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Dive into the research topics where Chunlei Wang is active.

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Featured researches published by Chunlei Wang.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

Optical properties of ZnO and ZnO:In nanorods assembled by sol-gel method

Yongming Chen; Y. C. Liu; S. X. Lu; Changshan Xu; C. L. Shao; Chunlei Wang; J.Y. Zhang; Y.M. Lu; D.Z. Shen; X.W. Fan

Self-assembled zinc oxide (ZnO) and indium-doping zinc oxide (ZnO:In) nanorod thin films were synthesized on quartz substrates without catalyst in aqueous solution by sol-gel method. The samples were characterized by x-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscope (SEM), Raman-scattering spectroscopy, room-temperature photoluminescence (PL) spectra, and temperature-dependent PL spectra measurements. XRD and Raman spectra illustrated that there were no single In2O3 phase in ZnO lattice after indium doping. The PL spectra of ZnO showed a strong UV emission band located at 394 nm and a very weak visible emission associated with deep-level defects. Indium incorporation induced the shift of optical band gap, quenching of the near-band-edge photoluminescence and enhanced LO mode multiphonon resonant Raman scattering in ZnO crystals at different temperatures. Abnormal temperature dependence of UV emission integrated intensity of ZnO and ZnO:In samples is observed. The local state emission peak of ZnO:In samples at 3.37 eV is observed in low-temperature PL spectra. The near-band-edge emission peak at room temperature was a mixture of excitons and impurity-related transitions for both of two samples.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Critical Dipole Length for the Wetting Transition Due to Collective Water-dipoles Interactions

Chunlei Wang; Bo Zhou; Yusong Tu; Manyi Duan; Peng Xiu; Jingye Li; Haiping Fang

The wetting behavior of water on the solid surfaces is fundamental to various physical, chemical and biological processes. Conventionally, the surface with charges or charge dipoles is hydrophilic, whereas the non-polar surface is hydrophobic though some exceptions were recently reported. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we show that there is a critical length of the charge dipoles on the solid surface. The solid surface still exhibited hydrophobic behavior when the dipole length was less than the critical value, indicating that the water molecules on the solid surface seemed not “feel” attractive interactions from the charge dipoles on the solid surface. Those unexpected observations result from the collective interactions between the water molecules and charge dipoles on the solid surface, where the steric exclusion effect between water molecules greatly reduces the water-dipole interactions. Remarkably, the steric exclusion effect is also important for surfaces with charge dipole lengths greater than this critical length.


Journal of Computational Physics | 2014

Galilean invariant fluid-solid interfacial dynamics in lattice Boltzmann simulations

Binghai Wen; Chaoying Zhang; Yusong Tu; Chunlei Wang; Haiping Fang

Galilean invariance is a fundamental property; however, although the dynamics of lattice Boltzmann equation in the hydrodynamic limit is Galilean invariant, this property is usually not taken into account in the treatment of the fluid-solid interface. Here, we show that consideration of Galilean invariance in fluid-solid interfacial dynamics can greatly enhance the computational accuracy and robustness in a numerical simulation. Surprisingly, simulations are so vastly improved that the force fluctuation is very small and a time average becomes unnecessary.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Ion Enrichment on the Hydrophobic Carbon-based Surface in Aqueous Salt Solutions due to Cation-π Interactions

Guosheng Shi; Jian Liu; Chunlei Wang; Bo(宋波) Song; Yusong Tu; Jun(胡钧) Hu; Haiping(方海平) Fang

By incorporating cation-π interactions to classic all-atoms force fields, we show that there is a clear enrichment of Na+ on a carbon-based π electron-rich surface in NaCl solutions using molecular dynamics simulations. Interestingly, Cl− is also enriched to some extend on the surface due to the electrostatic interaction between Na+ and Cl−, although the hydrated Cl−-π interaction is weak. The difference of the numbers of Na+ and Cl− accumulated at the interface leads to a significant negatively charged behavior in the solution, especially in nanoscale systems. Moreover, we find that the accumulation of the cations at the interfaces is universal since other cations (Li+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+, Fe2+, Co2+, Cu2+, Cd2+, Cr2+, and Pb2+) have similar adsorption behaviors. For comparison, as in usual force field without the proper consideration of cation-π interactions, the ions near the surfaces have a similar density of ions in the solution.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Janus effect of antifreeze proteins on ice nucleation

Kai Liu; Chunlei Wang; Ji Ma; Guosheng Shi; Xi Yao; Haiping Fang; Yanlin Song; Jianjun Wang

Significance In the past decades, a vast body of experimental and theoretical work has been undertaken to investigate the molecular level mechanism underlying heterogeneous ice nucleation. However, understanding of heterogeneous ice nucleation is still far from satisfactory. Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) are endowed with the unique ability to control freezing. Our research reveals the exact effect of AFPs on ice nucleation at the molecular level, which correlates ice nucleation with the surface chemistry and topography of different faces of AFPs. We also emphasize a critical role for the non–ice-binding face of AFPs and discover that the proper function of AFPs is realized only by synergistic effects of the non–ice-binding face and the ice-binding face. The mechanism of ice nucleation at the molecular level remains largely unknown. Nature endows antifreeze proteins (AFPs) with the unique capability of controlling ice formation. However, the effect of AFPs on ice nucleation has been under debate. Here we report the observation of both depression and promotion effects of AFPs on ice nucleation via selectively binding the ice-binding face (IBF) and the non–ice-binding face (NIBF) of AFPs to solid substrates. Freezing temperature and delay time assays show that ice nucleation is depressed with the NIBF exposed to liquid water, whereas ice nucleation is facilitated with the IBF exposed to liquid water. The generality of this Janus effect is verified by investigating three representative AFPs. Molecular dynamics simulation analysis shows that the Janus effect can be established by the distinct structures of the hydration layer around IBF and NIBF. Our work greatly enhances the understanding of the mechanism of AFPs at the molecular level and brings insights to the fundamentals of heterogeneous ice nucleation.


