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Dive into the research topics where Yun Jing is active.

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Featured researches published by Yun Jing.


Bioresource Technology | 2014

Disruption of microalgal cells using high-frequency focused ultrasound.

Meng Wang; Wenqiao Yuan; Xiaoning Jiang; Yun Jing; Zhuochen Wang

The objective of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of high-frequency focused ultrasound (HFFU) in microalgal cell disruption. Two microalgal species including Scenedesmus dimorphus and Nannochloropsis oculata were treated by a 3.2-MHz, 40-W focused ultrasound and a 100-W, low-frequency (20kHz) non-focused ultrasound (LFNFU). The results demonstrated that HFFU was effective in the disruption of microalgal cells, indicated by significantly increased lipid fluorescence density, the decrease of cell sizes, and the increase of chlorophyll a fluorescence density after treatments. Compared with LFNFU, HFFU treatment was more energy efficient. The combination of high and low frequency treatments was found to be even more effective than single frequency treatment at the same processing time, indicating that frequency played a critical role in cell disruption. In both HFFU and LFNFU treatments, the effectiveness of cell disruption was found to be dependent on the cell treated.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

A lightweight yet sound-proof honeycomb acoustic metamaterial

Ni Sui; Xiang Yan; Tai-Yun Huang; Jun Xu; Fuh-Gwo Yuan; Yun Jing

In this letter, a class of honeycomb acoustic metamaterial possessing lightweight and yet sound-proof properties is designed, theoretically proven, and then experimentally verified. It is here reported that the proposed metamaterial having a remarkably small mass per unit area at 1.3 kg/m2 can achieve low frequency (<500 Hz) sound transmission loss (STL) consistently greater than 45 dB. Furthermore, the sandwich panel which incorporates the honeycomb metamaterial as the core material yields a STL that is consistently greater than 50 dB at low frequencies. The proposed metamaterial is promising for constructing structures that are simultaneously strong, lightweight, and sound-proof.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Broadband Acoustic Hyperbolic Metamaterial.

Chen Shen; Yangbo Xie; Ni Sui; Wenqi Wang; Steven A. Cummer; Yun Jing

In this Letter, we report on the design and experimental characterization of a broadband acoustic hyperbolic metamaterial. The proposed metamaterial consists of multiple arrays of clamped thin plates facing the y direction and is shown to yield opposite signs of effective density in the x and y directions below a certain cutoff frequency, therefore, yielding a hyperbolic dispersion. Partial focusing and subwavelength imaging are experimentally demonstrated at frequencies between 1.0 and 2.5 kHz. The proposed metamaterial could open up new possibilities for acoustic wave manipulation and may find usage in medical imaging and nondestructive testing.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2014

Ultrasound-Triggered Regulation of Blood Glucose Levels Using Injectable Nano-Network

Jin Di; Jennifer Price; Xiao Gu; Xiaoning Jiang; Yun Jing; Zhen Gu

The integration of an injectable insulin-encapsulated nano-network with a focused ultrasound system (FUS) can remotely regulate insulin release both in vitro and in vivo. A single subcutaneous injection of the nano-network with intermittent FUS administration facilitates reduction of the blood glucose levels in type 1 diabetic mice for up to 10 d.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Tunable Asymmetric Transmission via Lossy Acoustic Metasurfaces

Yong Li; Chen Shen; Yangbo Xie; Junfei Li; Wenqi Wang; Steven A. Cummer; Yun Jing

In this study, we show that robust and tunable acoustic asymmetric transmission can be achieved through gradient-index metasurfaces by harnessing judiciously tailored losses. We theoretically prove that the asymmetric wave behavior stems from loss-induced suppression of high order diffraction. We further experimentally demonstrate this novel phenomenon. Our findings could provide new routes to broaden applications for lossy acoustic metamaterials and metasurfaces.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Asymmetric acoustic transmission through near-zero-index and gradient-index metasurfaces

Chen Shen; Yangbo Xie; Junfei Li; Steven A. Cummer; Yun Jing

We present a design of acoustic metasurfaces yielding asymmetric transmission within a certain frequency band. The design consists of a layer of gradient-index metasurface and a layer of low refractive index metasurface. Incident waves are controlled in a wave vector dependent manner to create strong asymmetric transmission. Numerical simulations show that the approach provides high transmission contrast between the two incident directions within the designed frequency band. This is further verified by experiments. Compared to previous designs, the proposed approach yields a compact and planar device. Our design may find applications in various scenarios such as noise control and therapeutic ultrasound.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2008

On boundary conditions for the diffusion equation in room-acoustic prediction: Theory, simulations, and experiments.

