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Dive into the research topics where Changyi Li is active.

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Featured researches published by Changyi Li.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Processable Cyclic Peptide Nanotubes with Tunable Interiors

Rami Hourani; Chen Zhang; Rob van der Weegen; Luis Ruiz; Changyi Li; Sinan Keten; Brett A. Helms; Ting Xu

A facile route to generate cyclic peptide nanotubes with tunable interiors is presented. By incorporating 3-amino-2-methylbenzoic acid in the D,L-alternating primary sequence of a cyclic peptide, a functional group can be presented in the interior of the nanotubes without compromising the formation of high aspect ratio nanotubes. The new design of such a cyclic peptide also enables one to modulate the nanotube growth process to be compatible with the polymer processing window without compromising the formation of high aspect ratio nanotubes, thus opening a viable approach toward molecularly defined porous membranes.


Nano Letters | 2015

Polysulfide-Blocking Microporous Polymer Membrane Tailored for Hybrid Li-Sulfur Flow Batteries

Changyi Li; Ashleigh L. Ward; Sean E. Doris; Tod A. Pascal; David Prendergast; Brett A. Helms

Redox flow batteries (RFBs) present unique opportunities for multi-hour electrochemical energy storage (EES) at low cost. Too often, the barrier for implementing them in large-scale EES is the unfettered migration of redox active species across the membrane, which shortens battery life and reduces Coulombic efficiency. To advance RFBs for reliable EES, a new paradigm for controlling membrane transport selectivity is needed. We show here that size- and ion-selective transport can be achieved using membranes fabricated from polymers of intrinsic microporosity (PIMs). As a proof-of-concept demonstration, a first-generation PIM membrane dramatically reduced polysulfide crossover (and shuttling at the anode) in lithium-sulfur batteries, even when sulfur cathodes were prepared as flowable energy-dense fluids. The design of our membrane platform was informed by molecular dynamics simulations of the solvated structures of lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (LiTFSI) vs lithiated polysulfides (Li2Sx, where x = 8, 6, and 4) in glyme-based electrolytes of different oligomer length. These simulations suggested polymer films with pore dimensions less than 1.2-1.7 nm might incur the desired ion-selectivity. Indeed, the polysulfide blocking ability of the PIM-1 membrane (∼0.8 nm pores) was improved 500-fold over mesoporous Celgard separators (∼17 nm pores). As a result, significantly improved battery performance was demonstrated, even in the absence of LiNO3 anode-protecting additives.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Mechanistic Insight into the Formation of Cationic Naked Nanocrystals Generated under Equilibrium Control

Sean E. Doris; Jared Lynch; Changyi Li; Andrew W. Wills; Jeffrey J. Urban; Brett A. Helms

Cationic naked nanocrystals (NCs) are useful building units for assembling hierarchical mesostructured materials. Until now, their preparation required strongly electrophilic reagents that irreversibly sever bonds between native organic ligands and the NC surface. Colloidal instabilities can occur during ligand stripping if exposed metal cations desorb from the surface. We hypothesized that cation desorption could be avoided were we able to stabilize the surface during ligand stripping via ion pairing. We were successful in this regard by carrying out ligand stripping under equilibrium control with Lewis acid-base adducts of BF3. To better understand the microscopic processes involved, we studied the reaction pathway in detail using in situ NMR experiments and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. As predicted, we found that cationic NC surfaces are transiently stabilized post-stripping by physisorbed anionic species that arise from the reaction of BF3 with native ligands. This stabilization allows polar dispersants to reach the NC surface before cation desorption can occur. The mechanistic insights gained in this work provide a much-needed framework for understanding the interplay between NC surface chemistry and colloidal stability. These insights enabled the preparation of stable naked NC inks of desorption-susceptible NC compositions such as PbSe, which were easily assembled into new mesostructured films and polymer-nanocrystal composites with wide-ranging technological applications.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Engineered Transport in Microporous Materials and Membranes for Clean Energy Technologies

Changyi Li; Stephen M. Meckler; Zachary P. Smith; Jonathan E. Bachman; Lorenzo Maserati; Jeffrey R. Long; Brett A. Helms

Many forward-looking clean-energy technologies hinge on the development of scalable and efficient membrane-based separations. Ongoing investment in the basic research of microporous materials is beginning to pay dividends in membrane technology maturation. Specifically, improvements in membrane selectivity, permeability, and durability are being leveraged for more efficient carbon capture, desalination, and energy storage, and the market adoption of membranes in those areas appears to be on the horizon. Herein, an overview of the microporous materials chemistry driving advanced membrane development, the clean-energy separations employing them, and the theoretical underpinnings tying membrane performance to membrane structure across multiple length scales is provided. The interplay of pore architecture and chemistry for a given set of analytes emerges as a critical design consideration dictating mass transport outcomes. Opportunities and outstanding challenges in the field are also discussed, including high-flux 2D molecular-sieving membranes, phase-change adsorbents as performance-enhancing components in composite membranes, and the need for quantitative metrologies for understanding mass transport in heterophasic materials and in micropores with unusual chemical interactions with analytes of interest.


Chemistry of Materials | 2015

Sub-micron Polymer-Zeolitic Imidazolate Framework Layered Hybrids via Controlled Chemical Transformation of Naked ZnO Nanocrystal Films

Stephen M. Meckler; Changyi Li; Wendy L. Queen; Teresa E. Williams; Jeffrey R. Long; Raffaella Buonsanti; Delia J. Milliron; Brett A. Helms


Chemistry of Materials | 2016

Minute-MOFs: Ultrafast Synthesis of M2(dobpdc) Metal–Organic Frameworks from Divalent Metal Oxide Colloidal Nanocrystals

Lorenzo Maserati; Stephen M. Meckler; Changyi Li; Brett A. Helms


Archive | 2016

POLYMERIC MATERIALS FOR ELECTROCHEMICAL CELLS AND ION SEPARATION PROCESSES

Brett A. Helms; Changyi Li; Ashleigh L. Ward; Sean E. Doris; Peter D. Frischmann


Abstracts of Papers, 251st ACS National Meeting & Exposition, San Diego, CA, United States, March 13-17, 2016 | 2016

Layered polymer-zeolitic imidazolate framework composites fabricated using sacrificial, metal-oxide, nanocrystal precursors

Stephen M. Meckler; Changyi Li; Wendy L. Queen; Teresa E. Williams; Jeffrey R. Long; Raffaella Buonsanti; Delia J. Milliron; Brett A. Helms


228th ECS Meeting (October 11-15, 2015) | 2015

Microporous Polymer Membranes Tailored for Redox Flow Batteries

Brett A. Helms; Changyi Li; Ashleigh L. Ward; Sean E. Doris; Tod A. Pascal; David Prendergast


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Co-assembly of polymer covered cyclic peptide nanotubes and block copolymer in thin films

Chen Zhang; Thomas Lazzara; Changyi Li; Brett Helmes; Ting Xu

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Brett A. Helms

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Sean E. Doris

University of California

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Chen Zhang

University of California

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Ting Xu

University of California

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David Prendergast

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Delia J. Milliron

University of Texas at Austin

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Lorenzo Maserati

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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