Nano Letters | 2016

Shape Evolution of Metal Nanoparticles in Water Vapor Environment

Beien Zhu; Zhen Xu; Chunlei Wang; Yi Gao

The structures of the metal nanoparticles are crucial for their catalytic activities. How to understand and even control the shape evolution of nanoparticles under reaction condition is a big challenge in heterogeneous catalysis. It has been proved that many reactive gases hold the capability of changing the structures and properties of metal nanoparticles. One interesting question is whether water vapor, such a ubiquitous environment, could induce the shape evolution of metal nanoparticles. So far this question has not received enough attention yet. In this work, we developed a model based on the density functional theory, the Wulff construction, and the Langmuir adsorption isotherm to explore the shape of metal nanoparticle at given temperature and water vapor pressure. By this model, we show clearly that water vapor could notably increase the fraction of (110) facets and decrease that of (111) facets for 3-8 nm Cu nanoparticles, which is perfectly consistent with the experimental observations. Further investigations indicate the water vapor has different effects on the different metal species (Cu, Au, Pt, and Pd). This work not only helps to understand the water vapor effect on the structures of metal nanoparticles but also proposes a simple but effective model to predict the shape of nanoparticles in certain environment.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Enhancement of Water Evaporation on Solid Surfaces with Nanoscale Hydrophobic-Hydrophilic Patterns

Rongzheng Wan; Chunlei Wang; Xiaoling Lei; Guoquan Zhou; Haiping Fang

Using molecular dynamics simulations, we show that the evaporation of nanoscale water on hydrophobic-hydrophilic patterned surfaces is unexpectedly faster than that on any surfaces with uniform wettability. The key to this phenomenon is that, on the patterned surface, the evaporation rate from the hydrophilic region only slightly decreases due to the correspondingly increased water thickness; meanwhile, a considerable number of water molecules evaporate from the hydrophobic region despite the lack of water film. Most of the evaporated water from the hydrophobic region originates from the hydrophilic region by diffusing across the contact lines. Further analysis shows that the evaporation rate from the hydrophobic region is approximately proportional to the total length of the contact lines.


ChemPhysChem | 2012

The Morphology and Stability of Nanoscopic Gas States at Water/Solid Interfaces

Lijuan Zhang; Chunlei Wang; Renzhong Tai; Jun Hu; Haiping Fang

Nanoscale gas bubbles have surprising stability at water/solid surfaces. Herein, we summarize progress made on investigating gases at the water/solid interfaces on the nanometer scale. The gas states include nanobubbles, micropancakes, multiple gas layers and their coexistence; these were investigated from experimental and theoretical aspects. The stability of nanoscale gas bubbles may be attributed to high inner density, as observed in molecular dynamic simulations and theoretical analysis. Moreover, it was found that there were maximal length scales for stable nanobubbles, namely, 100 nm high and a curvature radius of 2 μm.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Water-COOH Composite Structure with Enhanced Hydrophobicity Formed by Water Molecules Embedded into Carboxyl-Terminated Self-Assembled Monolayers.

Pan Guo; Yusong Tu; Jinrong Yang; Chunlei Wang; Nan Sheng; Haiping Fang

By combining molecular dynamics simulations and quantum mechanics calculations, we show the formation of a composite structure composed of embedded water molecules and the COOH matrix on carboxyl-terminated self-assembled monolayers (COOH SAMs) with appropriate packing densities. This composite structure with an integrated hydrogen bond network inside reduces the hydrogen bonds with the water above. This explains the seeming contradiction on the stability of the surface water on COOH SAMs observed in experiments. The existence of the composite structure at appropriate packing densities results in the two-step distribution of contact angles of water droplets on COOH SAMs, around 0° and 35°, which compares favorably to the experimental measurements of contact angles collected from forty research articles over the past 25 years. These findings provide a molecular-level understanding of water on surfaces (including surfaces on biomolecules) with hydrophilic functional groups.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Molecular-scale Hydrophilicity Induced by Solute: Molecular-thick Charged Pancakes of Aqueous Salt Solution on Hydrophobic Carbon-based Surfaces

Guosheng Shi; Yue Shen; Jian Liu; Chunlei Wang; Ying Wang; Bo Geun Song; Jun Hu; Haiping Fang

We directly observed molecular-thick aqueous salt-solution pancakes on a hydrophobic graphite surface under ambient conditions employing atomic force microscopy. This observation indicates the unexpected molecular-scale hydrophilicity of the salt solution on graphite surfaces, which is different from the macroscopic wetting property of a droplet standing on the graphite surface. Interestingly, the pancakes spontaneously displayed strong positively charged behavior. Theoretical studies showed that the formation of such positively charged pancakes is attributed to cation–π interactions between Na+ ions in the aqueous solution and aromatic rings on the graphite surface, promoting the adsorption of water molecules together with cations onto the graphite surface; i.e., Na+ ions as a medium adsorbed to the graphite surface through cation–π interactions on one side while at the same time bonding to water molecules through hydration interaction on the other side at a molecular scale. These findings suggest that actual interactions regarding carbon-based graphitic surfaces including those of graphene, carbon nanotubes, and biochar may be significantly different from existing theory and they provide new insight into the control of surface wettability, interactions and related physical, chemical and biological processes.

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Haiping Fang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Bo Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Guosheng Shi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yi Gao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jige Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Rongzheng Wan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Binghai Wen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hangjun Lu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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