Affected by the normalization of the COVID-19 pandemic, people’s lives are subject to many restrictions, and they are under enormous psychological and physical pressure. In this situation, health information may be a burden and cause of anxiety for people; thus, the refusal of health information occurs frequently. Health-information-avoidance behavior has produced potential impacts and harms on people’s lives. Based on more than 120,000 words of textual data obtained from semi-structured interviews, summarizing a case collection of 55 events, this paper explores the factors and how they combine to lead to avoidance of health information. First, the influencing factors are constructed according to the existing research, and then the fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) method is used to discover the configuration relationship of health-information-avoidance behavior. The results show that the occurrence of health-information avoidance is not the result of a single factor but the result of a configuration of health-information literacy, negative emotions, perceived information, health-information presentation, cross-platform distribution, and the network information environment. These findings provide inspiration for reducing the adverse consequences of avoiding health information and improving the construction of health-information service systems.
Many studies have shown that heavy oil with high asphaltene content has a yield stress. Coupled with the solid-liquid interaction between porous media and heavy oil, there is a threshold pressure gradient when heavy oil flows in porous media. Meanwhile, some previous research has indicated
that the high viscosity of heavy oil is the decisive factor for its threshold pressure gradient. Hence, this concept needs more clarification, especially because its accuracy is questionable. In this research, different oil samples with the same viscosity and also different asphaltene contents
heavy oil samples were prepared. The viscosity of the different heavy oil samples was measured. Threshold pressure gradient experiments under different permeabilities and temperatures were also conducted on heavy oils. The results proved that the viscosity was not directly related to threshold
pressure gradient of heavy oil. They also suggested that the heavy oil viscosity increased with the increase of asphaltene content. Moreover, the formula of the factors affecting threshold pressure gradient was regressed, and also its applicability was verified. As the temperature and core
permeability increase, the threshold pressure gradient was also proven to decrease significantly. Furthermore, it was found that the threshold pressure gradient increased significantly with the increase of asphaltene content. Therefore, the heavy oil threshold pressure gradient could be characterized
as a function of temperature, permeability, and asphaltene content. This study provided some theoretical support for the research attempts on the reduction of threshold pressure gradient and also on the effective development of heavy oil reservoirs.
Synthesis and characterization of microsheets, microrods, microflowers and microspheres of orthorhombic phase molybdenum oxide (MoO3) were reported. The reaction between ammonium molybdate and hydrochloric acid was used to prepare MoO3microstructures and followed by annealing in air at 400oCfor 2h. The combined techniques of X-ray powder diffraction (XRD), field emission scanning electron microscope (FESEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and Raman spectroscopy were used to investigate the effect of pH and additives on the as-prepared samples. Results indicated that they were of microsize. With alcohol as an additive, the sample was plate-like MoO3at pH=2.5, and it was a mixture of MoO3and MoO3•0.55H2O of irradiative corolla at pH=1. The sample obtained by hydrothermal was MoO3flowers. Meanwhile, when silane coupling agent was introduced as the additive, the sample was MoO3spheres.
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