagined natural environments. Studies were analyzed by tasks, populations, neuroimaging modality, psychological assessment, and methodological quality. Most studies were conducted in Asia (n = 23 or 70%). Healthy participants were the dominant target population (70%). In total, 61% of the studies were conducted in natural settings, while 39% used visual imagery. EEG was the most common modality (82%). STAI (n = 8) and POMS (n = 8) were the most common psychological assessments. Only seven studies included clinical populations. Two separate meta-analyses of nine studies with explicit experimental and control groups revealed a significant positive effect of nature exposure on psychological outcomes (Hedges’ g = 0.30; p = 0.0021), and a larger effect on neurophysiological outcomes (Hedges’ g = 0.43; p = 0.0004), both with moderate-to-high heterogeneity. Overall, exposure to nature was associated with reductions in negative emotions in clinical populations. In contrast, healthy populations showed a more balanced psychological response, with nature exposure being associated with both increases in positive emotions and reductions in negative emotions. Notably, 88% of the studies presented methodological weaknesses, highlighting key opportunities for future neuroengineering research on the neural and psychological effects of nature exposure. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Behavioral and Mental Health)
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