Yun Jing; Ning Xiang

This paper proposes a modified boundary condition to improve the room-acoustic prediction accuracy of a diffusion equation model. Previous boundary conditions for the diffusion equation model have certain limitations which restrict its application to a certain number of room types. The boundary condition employing the Sabine absorption coefficient [V. Valeau et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 119, 1504-1513 (2006)] cannot predict the sound field well when the absorption coefficient is high, while the boundary condition employing the Eyring absorption coefficient [Y. Jing and N. Xiang, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 121, 3284-3287 (2007); A. Billon et al., Appl. Acoust. 69, (2008)] has a singularity whenever any surface material has an absorption coefficient of 1.0. The modified boundary condition is derived based on an analogy between sound propagation and light propagation. Simulated and experimental data are compared to verify the modified boundary condition in terms of room-acoustic parameter prediction. The results of this comparison suggest that the modified boundary condition is valid for a range of absorption coefficient values and successfully eliminates the singularity problem.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2007

A modified diffusion equation for room-acoustic predication.

Yun Jing; Ning Xiang

This letter presents a modified diffusion model using an Eyring absorption coefficient to predict the reverberation time and sound pressure distributions in enclosures. While the original diffusion model [Ollendorff, Acustica 21, 236-245 (1969); J. Picaut et al., Acustica 83, 614-621 (1997); Valeau et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 119, 1504-1513 (2006)] usually has good performance for low absorption, the modified diffusion model yields more satisfactory results for both low and high absorption. Comparisons among the modified model, the original model, a geometrical-acoustics model, and several well-established theories in terms of reverberation times and sound pressure level distributions, indicate significantly improved prediction accuracy by the modification.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2011

Combining Two-Dimensional Spatially Selective RF Excitation, Parallel Imaging, and UNFOLD for Accelerated MR Thermometry Imaging

Chang-Sheng Mei; Lawrence P. Panych; Jing Yuan; Nathan McDannold; Lisa H. Treat; Yun Jing; Bruno Madore

MR thermometry can be a very challenging application, as good resolution may be needed along spatial, temporal, and temperature axes. Given that the heated foci produced during thermal therapies are typically much smaller than the anatomy being imaged, much of the imaged field‐of‐view is not actually being heated and may not require temperature monitoring. In this work, many‐fold improvements were obtained in terms of temporal resolution and/or 3D spatial coverage by sacrificing some of the in‐plane spatial coverage. To do so, three fast‐imaging approaches were jointly implemented with a spoiled gradient echo sequence: (1) two‐dimensional spatially selective RF excitation, (2) unaliasing by Fourier encoding the overlaps using the temporal dimension (UNFOLD), and (3) parallel imaging. The sequence was tested during experiments with focused ultrasound heating in ex vivo tissue and a tissue‐mimicking phantom. Temperature maps were estimated from phase‐difference images based on the water proton resonance frequency shift. Results were compared to those obtained from a spoiled gradient echo sequence sequence, using a t‐test. Temporal resolution was increased by 24‐fold, with temperature uncertainty less than 1°C, while maintaining accurate temperature measurements (mean difference between measurements, as observed in gel = 0.1°C ± 0.6; R = 0.98; P > 0.05). Magn Reson Med 66:112–122, 2011.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2016

Membrane- and plate-type acoustic metamaterials

Tai-Yun Huang; Chen Shen; Yun Jing

Over the past decade there has been a great amount of research effort devoted to the topic of acoustic metamaterials (AMMs). The recent development of AMMs has enlightened the way of manipulating sound waves. Several potential applications such as low-frequency noise reduction, cloaking, angular filtering, subwavelength imaging, and energy tunneling have been proposed and implemented by the so-called membrane- or plate-type AMMs. This paper aims to offer a thorough overview on the recent development of membrane- or plate-type AMMs. The underlying mechanism of these types of AMMs for tuning the effective density will be examined first. Four different groups of membrane- or plate-type AMMs (membranes with masses attached, plates with masses attached, membranes or plates without masses attached, and active AMMs) will be reviewed. The opportunities, limitations, and challenges of membrane- or plate-type AMMs will be also discussed.

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Chen Shen

North Carolina State University

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Ning Xiang

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Xiaoning Jiang

North Carolina State University

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Dingjie Suo

North Carolina State University

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Greg T. Clement

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Jun Xu

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ni Sui

North Carolina State University

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