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Dive into the research topics where Jianbing Jiang is active.

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Featured researches published by Jianbing Jiang.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Electrochemical CO2 Reduction to Hydrocarbons on a Heterogeneous Molecular Cu Catalyst in Aqueous Solution

Zhe Weng; Jianbing Jiang; Yueshen Wu; Zishan Wu; Xiaoting Guo; Kelly L. Materna; Wen Liu; Victor S. Batista; Gary W. Brudvig; Hailiang Wang

Exploration of heterogeneous molecular catalysts combining the atomic-level tunability of molecular structures and the practical handling advantages of heterogeneous catalysts represents an attractive approach to developing high-performance catalysts for important and challenging chemical reactions such as electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction which holds the promise for converting emissions back to fuels utilizing renewable energy. Thus, far, efficient and selective electroreduction of CO2 to deeply reduced products such as hydrocarbons remains a big challenge. Here, we report a molecular copper-porphyrin complex (copper(II)-5,10,15,20-tetrakis(2,6-dihydroxyphenyl)porphyrin) that can be used as a heterogeneous electrocatalyst with high activity and selectivity for reducing CO2 to hydrocarbons in aqueous media. At -0.976 V vs the reversible hydrogen electrode, the catalyst is able to drive partial current densities of 13.2 and 8.4 mA cm(-2) for methane and ethylene production from CO2 reduction, corresponding to turnover frequencies of 4.3 and 1.8 molecules·site(-1)·s(-1) for methane and ethylene, respectively. This represents the highest catalytic activity to date for hydrocarbon production over a molecular CO2 reduction electrocatalyst. The unprecedented catalytic performance is attributed to the built-in hydroxyl groups in the porphyrin structure and the reactivity of the copper(I) metal center.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Ultrathin dendrimer–graphene oxide composite film for stable cycling lithium–sulfur batteries

Wen Liu; Jianbing Jiang; Ke R. Yang; Yingying Mi; Piranavan Kumaravadivel; Yiren Zhong; Qi Fan; Zhe Weng; Zishan Wu; Judy J. Cha; Henghui Zhou; Victor S. Batista; Gary W. Brudvig; Hailiang Wang

Significance The promise of lithium–sulfur batteries for future electric transportation and stationary energy storage is being limited by their poor cycling stability. Previous approaches to improvement often involve incorporating additional components with significant dead weight or volume in battery structures. We develop an ultrathin functionalized dendrimer–graphene oxide composite film which can be applied to virtually any sulfur cathode to alleviate capacity fading over battery cycling without compromising the energy or power density of the entire battery. The design provides a new strategy for confining lithium polysulfide intermediates and thus stabilizing lithium–sulfur batteries. It also brings a suitable platform for elucidating the underlying materials and surface chemistry. Lithium–sulfur batteries (Li–S batteries) have attracted intense interest because of their high specific capacity and low cost, although they are still hindered by severe capacity loss upon cycling caused by the soluble lithium polysulfide intermediates. Although many structure innovations at the material and device levels have been explored for the ultimate goal of realizing long cycle life of Li–S batteries, it remains a major challenge to achieve stable cycling while avoiding energy and power density compromises caused by the introduction of significant dead weight/volume and increased electrochemical resistance. Here we introduce an ultrathin composite film consisting of naphthalimide-functionalized poly(amidoamine) dendrimers and graphene oxide nanosheets as a cycling stabilizer. Combining the dendrimer structure that can confine polysulfide intermediates chemically and physically together with the graphene oxide that renders the film robust and thin (<1% of the thickness of the active sulfur layer), the composite film is designed to enable stable cycling of sulfur cathodes without compromising the energy and power densities. Our sulfur electrodes coated with the composite film exhibit very good cycling stability, together with high sulfur content, large areal capacity, and improved power rate.


