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Dive into the research topics where Biwei Deng is active.

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Featured researches published by Biwei Deng.


ACS Nano | 2014

Three-Dimensional Printing of Complex Structures: Man Made or toward Nature?

Dong Lin; Qiong Nian; Biwei Deng; Shengyu Jin; Yaowu Hu; Wenqi Wang; Gary J. Cheng

Current three-dimensional (3D) printing techniques enable the fabrication of complex multifunctional structures that are unimaginable in conventional manufacturing. In this Perspective, we outline recent progress in materials and manufacturing and propose challenges and opportunities for the future development of 3D printing of functional materials. The success of future 3D printing relies not only on multifunctional materials and printing techniques but also on smart design of complex systems. Engineers need to understand advanced materials, additive manufacturing, and, more importantly, creative design. Fortunately, we can learn from many structures that exist in nature and adapt them to engineered structures.


ACS Nano | 2015

Crystalline Nanojoining Silver Nanowire Percolated Networks on Flexible Substrate

Qiong Nian; Mojib Saei; Yang Xu; Ganguli Sabyasachi; Biwei Deng; Yong P. Chen; Gary J. Cheng

Optoelectronic performance of metal nanowire networks are dominated by junction microstructure and network configuration. Although metal nanowire printings, such as silver nanowires (AgNWs) or AgNWs/semiconductor oxide bilayer, have great potential to replace traditional ITO, efficient and selective nanoscale integration of nanowires is still challenging owing to high cross nanowire junction resistance. Herein, pulsed laser irradiation under controlled conditions is used to generate local crystalline nanojoining of AgNWs without affecting other regions of the network, resulting in significantly improved optoelectronic performance. The method, laser-induced plasmonic welding (LPW), can be applied to roll-to-roll printed AgNWs percolating networks on PET substrate. First principle simulations and experimental characterizations reveal the mechanism of crystalline nanojoining originated from thermal activated isolated metal atom flow over nanowire junctions. Molecular dynamic simulation results show an angle-dependent recrystallization process during LPW. The excellent optoelectronic performance of AgNW/PET has achieved Rs ∼ 5 Ω/sq at high transparency (91% @λ = 550 nm).


Advanced Materials | 2017

Flyweight, Superelastic, Electrically Conductive, and Flame‐Retardant 3D Multi‐Nanolayer Graphene/Ceramic Metamaterial

Qiangqiang Zhang; Dong Lin; Biwei Deng; Xiang Xu; Qiong Nian; Shengyu Jin; Kevin Leedy; Hui Li; Gary J. Cheng

A ceramic/graphene metamaterial (GCM) with microstructure-derived superelasticity and structural robustness is achieved by designing hierarchical honeycomb microstructures, which are composited with two brittle constituents (graphene and ceramic) assembled in multi-nanolayer cellular walls. Attributed to the designed microstructure, well-interconnected scaffolds, chemically bonded interface, and coupled strengthening effect between the graphene framework and the nanolayers of the Al2 O3 ceramic (NAC), the GCM demonstrates a sequence of multifunctional properties simultaneously that have not been reported for ceramics and ceramics-matrix-composite structures, such as flyweight density, 80% reversible compressibility, high fatigue resistance, high electrical conductivity, and excellent thermal-insulation/flame-retardant performance simultaneously. The 3D well-ordered graphene aerogel templates are strongly coupled with the NAC by the chemically bonded interface, exhibiting mutual strengthening, compatible deformability, and a linearly dependent relationship between the density and Youngs modulus. Considerable size effects of the ceramic nanolayers on the mechanical properties are revealed in these ceramic-based metamaterials. The designed hierarchical honeycomb graphene with a fourth dimensional control of the ceramic nanolayers on new ways to scalable fabrication of advanced multifunctional ceramic composites with controllable design suggest a great potential in applications of flexible conductors, shock/vibration absorbers, thermal shock barriers, thermal insulation/flame-retardant skins, and porous microwave-absorbing coatings.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Graphene/PbS-Quantum Dots/Graphene Sandwich Structures Enabled by Laser Shock Imprinting for High Performance Photodetectors

Qiong Nian; Liang Gao; Yaowu Hu; Biwei Deng; Jiang Tang; Gary J. Cheng

Quantum dots (QDs) integrated 2-dimensional (2D) materials have great potential for photodetector applications due to the excellent light absorption of QDs and ultrafast carrier transportation of 2D materials. However, there is a main issue that prevents efficient carrier transportation and ideal performance of photodetectors: the high interfacial resistance between 2D materials and QDs due to the bad contacts between 2D/0D interface, which makes sluggish carrier transfer from QDs to 2D materials. Here, a sandwich structure (graphene/PbS-QDs/graphene) with seamless 2D/0D contact was fabricated by laser shock imprinting, which opto-mechanically tunes the morphology of 2D materials to perfectly wrap on 0D materials and efficiently collect carriers from the PbS-QDs. It is found that this seamless integrated 2D/0D/2D structure significantly enhanced the carrier transmission, photoresponse gain (by 2×), response time (by 20×), and photoresponse speed (by 13×). The response time (∼30 ms) and Ip/ Id ratio (13.2) are both over 10× better than the reported hybrid graphene photodetectors. This is due to the tight contact and efficient gate-modulated carrier injection from PbS-QDs to graphene. The gate voltage dictates whether electrons or holes dominate the carrier injection from PbS-QDs to graphene.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Superplastic Formation of Metal Nanostructure Arrays with Ultrafine Gaps

