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Dive into the research topics where Chandra Veer Singh is active.

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Featured researches published by Chandra Veer Singh.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Phosphorene as a Polysulfide Immobilizer and Catalyst in High‐Performance Lithium–Sulfur Batteries

Lu Li; Long Chen; Sankha Mukherjee; Jian Gao; Hao Sun; Zhibo Liu; X. L. Ma; Tushar Gupta; Chandra Veer Singh; Wencai Ren; Hui-Ming Cheng; Nikhil Koratkar

Theoretical and experimental studies together show phosphorene as a highly potent polysulfide immobilizer for lithium-sulfur batteries, enabling a high capacity, good rate capability, and excellent cycling stability.


Nano Letters | 2016

Vertically Oriented Arrays of ReS2 Nanosheets for Electrochemical Energy Storage and Electrocatalysis

Jian Gao; Lu Li; Jiawei Tan; Hao Sun; Baichang Li; Juan Carlos Idrobo; Chandra Veer Singh; Toh-Ming Lu; Nikhil Koratkar

Transition-metal dichalcogenide (TMD) nanolayers show potential as high-performance catalysts in energy conversion and storage devices. Synthetic TMDs produced by chemical-vapor deposition (CVD) methods tend to grow parallel to the growth substrate. Here, we show that with the right precursors and appropriate tuning of the CVD growth conditions, ReS2 nanosheets can be made to orient perpendicular to the growth substrate. This accomplishes two important objectives; first, it drastically increases the wetted or exposed surface area of the ReS2 sheets, and second, it exposes the sharp edges and corners of the ReS2 sheets. We show that these structural features of the vertically grown ReS2 sheets can be exploited to significantly improve their performance as polysulfide immobilizers and electrochemical catalysts in lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries and in hydrogen evolution reactions (HER). After 300 cycles, the specific capacity of the Li-S battery with vertical ReS2 catalyst is retained above 750 mA h g(-1), with only ∼0.063% capacity decay per cycle, much better than the baseline battery (without ReS2), which shows ∼0.184% capacity decay per cycle under the same test conditions. As a HER catalyst, the vertical ReS2 provides very small onset overpotential (<100 mV) and an exceptional exchange-current density (∼67.6 μA/cm(2)), which is vastly superior to the baseline electrode without ReS2.


ACS Nano | 2015

A Foldable Lithium–Sulfur Battery

Lu Li; Zi Ping Wu; Hao Sun; Deming Chen; Jian Gao; Shravan Suresh; Philippe K. Chow; Chandra Veer Singh; Nikhil Koratkar

The next generation of deformable and shape-conformable electronics devices will need to be powered by batteries that are not only flexible but also foldable. Here we report a foldable lithium-sulfur (Li-S) rechargeable battery, with the highest areal capacity (∼3 mAh cm(-2)) reported to date among all types of foldable energy-storage devices. The key to this result lies in the use of fully foldable and superelastic carbon nanotube current-collector films and impregnation of the active materials (S and Li) into the current-collectors in a checkerboard pattern, enabling the battery to be folded along two mutually orthogonal directions. The carbon nanotube films also serve as the sulfur entrapment layer in the Li-S battery. The foldable battery showed <12% loss in specific capacity over 100 continuous folding and unfolding cycles. Such shape-conformable Li-S batteries with significantly greater energy density than traditional lithium-ion batteries could power the flexible and foldable devices of the future including laptops, cell phones, tablet computers, surgical tools, and implantable biomedical devices.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Photoexcited Surface Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Heterogeneous Photocatalytic CO2 Reduction

Kulbir Kaur Ghuman; Laura B. Hoch; Paul Szymanski; Joel Y. Y. Loh; Nazir P. Kherani; Mostafa A. El-Sayed; Geoffrey A. Ozin; Chandra Veer Singh

In this study we investigated, theoretically and experimentally, the unique photoactive behavior of pristine and defected indium oxide surfaces providing fundamental insights into their excited state properties as well as an explanation for the experimentally observed enhanced activity of defected indium oxide surfaces for the gas-phase reverse water gas shift reaction, CO2 + H2 + hν→ CO + H2O in the light compared to the dark. To this end, a detailed excited-state study of pristine and defected forms of indium oxide (In2O3, In2O3-x, In2O3(OH)y and In2O3-x(OH)y) surfaces was performed using time dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) calculations, the results of which were supported experimentally by transient absorption spectroscopy and photoconductivity measurements. It was found that the surface frustrated Lewis pairs (FLPs) created by a Lewis acidic coordinately unsaturated surface indium site proximal to an oxygen vacancy and a Lewis basic surface hydroxide site in In2O3-x(OH)y become more acidic and basic and hence more active in the ES compared to the GS. This provides a theoretical mechanism responsible for the enhanced activity and reduced activation energy of the photochemical reverse water gas shift reaction observed experimentally for In2O3-x(OH)y compared to the thermochemical reaction. This fundamental insight into the role of photoexcited surface FLPs for catalytic CO2 reduction could lead to improved photocatalysts for solar fuel production.