ACS central science | 2017

Electroreduction of CO2 Catalyzed by a Heterogenized Zn–Porphyrin Complex with a Redox-Innocent Metal Center

Yueshen Wu; Jianbing Jiang; Zhe Weng; Maoyu Wang; Daniël L. J. Broere; Yiren Zhong; Gary W. Brudvig; Zhenxing Feng; Hailiang Wang

Transition-metal-based molecular complexes are a class of catalyst materials for electrochemical CO2 reduction to CO that can be rationally designed to deliver high catalytic performance. One common mechanistic feature of these electrocatalysts developed thus far is an electrogenerated reduced metal center associated with catalytic CO2 reduction. Here we report a heterogenized zinc–porphyrin complex (zinc(II) 5,10,15,20-tetramesitylporphyrin) as an electrocatalyst that delivers a turnover frequency as high as 14.4 site–1 s–1 and a Faradaic efficiency as high as 95% for CO2 electroreduction to CO at −1.7 V vs the standard hydrogen electrode in an organic/water mixed electrolyte. While the Zn center is critical to the observed catalysis, in situ and operando X-ray absorption spectroscopic studies reveal that it is redox-innocent throughout the potential range. Cyclic voltammetry indicates that the porphyrin ligand may act as a redox mediator. Chemical reduction of the zinc–porphyrin complex further confirms that the reduction is ligand-based and the reduced species can react with CO2. This represents the first example of a transition-metal complex for CO2 electroreduction catalysis with its metal center being redox-innocent under working conditions.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Ferrocene-Promoted Long-Cycle Lithium–Sulfur Batteries

Yingying Mi; Wen Liu; Ke R. Yang; Jianbing Jiang; Qi Fan; Zhe Weng; Yiren Zhong; Zishan Wu; Gary W. Brudvig; Victor S. Batista; Henghui Zhou; Hailiang Wang

Confining lithium polysulfide intermediates is one of the most effective ways to alleviate the capacity fade of sulfur-cathode materials in lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries. To develop long-cycle Li-S batteries, there is an urgent need for material structures with effective polysulfide binding capability and well-defined surface sites; thereby improving cycling stability and allowing study of molecular-level interactions. This challenge was addressed by introducing an organometallic molecular compound, ferrocene, as a new polysulfide-confining agent. With ferrocene molecules covalently anchored on graphene oxide, sulfur electrode materials with capacity decay as low as 0.014 % per cycle were realized, among the best of cycling stabilities reported to date. With combined spectroscopic studies and theoretical calculations, it was determined that effective polysulfide binding originates from favorable cation-π interactions between Li+ of lithium polysulfides and the negatively charged cyclopentadienyl ligands of ferrocene.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2017

A pomegranate-structured sulfur cathode material with triple confinement of lithium polysulfides for high-performance lithium–sulfur batteries

Yingying Mi; Wen Liu; Qian Wang; Jianbing Jiang; Gary W. Brudvig; Henghui Zhou; Hailiang Wang

High-performance lithium–sulfur batteries are widely and intensively pursued, owing to their projected high energy density and low cost. However, realizing the stable cycling of a sulfur cathode with good discharging/charging rate capability under high sulfur content and high sulfur loading conditions remains a major challenge. Confining the dissolvable lithium polysulfide intermediates while addressing the intrinsic low electrical conductivity of sulfur is a key approach toward solving the problem. This work presents the design of a pomegranate-structured sulfur cathode material with high electrochemical performance. To synthesize the material, mesoporous carbon particles with ferrocene decoration are infiltrated with sulfur and then wrapped into secondary particles by dendrimer-linked graphene oxide. In the designed structure, the mesoporous carbon serves as a conductive matrix and porous host for sulfur species; ferrocene provides polar sites to bind lithium polysulfides chemically; the dendrimer-linked graphene oxide encapsulation layers further confine leaching of polysulfides and ferrocene into the electrolyte. With the three components providing triple confinement of the polysulfides, the material with a high sulfur content of 75.7 wt% exhibits excellent cycling stability and good rate capability. A capacity of 826 mA h g−1 can be delivered at 1.0C with an average decay of only 0.010% per cycle over 1200 cycles. With a high S mass loading of 4 mg cm−2, the cathode can still be cycled at 0.5C for 300 cycles with a capacity decay as low as 0.038% per cycle.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Molecular design of light-harvesting photosensitizers: effect of varied linker conjugation on interfacial electron transfer.

