The
methanol-to-olefins (MTO) reaction is an interesting and important
reaction for both fundamental research and industrial application.
The Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) has developed a MTO
technology that led to the successful construction and operation of
the world’s first coal to olefin plant in 2010. This historical
perspective gives a brief summary on the key issues for the process
development, including studies on the reaction mechanism, molecular
sieve synthesis and crystallization mechanism, catalyst and its manufacturing
scale-up, reactor selection and reactor scale-up, process demonstration,
and commercialization. Further challenges on the fundamental research
and the directions for future catalyst improvement are also suggested.
The notion that animals can detect the Earth's magnetic field was once ridiculed, but is now well established. Yet the biological nature of such magnetosensing phenomenon remains unknown. Here, we report a putative magnetic receptor (Drosophila CG8198, here named MagR) and a multimeric magnetosensing rod-like protein complex, identified by theoretical postulation and genome-wide screening, and validated with cellular, biochemical, structural and biophysical methods. The magnetosensing complex consists of the identified putative magnetoreceptor and known magnetoreception-related photoreceptor cryptochromes (Cry), has the attributes of both Cry- and iron-based systems, and exhibits spontaneous alignment in magnetic fields, including that of the Earth. Such a protein complex may form the basis of magnetoreception in animals, and may lead to applications across multiple fields.
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