Journal of Composite Materials | 2013

A synergistic damage mechanics approach to mechanical response of composite laminates with ply cracks

Chandra Veer Singh; Ramesh Talreja

We treat selected test cases in the third world wide failure exercise by the approach described as synergistic damage mechanics. This approach utilizes micromechanics and continuum damage mechanics to predict the overall mechanical response of composite laminates with ply cracking in multiple orientations. The material constants needed in the continuum damage mechanic formulation are calculated from stiffness property changes incurred in a reference laminate. For other laminate configurations, the stiffness changes are derived using a relative constraint parameter which is calculated from the constraint on the opening displacement of ply cracks within the given cracked laminate evaluated numerically by a finite element analysis of appropriately constructed representative unit cell. The number density of ply cracks (cracks per unit length normal to the crack planes) under quasi-static loading is calculated by an energy-based approach. Finally, the stress–strain response of a laminate is determined by combining stiffness property changes and evolution of crack number density.


ACS Nano | 2016

Interfacial Shear Strength of Multilayer Graphene Oxide Films

Matthew Daly; Changhong Cao; Hao Sun; Yu Sun; Tobin Filleter; Chandra Veer Singh

Graphene oxide (GO) is considered as one of the most promising layered materials with tunable physical properties and applicability in many important engineering applications. In this work, the interfacial behavior of multilayer GO films was directly investigated via GO-to-GO friction force microscopy, and the interfacial shear strength (ISS) was measured to be 5.3 ± 3.2 MPa. Based on high resolution atomic force microscopy images and the available chemical data, targeted molecular dynamics simulations were performed to evaluate the influence of functional structure, topological defects, and interlayer registry on the shear response of the GO films. Theoretical values for shear strength ranging from 17 to 132 MPa were predicted for the different structures studied, providing upper bounds for the ISS. Computational results also revealed the atomic origins of the stochastic nature of friction measurements. Specifically, the wide scatter in experimental measurements was attributed to variations in functional structure and topological defects within the sliding volume. The findings of this study provide important insight for understanding the significant differences in strength between monolayer and bulk graphene oxide materials and can be useful for engineering topological structures with tunable mechanical properties.


Nature Communications | 2016

Heterogeneous reduction of carbon dioxide by hydride-terminated silicon nanocrystals

Wei Sun; Chenxi Qian; Le He; Kulbir Kaur Ghuman; Annabelle P. Y. Wong; Jia Jia; Abdinoor A. Jelle; Paul O’Brien; Laura M. Reyes; Thomas E. Wood; Amr S. Helmy; Charles A. Mims; Chandra Veer Singh; Geoffrey A. Ozin

Silicon constitutes 28% of the earths mass. Its high abundance, lack of toxicity and low cost coupled with its electrical and optical properties, make silicon unique among the semiconductors for converting sunlight into electricity. In the quest for semiconductors that can make chemicals and fuels from sunlight and carbon dioxide, unfortunately the best performers are invariably made from rare and expensive elements. Here we report the observation that hydride-terminated silicon nanocrystals with average diameter 3.5 nm, denoted ncSi:H, can function as a single component heterogeneous reducing agent for converting gaseous carbon dioxide selectively to carbon monoxide, at a rate of hundreds of μmol h−1 g−1. The large surface area, broadband visible to near infrared light harvesting and reducing power of SiH surface sites of ncSi:H, together play key roles in this conversion. Making use of the reducing power of nanostructured hydrides towards gaseous carbon dioxide is a conceptually distinct and commercially interesting strategy for making fuels directly from sunlight.