Yaowu Hu; Yi Xuan; Xiaolei Wang; Biwei Deng; Mojib Saei; Shengyu Jin; Joseph Irudayaraj; Gary J. Cheng

Laser shock compression of plasmonic nanoarrays results in ultrafine tunable line-gaps at sub-10 nm scale by collaborative superplastic flow. From molecular dynamics analysis, the metal nanostructures change from crystalline to liquid-like metals, expanding quickly but never fusing together, even when they are very close. This technique enables good tunability of surface plasmon resonances and significantly enhanced local fields.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Ultrafast Laser‐Shock‐Induced Confined Metaphase Transformation for Direct Writing of Black Phosphorus Thin Films

Gang Qiu; Qiong Nian; Maithilee Motlag; Shengyu Jin; Biwei Deng; Yexin Deng; Adam Charnas; Peide D. Ye; Gary J. Cheng

Few-layer black phosphorus (BP) has emerged as one of the most promising candidates for post-silicon electronic materials due to its outstanding electrical and optical properties. However, lack of large-scale BP thin films is still a major roadblock to further applications. The most widely used methods for obtaining BP thin films are mechanical exfoliation and liquid exfoliation. Herein, a method of directly synthesizing continuous BP thin films with the capability of patterning arbitrary shapes by employing ultrafast laser writing with confinement is reported. The physical mechanism of confined laser metaphase transformation is understood by molecular dynamics simulation. Ultrafast laser ablation of BP layer under confinement can induce transient nonequilibrium high-temperature and high-pressure conditions for a few picoseconds. Under optimized laser intensity, this process induces a metaphase transformation to form a crystalline BP thin film on the substrate. Raman spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy techniques are utilized to characterize the morphology of the resulting BP thin films. Field-effect transistors are fabricated on the BP films to study their electrical properties. This unique approach offers a general methodology to mass produce large-scale patterned BP films with a one-step manufacturing process that has the potential to be applied to other 2D materials.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2015

Mesoscale elucidation of laser-assisted chemical deposition of Sn nanostructured electrodes

Zhixiao Liu; Biwei Deng; Gary J. Cheng; Huiqiu Deng; Partha P. Mukherjee

Nanostructured tin (Sn) is a promising high-capacity electrode for improved performance in lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles. In this work, Sn nanoisland growth for nanostructured electrodes assisted by the pulse laser irradiation has been investigated based on a mesoscale modeling formalism. The influence of pertinent processing conditions, such as pulse duration, heating/cooling rates, and atom flux, on the Sn nanostructure formation is specifically considered. The interaction between the adsorbed atom and the substrate, represented by the adatom diffusion barrier, is carefully studied. It is found that the diffusion barrier predominantly affects the distribution of Sn atoms. For both α-Sn and β-Sn, the averaged coordination number is larger than 3 when the diffusion barrier equals to 0.15 eV. The averaged coordination number decreases as the diffusion barrier increases. The substrate temperature, which is determined by heating/cooling rates and pulse duration, can also affect the formation of Sn nanoislands. For α-Sn, when applied low heating/cooling rates, nanoislands cannot form if the diffusion barrier is larger than 0.35 eV.


ASME 2014 International Manufacturing Science and Engineering Conference collocated with the JSME 2014 International Conference on Materials and Processing and the 42nd North American Manufacturing Research Conference | 2014

Magnetic Field Assisted Growth of High Dense Hematite Nanosheets and Their Application in Water Treatment

Dong Lin; Biwei Deng; Gary J. Cheng

This paper describes an approach combining thermal stress and magnetic force in order to generate α-Fe2O3 nanosheets on the surface of various iron substrates that include plate and powder and their application of nanosheets on water treatment. A typical procedure involved the thermal oxidation of these substrates on the hot plate with magnetic field in air and with fixed temperature of 500°C for different times. A possible mechanism — magnetic force adding on iron ions — was proposed to explain the growth of nanosheet at the width direction. Electron microscopic studies indicate that these nanosheets show a parabolic relation with time of thermal oxidation for the growth at width direction. A comparison of heavy metal (As, Cr) ion adsorption effect of nanosheets and nanowires was also investiged, which show that nanosheets have a much better adsorption ratio than nanowires.Copyright


Nanoscale | 2014

Ultrafast and scalable laser liquid synthesis of tin oxide nanotubes and its application in lithium ion batteries

Zhikun Liu; Zeyuan Cao; Biwei Deng; Yuefeng Wang; Jiayi Shao; Prashant Kumar; C. Richard Liu; Bingqing Wei; Gary J. Cheng


RSC Advances | 2014

Magnetic field assisted growth of highly dense α-Fe2O3 single crystal nanosheets and their application in water treatment

Dong Lin; Biwei Deng; Stephen A. Sassman; Yaowu Hu; Sergey Suslov; Gary J. Cheng

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Qiong Nian

Arizona State University

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Dong Lin

Kansas State University

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