Jianbing Jiang; John R. Swierk; Svante Hedström; Adam J. Matula; Robert H. Crabtree; Victor S. Batista; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer; Gary W. Brudvig

Interfacial electron transfer dynamics of a series of photosensitizers bound to TiO2via linkers of varying conjugation strength are explored by spectroscopic and computational techniques. Injection and recombination depend on the extent of conjugation in the linker, where the LUMO delocalization determines the injection dynamics but both the HOMO and HOMO-1 are involved in recombination.


Chemsuschem | 2017

Optimization of Photoanodes for Photocatalytic Water Oxidation by Combining a Heterogenized Iridium Water-Oxidation Catalyst with a High-Potential Porphyrin Photosensitizer

Kelly L. Materna; Jianbing Jiang; Kevin P. Regan; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer; Robert H. Crabtree; Gary W. Brudvig

The development of water-splitting dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cells has gained interest owing to their ability to generate renewable fuels from solar energy. In this study, photoanodes were assembled from a SnO2 film sensitized with a combination of a high-potential CF3 -substituted porphyrin dye with a tetrahydropyranyl-protected hydroxamic acid surface-anchoring group and a Cp*Ir (Cp*=pentamethylcyclopentadienyl) water-oxidation catalyst containing a silatrane anchoring group. The dye/catalyst ratios were varied from 2:1 to 32:1 to optimize the photocatalytic water oxidation. Photoelectrochemical measurements showed not only more stable and reproducible photocurrents for lower dye/catalyst ratios but also improved photostability. O2 production was confirmed in real time over a 20 h period with a Clark electrode. Photoanodes prepared from 2:1 and 8:1 dye/catalyst sensitization solutions provided the most active electrodes for photocatalytic water oxidation and performed approximately 30-35 turnovers in 20 h.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Antimony Complexes for Electrocatalysis: Activity of a Main-Group Element in Proton Reduction

Jianbing Jiang; Kelly L. Materna; Svante Hedström; Ke R. Yang; Robert H. Crabtree; Victor S. Batista; Gary W. Brudvig

Main-group complexes are shown to be viable electrocatalysts for the H2 -evolution reaction (HER) from acid. A series of antimony porphyrins with varying axial ligands were synthesized for electrocatalysis applications. The proton-reduction catalytic properties of TPSb(OH)2 (TP=5,10,15,20-tetra(p-tolyl)porphyrin) with two axial hydroxy ligands were studied in detail, demonstrating catalytic H2 production. Experiments, in conjunction with quantum chemistry calculations, show that the catalytic cycle is driven via the redox activity of both the porphyrin ligand and the Sb center. This study brings insight into main group catalysis and the role of redox-active ligands during catalysis.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Silatrane Anchors for Metal Oxide Surfaces: Optimization for Potential Photocatalytic and Electrocatalytic Applications

Kelly L. Materna; Jianbing Jiang; Robert H. Crabtree; Gary W. Brudvig

Silatrane surface anchors are protected siloxanes that are known to bond firmly (from pH 2-11) to metal oxide electrodes under heating. However, these conditions are not always compatible with the other functionality present. A silatrane-containing porphyrin molecule and a silatrane-containing ruthenium complex have now been designed, synthesized and optimized conditions have been identified for surface binding. Two mild, room-temperature surface binding methods were explored: binding with or without an acidic pretreatment; these methods were compared to the traditional, harsher binding conditions involving strong heating. We find that a preacidified electrode gave comparable surface loadings at room temperature compared to sensitization by using the previous strong heating method. This was also true on TiO2, SnO2, and nanoITO electrodes and thus may be generalizable. The new, milder binding methods also resulted in excellent aqueous and electrochemical stability from pH 2-11. Using a water-insoluble porphyrin with a silatrane anchor further increased the aqueous stability of the deposit, aided by the insolubility of the porphyrin. Finally, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) data confirmed for the first time that the triethanolamine released from the silatrane on deprotection/binding in turn binds to TiO2, SnO2, and nanoITO electrodes. This undesired triethanolamine deposit was easily removed from the surface by electrochemical voltage cycling or with an aqueous acidic wash for 1 h.


ACS energy letters | 2016

Rutile TiO2 as an Anode Material for Water-Splitting Dye-Sensitized Photoelectrochemical Cells

John R. Swierk; Kevin P. Regan; Jianbing Jiang; Gary W. Brudvig; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer

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