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Featured researches published by Chenxi Qian.


ACS Nano | 2016

Spatial Separation of Charge Carriers in In2O3–x(OH)y Nanocrystal Superstructures for Enhanced Gas-Phase Photocatalytic Activity

Le He; Thomas E. Wood; Bo Wu; Yuchan Dong; Laura B. Hoch; Laura M. Reyes; Di Wang; Christian Kübel; Chenxi Qian; Jia Jia; Kristine Liao; Paul O'Brien; Amit Sandhel; Joel Y. Y. Loh; Paul Szymanski; Nazir P. Kherani; Tze Chien Sum; Charles A. Mims; Geoffrey A. Ozin

The development of strategies for increasing the lifetime of photoexcited charge carriers in nanostructured metal oxide semiconductors is important for enhancing their photocatalytic activity. Intensive efforts have been made in tailoring the properties of the nanostructured photocatalysts through different ways, mainly including band-structure engineering, doping, catalyst-support interaction, and loading cocatalysts. In liquid-phase photocatalytic dye degradation and water splitting, it was recently found that nanocrystal superstructure based semiconductors exhibited improved spatial separation of photoexcited charge carriers and enhanced photocatalytic performance. Nevertheless, it remains unknown whether this strategy is applicable in gas-phase photocatalysis. Using porous indium oxide nanorods in catalyzing the reverse water-gas shift reaction as a model system, we demonstrate here that assembling semiconductor nanocrystals into superstructures can also promote gas-phase photocatalytic processes. Transient absorption studies prove that the improved activity is a result of prolonged photoexcited charge carrier lifetimes due to the charge transfer within the nanocrystal network comprising the nanorods. Our study reveals that the spatial charge separation within the nanocrystal networks could also benefit gas-phase photocatalysis and sheds light on the design principles of efficient nanocrystal superstructure based photocatalysts.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Non-wettable, oxidation-stable, brightly luminescent, perfluorodecyl-capped silicon nanocrystal film.

Chenxi Qian; Wei Sun; Liwei Wang; Changlong Chen; Kristine Liao; Wendong Wang; Jia Jia; Benjamin D. Hatton; Gilberto Casillas; Marty Kurylowicz; Christopher M. Yip; Melanie L. Mastronardi; Geoffrey A. Ozin

Here we describe for the first time the synthesis of colloidally stable, brightly luminescent perfluorodecyl-capped silicon nanocrystals and compare the properties of solutions and films made from them with those of their perhydrodecyl-capped relatives. The perfluorodecyl capping group compared to the perhydrodecyl capping group yields superior hydrophobicity and much greater resistance to air oxidation, the enhanced electron-withdrawing character induces blue shifts in the wavelength of photoluminescence, and the lower-frequency carbon-fluorine stretching modes disfavor non-radiative relaxation pathways and boost the absolute photoluminescence quantum yield. Together these attributes bode well for advanced materials and biomedical applications founded upon perfluorodecyl-protected silicon nanocrystals.


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.


Small | 2015

Exploring the Possibilities and Limitations of a Nanomaterials Genome

Chenxi Qian; Todd Siler; Geoffrey A. Ozin

What are we going to do with the cornucopia of nanomaterials appearing in the open and patent literature, every day? Imagine the benefits of an intelligent and convenient means of categorizing, organizing, sifting, sorting, connecting, and utilizing this information in scientifically and technologically innovative ways by building a Nanomaterials Genome founded upon an all-purpose Periodic Table of Nanomaterials. In this Concept article, inspired by work on the Human Genome project, which began in 1989 together with motivation from the recent emergence of the Materials Genome project initiated in 2011 and the Nanoinformatics Roadmap 2020 instigated in 2010, we envision the development of a Nanomaterials Genome (NMG) database with the most advanced data-mining tools that leverage inference engines to help connect and interpret patterns of nanomaterials information. It will be equipped with state-of-the-art visualization techniques that rapidly organize and picture, categorize and interrelate the inherited behavior of complex nanomatter from the information programmed in its constituent nanomaterials building blocks. A Nanomaterials Genome Initiative (NMGI) of the type imagined herein has the potential to serve the global nanoscience community with an opportunity to speed up the development continuum of nanomaterials through the innovation process steps of discovery, structure determination and property optimization, functionality elucidation, system design and integration, certification and manufacturing to deployment in technologies that apply these versatile nanomaterials in environmentally responsible ways. The possibilities and limitations of this concept are critically evaluated in this article.


