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Dive into the research topics where Guangxu Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Guangxu Chen.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2011

Freestanding palladium nanosheets with plasmonic and catalytic properties

Xiaoqing Huang; Shaoheng Tang; Xiaoliang Mu; Yan Dai; Guangxu Chen; Zhi-You Zhou; Fangxiong Ruan; Zhilin Yang; Nanfeng Zheng

Ultrathin metal films can exhibit quantum size and surface effects that give rise to unique physical and chemical properties. Metal films containing just a few layers of atoms can be fabricated on substrates using deposition techniques, but the production of freestanding ultrathin structures remains a significant challenge. Here we report the facile synthesis of freestanding hexagonal palladium nanosheets that are less than 10 atomic layers thick, using carbon monoxide as a surface confining agent. The as-prepared nanosheets are blue in colour and exhibit a well-defined but tunable surface plasmon resonance peak in the near-infrared region. The combination of photothermal stability and biocompatibility makes palladium nanosheets promising candidates for photothermal therapy. The nanosheets also exhibit electrocatalytic activity for the oxidation of formic acid that is 2.5 times greater than that of commercial palladium black catalyst.


Science | 2016

Photochemical route for synthesizing atomically dispersed palladium catalysts

Pengxin Liu; Yun Zhao; Ruixuan Qin; Shiguang Mo; Guangxu Chen; Lin Gu; Daniel M. Chevrier; Peng Zhang; Qing Guo; Dandan Zang; Binghui Wu; Gang Fu; Nanfeng Zheng

Lightly dispersed palladium Catalysts made from atomically dispersed metal atoms on oxide supports can exhibit very high per atom activity. However, the low loadings needed to prevent metal particle formation can limit overall performance. Liu et al. stably decorated titanium oxide nanosheets with relatively high loadings of single palladium atoms by reducing the ions with ultraviolet light and ethylene glycol. These catalysts cleaved H2 into atoms and were highly effective for hydrogenating alkenes and aldehydes. Science, this issue p. 797 Ultraviolet light and ethylene glycol enable decoration of titanium oxide nanosheets with high loading of palladium atoms. Atomically dispersed noble metal catalysts often exhibit high catalytic performances, but the metal loading density must be kept low (usually below 0.5%) to avoid the formation of metal nanoparticles through sintering. We report a photochemical strategy to fabricate a stable atomically dispersed palladium–titanium oxide catalyst (Pd1/TiO2) on ethylene glycolate (EG)–stabilized ultrathin TiO2 nanosheets containing Pd up to 1.5%. The Pd1/TiO2 catalyst exhibited high catalytic activity in hydrogenation of C=C bonds, exceeding that of surface Pd atoms on commercial Pd catalysts by a factor of 9. No decay in the activity was observed for 20 cycles. More important, the Pd1/TiO2-EG system could activate H2 in a heterolytic pathway, leading to a catalytic enhancement in hydrogenation of aldehydes by a factor of more than 55.


Science | 2014

Interfacial Effects in Iron-Nickel Hydroxide–Platinum Nanoparticles Enhance Catalytic Oxidation

Guangxu Chen; Yun Zhao; Gang Fu; Paul N. Duchesne; Lin Gu; Yanping Zheng; Xuefei Weng; Mingshu Chen; Peng Zhang; Chih-Wen Pao; Jyh-Fu Lee; Nanfeng Zheng

Improving Reactions at Interfaces Alloying precious metals such as platinum with more abundant transition metals, such as iron and nickel, can both improve their catalytic reactivity and lower catalyst cost. Chen et al. (p. 495) explored using coatings of iron oxide–hydroxide layers on supported platinum nanoparticles for CO oxidation. The presence of this layer allowed the reaction to run rapidly at room temperature by bringing together different reaction sites on the two metals. The addition of nickel improved catalyst lifetime, and an oxidative transformation created a more complex nanoparticle morphology that increased platinum utilization. An alloy catalyst for room-temperature CO creates sites for O2 activation when the CO2 product is released. Hybrid metal nanoparticles can allow separate reaction steps to occur in close proximity at different metal sites and accelerate catalysis. We synthesized iron-nickel hydroxide–platinum (transition metal-OH-Pt) nanoparticles with diameters below 5 nanometers and showed that they are highly efficient for carbon monoxide (CO) oxidation catalysis at room temperature. We characterized the composition and structure of the transition metal–OH-Pt interface and showed that Ni2+ plays a key role in stabilizing the interface against dehydration. Density functional theory and isotope-labeling experiments revealed that the OH groups at the Fe3+-OH-Pt interfaces readily react with CO adsorbed nearby to directly yield carbon dioxide (CO2) and simultaneously produce coordinatively unsaturated Fe sites for O2 activation. The oxide-supported PtFeNi nanocatalyst rapidly and fully removed CO from humid air without decay in activity for 1 month.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2013

Synthesis of Ultrathin Nitrogen-Doped Graphitic Carbon Nanocages as Advanced Electrode Materials for Supercapacitor

Yueming Tan; Chaofa Xu; Guangxu Chen; Zhaohui Liu; Ming Ma; Qingji Xie; Nanfeng Zheng; Shouzhuo Yao