Nano Letters | 2015

Strengthening in Graphene Oxide Nanosheets: Bridging the Gap between Interplanar and Intraplanar Fracture

Changhong Cao; Matthew Daly; Brandon K. Chen; Jane Y. Howe; Chandra Veer Singh; Tobin Filleter; Yu Sun

Graphene oxide (GO) is a layered material comprised of hierarchical features which possess vastly differing characteristic dimensions. GO nanosheets represent the critical hierarchical structure which bridges the length-scale of monolayer and bulk material architectures. In this study, the strength and fracture behavior of GO nanosheets were examined. Under uniaxial loading, the tensile strength of the nanosheets was measured to be as high as 12 ± 4 GPa, which approaches the intrinsic strength of monolayer GO and is orders of magnitude higher than that of bulk GO materials. During mechanical failure, brittle fracture was observed in a highly localized region through the cross-section of the nanosheets without interlayer pull-out. This transition in the failure behavior from interplanar fracture, common for bulk GO, to intraplanar fracture, which dominates failure in monolayer GO, is responsible for the high strength measured in the nanosheets. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that the elastic release from the propagation of intraplanar cracks initiates global fracture due to interlayer load transmission through hydrogen bond networks within the gallery space of the GO nanosheets. Furthermore, the GO nanosheet strength and stiffness were found to be strongly correlated to the effective volume and thickness of the samples, respectively. These findings help to bridge the understanding of the mechanical behavior of hierarchical GO materials and will ultimately guide the application of this intermediate scale material.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2014

A van der Waals density functional theory comparison of metal decorated graphene systems for hydrogen adsorption

Janet Wong; Shwetank Yadav; Jasmine Tam; Chandra Veer Singh

Previous Density Functional Theory (DFT) studies on metal decorated graphene generally use local density approximation (LDA) or generalized gradient approximation (GGA) functionals which can cause inaccuracies in hydrogen binding energies as they neglect van der Waals (vdW) interactions and are difficult to compare due to their widely varying simulation parameters. We investigated the hydrogen binding ability of several metals with a consistent set of simulations using the GGA functional and incorporated vdW forces through the vdW-DF2 functional. Metal adatom anchoring on graphene and hydrogen adsorption ability for both single and double sided decoration were studied for eight metals (Al, Li, Na, Ca, Cu, Ni, Pd, and Pt). It was found that the vdW correction can have a significant impact on both metal and hydrogen binding energies. The vdW-DF2 functional led to stronger metal adatom and hydrogen binding for light metals in comparison to GGA results, while heavier transition metals displayed the opposite behaviour but still produced stronger hydrogen binding energies than light metals. Nickel was found to be the best balance between hydrogen binding ability for reversible storage and low weight. The effects on hydrogen binding energy and maximum achievable hydrogen gravimetric density were analyzed for Ni-graphene systems with varying metal coverage. Lower metal coverage was found to improve hydrogen binding but decrease hydrogen gravimetric density. The highest achieved Ni-graphene system gravimetric density was 6.12 wt. %.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Consequences of Surface Oxophilicity of Ni, Ni-Co, and Co Clusters on Methane Activation

Weifeng Tu; Mireille Ghoussoub; Chandra Veer Singh; Ya-Huei Cathy Chin

This study describes a new C-H bond activation pathway during CH4-CO2 reactions on oxophilic Ni-Co and Co clusters, unlike those established previously on Ni clusters. The initial C-H bond activation remains as the sole kinetically relevant step on Ni-Co, Ni, and Co clusters, but their specific reaction paths vary. On Ni clusters, C-H bond activation occurs via an oxidative addition step that involves a three-center (H3C···*···H)⧧ transition state, during which a Ni-atom inserts into the C-H bond and donates its electron density into the C-H bonds antibonding orbital. Ni-Co clusters are more oxophilic than Ni; thus, their surfaces are covered with oxygen adatoms. An oxygen adatom and a vicinal Co-atom form a metal-oxygen site-pair that cleaves the C-H bond via a σ bond metathesis reaction, during which the Co inserts into the C-H bond while the oxygen abstracts the leaving H-atom in a concerted, four-center (H3C···*···H···O*)⧧ transition state. Similarly, Co clusters also catalyze the σ bond metathesis step, but much less effectively because of their higher oxophilicities, much stronger binding to oxygen, and less effective hydrogen abstraction than Ni-Co clusters. On Ni-Co and Co clusters, the pseudo-first-order rate coefficients are single-valued functions of the CO2-to-CO ratio (or H2O-to-H2 ratio), because this ratio prescribes the oxygen chemical potentials and the relative abundances of metal-oxygen site-pairs through the water-gas shift equilibrium. The direct involvement of reactive oxygen in the kinetically relevant step leads to more effective CH4 turnovers and complete elimination of coke deposition on Ni-Co bimetallic clusters.

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