Advanced Science | 2017

Photothermal Catalyst Engineering: Hydrogenation of Gaseous CO2 with High Activity and Tailored Selectivity

Jia Jia; Hong Wang; Zhuole Lu; Paul G. O'Brien; Mireille Ghoussoub; Paul N. Duchesne; Ziqi Zheng; Peicheng Li; Qiao Qiao; Lu Wang; Alan Gu; Abdinoor A. Jelle; Yuchan Dong; Qiang Wang; Kulbir Kaur Ghuman; Thomas E. Wood; Chenxi Qian; Yue Shao; Chenyue Qiu; Miaomiao Ye; Yimei Zhu; Zheng-Hong Lu; Peng Zhang; Amr S. Helmy; Chandra Veer Singh; Nazir P. Kherani; Doug D. Perovic; Geoffrey A. Ozin

Abstract This study has designed and implemented a library of hetero‐nanostructured catalysts, denoted as Pd@Nb2O5, comprised of size‐controlled Pd nanocrystals interfaced with Nb2O5 nanorods. This study also demonstrates that the catalytic activity and selectivity of CO2 reduction to CO and CH4 products can be systematically tailored by varying the size of the Pd nanocrystals supported on the Nb2O5 nanorods. Using large Pd nanocrystals, this study achieves CO and CH4 production rates as high as 0.75 and 0.11 mol h−1 gPd −1, respectively. By contrast, using small Pd nanocrystals, a CO production rate surpassing 18.8 mol h−1 gPd −1 is observed with 99.5% CO selectivity. These performance metrics establish a new milestone in the champion league of catalytic nanomaterials that can enable solar‐powered gas‐phase heterogeneous CO2 reduction. The remarkable control over the catalytic performance of Pd@Nb2O5 is demonstrated to stem from a combination of photothermal, electronic and size effects, which is rationally tunable through nanochemistry.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Size-Tunable Photothermal Germanium Nanocrystals

Wei Sun; Grace Zhong; Christian Kübel; Abdinoor A. Jelle; Chenxi Qian; Lu Wang; Manuchehr Ebrahimi; Laura M. Reyes; Amr S. Helmy; Geoffrey A. Ozin

Germanium nanocrystals (ncGe) have not received as much attention as silicon nanocrystals (ncSi). However, Ge has demonstrated superiority over Si nanomaterials in some applications. Examples include, high charge-discharge rate lithium-ion batteries, small band-gap opto-electronic devices, and photo-therapeutics. When stabilized in an oxide matrix (ncGe/GeOx ), its high charge-retention has enabled non-volatile memories. It has also found utility as a high-capacity anode material for Li-ion batteries with impressive stability. Herein, we report an organic-free synthesis of size-controlled ncGe in a GeOx matrix as well as freestanding ncGe, via the thermal disproportionation of GeO prepared from thermally induced dehydration of Ge(OH)2 . The photothermal effect of ncGe, quantified by Raman spectroscopy, is found to be size dependent and superior to ncSi. This advance suggests applications of ncGe in photothermal therapy, desalination, and catalysis.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Enhanced cellular uptake of size-separated lipophilic silicon nanoparticles

Aubrey Kusi-Appiah; Melanie L. Mastronardi; Chenxi Qian; Kenneth K. Chen; Lida Ghazanfari; Plengchart Prommapan; Christian Kübel; Geoffrey A. Ozin; Steven Lenhert

Specific size, shape and surface chemistry influence the biological activity of nanoparticles. In the case of lipophilic nanoparticles, which are widely used in consumer products, there is evidence that particle size and formulation influences skin permeability and that lipophilic particles smaller than 6 nm can embed in lipid bilayers. Since most nanoparticle synthetic procedures result in mixtures of different particles, post-synthetic purification promises to provide insights into nanostructure-function relationships. Here we used size-selective precipitation to separate lipophilic allyl-benzyl-capped silicon nanoparticles into monodisperse fractions within the range of 1 nm to 5 nm. We measured liposomal encapsulation and cellular uptake of the monodisperse particles and found them to have generally low cytotoxicities in Hela cells. However, specific fractions showed reproducibly higher cytotoxicity than other fractions as well as the unseparated ensemble. Measurements indicate that the cytotoxicity mechanism involves oxidative stress and the differential cytotoxicity is due to enhanced cellular uptake by specific fractions. The results indicate that specific particles, with enhanced suitability for incorporation into lipophilic regions of liposomes and subsequent in vitro delivery to cells, are enriched in certain fractions.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2016

Dye colour switching by hydride-terminated silicon particles and its application as an oxygen indicator

Miaomiao Ye; Chenxi Qian; Wei Sun; Le He; Jia Jia; Yuchan Dong; Wenjie Zhou

Correction for ‘Dye colour switching by hydride-terminated silicon particles and its application as an oxygen indicator’ by Miaomiao Ye et al., J. Mater. Chem. C, 2016, DOI: 10.1039/c6tc00749j.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Efficient Electrocatalytic Reduction of CO2 by Nitrogen-Doped Nanoporous Carbon/Carbon Nanotube Membranes: A Step Towards the Electrochemical CO2 Refinery

Hong Wang; Jia Jia; Pengfei Song; Qiang Wang; Debao Li; Shixiong Min; Chenxi Qian; Lu Wang; Young Feng Li; Chun Ma; Tom Wu; Jiayin Yuan; Markus Antonietti; Geoffrey A. Ozin


Advanced Energy Materials | 2017

Synthesis of Black TiOx Nanoparticles by Mg Reduction of TiO2 Nanocrystals and their Application for Solar Water Evaporation

Miaomiao Ye; Jia Jia; Zhejian Wu; Chenxi Qian; Rong Chen; Paul G. O'Brien; Wei Sun; Yuchan Dong; Geoffrey A. Ozin

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Wei Sun

University of Toronto

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Jia Jia

University of Toronto

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Lu Wang

University of Toronto

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