Synthesis of nitrogen-doped carbons with large surface area, high conductivity, and suitable pore size distribution is highly desirable for high-performance supercapacitor applications. Here, we report a novel protocol for template synthesis of ultrathin nitrogen-doped graphitic carbon nanocages (CNCs) derived from polyaniline (PANI) and their excellent capacitive properties. The synthesis of CNCs involves one-pot hydrothermal synthesis of Mn3O4@PANI core-shell nanoparticles, carbonization to produce carbon coated MnO nanoparticles, and then removal of the MnO cores by acidic treatment. The CNCs prepared at an optimum carbonization temperature of 800 °C (CNCs-800) have regular frameworks, moderate graphitization, high specific surface area, good mesoporosity, and appropriate N doping. The CNCs-800 show high specific capacitance (248 F g(-1) at 1.0 A g(-1)), excellent rate capability (88% and 76% capacitance retention at 10 and 100 A g(-1), respectively), and outstanding cycling stability (~95% capacitance retention after 5000 cycles) in 6 M KOH aqueous solution. The CNCs-800 can also exhibit great pseudocapacitance in 0.5 M H2SO4 aqueous solution besides the large electrochemical double-layer capacitance. The excellent capacitance performance coupled with the facile synthesis of ultrathin nitrogen-doped graphitic CNCs indicates their great application potential in supercapacitors.


Nature Materials | 2016

Interfacial electronic effects control the reaction selectivity of platinum catalysts

Guangxu Chen; Chaofa Xu; Xiaoqing Huang; Jinyu Ye; Lin Gu; Gang Li; Zichao Tang; Binghui Wu; Huayan Yang; Zipeng Zhao; Zhi-You Zhou; Gang Fu; Nanfeng Zheng

Tuning the electronic structure of heterogeneous metal catalysts has emerged as an effective strategy to optimize their catalytic activities. By preparing ethylenediamine-coated ultrathin platinum nanowires as a model catalyst, here we demonstrate an interfacial electronic effect induced by simple organic modifications to control the selectivity of metal nanocatalysts during catalytic hydrogenation. This we apply to produce thermodynamically unfavourable but industrially important compounds, with ultrathin platinum nanowires exhibiting an unexpectedly high selectivity for the production of N-hydroxylanilines, through the partial hydrogenation of nitroaromatics. Mechanistic studies reveal that the electron donation from ethylenediamine makes the surface of platinum nanowires highly electron rich. During catalysis, such an interfacial electronic effect makes the catalytic surface favour the adsorption of electron-deficient reactants over electron-rich substrates (that is, N-hydroxylanilines), thus preventing full hydrogenation. More importantly, this interfacial electronic effect, achieved through simple organic modifications, may now be used for the optimization of commercial platinum catalysts.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2012

A graphene–platinum nanoparticles–ionic liquid composite catalyst for methanol-tolerant oxygen reduction reaction

Yueming Tan; Chaofa Xu; Guangxu Chen; Nanfeng Zheng; Qingji Xie

We report here that graphene-supported Pt nanoparticles impregnated with the ionic liquid [MTBD][bmsi] which is more oxygen-philic and less methanol-philic than the exterior aqueous solution can exhibit both enhanced electrocatalytic activity and excellent methanol tolerance for oxygen reduction reaction.


Chemical Communications | 2012

Carbon monoxide-controlled synthesis of surface-clean Pt nanocubes with high electrocatalytic activity

Guangxu Chen; Yueming Tan; Binghui Wu; Gang Fu; Nanfeng Zheng

A new strategy for synthesis of Pt nanocubes on various supports by reduction of a Pt precursor under a CO atmosphere was described. The as-prepared Pt nanocubes supported on multi-walled carbon nanotubes exhibited high activity toward methanol electrooxidation.


Chemical Communications | 2011

Au/Pt and Au/Pt3Ni nanowires as self-supported electrocatalysts with high activity and durability for oxygen reduction

Yueming Tan; Jingmin Fan; Guangxu Chen; Nanfeng Zheng; Qingji Xie

Novel Au/Pt and Au/Pt(3)Ni nanostructures consisting of Pt and Pt(3)Ni alloy nanodendrites grown on Au nanowires were synthesized, which exhibited high electrocatalytic activity and durability toward oxygen reduction when used as self-supported catalysts.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Shape-Controlled Synthesis of Surface-Clean Ultrathin Palladium Nanosheets by Simply Mixing a Dinuclear Pd-I Carbonyl Chloride Complex with H2O

Huan Li; Guangxu Chen; Huayan Yang; Xingli Wang; Jinghong Liang; Pengxin Liu; Mei Chen; Nanfeng Zheng

通讯作者地址: Zheng, NF (通讯作者) Xiamen Univ, State Key Lab Phys Chem Solid Surfaces, Collaborat Innovat Ctr Chem Energy Mat, Xiamen 361005, Peoples R China.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Electrostatic Self-Assembling Formation of Pd Superlattice Nanowires from Surfactant-Free Ultrathin Pd Nanosheets

Chengyi Hu; Kaiqiang Lin; Xingli Wang; Shengjie Liu; Jun Yi; Yu Tian; Binghui Wu; Guangxu Chen; Huayan Yang; Yan Dai; Huan Li; Nanfeng Zheng

A facile method has been developed for face-to-face assembly of two-dimensional surfactant-free Pd nanosheets into one-dimensional Pd superlattice nanowires. The length of the Pd nanowires can be well controlled by introducing cations of different concentration and charge density. Our studies reveal that cations with higher charge density have stronger charge-screening ability, and their introduction leads to more positive zeta-potential and decreased electrostatic repulsion between negatively charged Pd nanosheets. Moreover, their surfactant-free feature is of great importance in assembling the Pd nanosheets into superlattice nanowires. While the cations are important for the assembly of Pd nanosheets, the use of poly(vinylpyrrolidone) is necessary to enhance the stability of the assembled superlattice nanowires. The as-assembled segmented Pd nanowires display tunable surface plasmon resonance features and excellent hydrogen-sensing properties.

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Lin Gu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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