Jingfeng Song
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
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Featured researches published by Jingfeng Song.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Qingfeng Dong; Jingfeng Song; Yanjun Fang; Yuchuan Shao; Stephen Ducharme; Jinsong Huang
Single-crystal perovskite solar cells with a lateral structure yield an efficiency enhancement 44-fold that of polycrystalline thin films, due to the much longer carrier diffusion length. A piezoelectric effect observed in perovskite single-crystal and the strain-generated grain-boundaries enable ion migration to form a p-i-n structure.
ACS Nano | 2016
Dawei Li; W. Xiong; Lijia Jiang; Zhiyong Xiao; Hossein Rabiee Golgir; Mengmeng Wang; Xi Huang; Y. S. Zhou; Zhe Lin; Jingfeng Song; Stephen Ducharme; Lan Jiang; Jean-François Silvain; Yongfeng Lu
van der Waals layered structures, notably the transitional metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) and TMD-based heterostructures, have recently attracted immense interest due to their unique physical properties and potential applications in electronics, optoelectronics, and energy harvesting. Despite the recent progress, it is still a challenge to perform comprehensive characterizations of critical properties of these layered structures, including crystal structures, chemical dynamics, and interlayer coupling, using a single characterization platform. In this study, we successfully developed a multimodal nonlinear optical imaging method to characterize these critical properties of molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) and MoS2-based heterostructures. Our results demonstrate that MoS2 layers exhibit strong four-wave mixing (FWM), sum-frequency generation (SFG), and second-harmonic generation (SHG) nonlinear optical characteristics. We believe this is the first observation of FWM and SFG from TMD layers. All three kinds of optical nonlinearities are sensitive to layer numbers, crystal orientation, and interlayer coupling. The combined and simultaneous SHG/SFG-FWM imaging not only is capable of rapid evaluation of crystal quality and precise determination of odd-even layers but also provides in situ monitoring of the chemical dynamics of thermal oxidation in MoS2 and interlayer coupling in MoS2-graphene heterostructures. This method has the advantages of versatility, high fidelity, easy operation, and fast imaging, enabling comprehensive characterization of van der Waals layered structures for fundamental research and practical applications.
Nature Communications | 2016
Yang Gao; Jingfeng Song; Shumin Li; Christian Elowsky; You Zhou; Stephen Ducharme; Yong Mei Chen; Qin Zhou; Li Tan
Exploring the abundant resources in the ocean requires underwater acoustic detectors with a high-sensitivity reception of low-frequency sound from greater distances and zero reflections. Here we address both challenges by integrating an easily deformable network of metal nanoparticles in a hydrogel matrix for use as a cavity-free microphone. Since metal nanoparticles can be densely implanted as inclusions, and can even be arranged in coherent arrays, this microphone can detect static loads and air breezes from different angles, as well as underwater acoustic signals from 20 Hz to 3 kHz at amplitudes as low as 4 Pa. Unlike dielectric capacitors or cavity-based microphones that respond to stimuli by deforming the device in thickness directions, this hydrogel device responds with a transient modulation of electric double layers, resulting in an extraordinary sensitivity (217 nF kPa−1 or 24 μC N−1 at a bias of 1.0 V) without using any signal amplification tools.
Nanotechnology | 2016
Jingfeng Song; Haidong Lu; Shumin Li; Li Tan; Alexei Gruverman; Stephen Ducharme
Conventional nanoimprint lithography with expensive rigid molds is used to pattern ferroelectric polymer nanostructures on hard substrate for use in, e.g., organic electronics. The main innovation here is the use of inexpensive soft polycarbonate molds derived from recordable DVDs and reverse nanoimprint lithography at low pressure, which is compatible with flexible substrates. This approach was implemented to produce regular stripe arrays with a spacing of 700 nm from vinylidene fluoride co trifluoroethylene ferroelectric copolymer on flexible polyethylene terephthalate substrates. The nanostructures have very stable and switchable piezoelectric response and good crystallinity, and are highly promising for use in organic electronics enhanced or complemented by the unique properties of the ferroelectric polymer, such as bistable polarization, piezoelectric response, pyroelectric response, or electrocaloric function. The soft-mold reverse nanoimprint lithography also leaves little or no residual layer, affording good isolation of the nanostructures. This approach reduces the cost and facilitates large-area, high-throughput production of isolated functional polymer nanostructures on flexible substrates for the increasing application of ferroelectric polymers in flexible electronics.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Jingfeng Song; Haidong Lu; Alexei Gruverman; Stephen Ducharme
A Pyroelectric Scanning Microscopy system, which uses laser-induced thermal modulation for mapping the pyroelectric response, has been used to image a bipolar domain pattern in a ferroelectric polymer thin film capacitor. This system has achieved a resolution of 660 ± 28 nm by using a violet laser and high f-number microscope objective to reduce the optical spot size, and by operating at high modulation frequencies to reduce the thermal diffusion length. The results agree well with a thermal model implemented numerically using finite element analysis.
Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2016
Jingfeng Song; Haidong Lu; Keith Foreman; Shumin Li; Li Tan; Shireen Adenwalla; Alexei Gruverman; Stephen Ducharme
With the increasing interest in deploying ferroelectric polymer in flexible electronics and electro-mechanics, high-throughput and low-cost fabrication of 3D ferroelectric polymer nanostructures on flexible substrates can be a significant basis for future research and applications. Here, we report that large arrays of ferroelectric polymer nanopillars can be prepared directly on soft, flexible substrates by using low-cost polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) soft-mold reverse nanoimprint lithography at 135 °C and at pressures as low as 3 bar. The nanopillar arrays were highly uniform over large areas of at least 200 × 200 μm and had good crystallinity with nearly optimum (110) orientation. Furthermore, the method leaves little or no residual polymer layer, fully isolating the nanopillars to avoid cross-talk and, obviating the need for additional etching processes that arises with conventional low-contrast nanoimprinting. The ferroelectric properties of individual nanopillars were probed by piezoresponse force microscopy, which showed that they exhibited switchable and bi-stable polarization. In addition, the polarization hysteresis loops probed by pyroelectric measurements of the entire array showed that the nanopillar capacitor arrays had good ferroelectric switching characteristics, over areas of at least 1 mm × 1 mm.
Journal of Physics D | 2016
Shashi Poddar; Haidong Lu; Jingfeng Song; Om Goit; Shah R. Valloppilly; Alexei Gruverman; Stephen Ducharme
Textured arrays of ferroelectric microcrystals of diisopropylammonium bromide were grown from solution at room temperature onto silicon substrates and studied by means of x-ray diffraction, atomic force microscopy, electron microscopy, and piezoresponse force microscopy. The needle-shaped crystals had dimensions of approximately 50 µm × 5 µm in the plane and were approximately 200 nm thick, where the dimensions and arrangement were influenced by growth conditions. The observations suggest an Ostwald ripening mechanism of the microcrystal growth. The crystals had the structure of the ferroelectric phase, where the polarization axis was in-plane and parallel to the long axis of the crystals. The in-plane polarization could be switched at will with a scanning probe tip bias of 15 V and could be arranged in stable domain patterns with both charged and uncharged 180° domain walls.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2017
Kamran Keramatnejad; Y. S. Zhou; Dawei Li; H. Rabiee Golgir; Xi Huang; Jingfeng Song; Stephen Ducharme; Y. F. Lu
Publisher’s Note: This paper, originally published on February 17, 2017, was withdrawn per author request.
Nature Materials | 2018
Bo Chen; Tao Li; Qingfeng Dong; Edoardo Mosconi; Jingfeng Song; Zhaolai Chen; Yehao Deng; Ye Liu; Stephen Ducharme; Alexei Gruverman; Filippo De Angelis; Jinsong Huang
Lead halide perovskites have demonstrated outstanding performance in photovoltaics, photodetectors, radiation detectors and light-emitting diodes. However, the electromechanical properties, which are the main application of inorganic perovskites, have rarely been explored for lead halide perovskites. Here, we report the discovery of a large electrostrictive response in methylammonium lead triiodide (MAPbI3) single crystals. Under an electric field of 3.7 V µm−1, MAPbI3 shows a large compressive strain of 1%, corresponding to a mechanical energy density of 0.74 J cm−3, comparable to that of human muscles. The influences of piezoelectricity, thermal expansion, intrinsic electrostrictive effect, Maxwell stress, ferroelectricity, local polar fluctuation and methylammonium cation ordering on this electromechanical response are excluded. We speculate, using density functional theory, that electrostriction of MAPbI3 probably originates from lattice deformation due to formation of additional defects under applied bias. The discovery of large electrostriction in lead iodide perovskites may lead to new potential applications in actuators, sonar and micro-electromechanical systems and aid the understanding of other field-dependent material properties.The electromechanical properties of organic–inorganic hybrid perovskites are not well characterized. Here, a large electrostrictive strain of 1% is measured, suggesting both new electromechanical applications and implications for photovoltaics.
Nature Materials | 2018
Bo Chen; Tao Li; Qingfeng Dong; Edoardo Mosconi; Jingfeng Song; Zhaolai Chen; Yehao Deng; Ye Liu; Stephen Ducharme; Alexei Gruverman; Filippo De Angelis; Jinsong Huang
In the version of this Article originally published, the y axis of Fig. 1c was incorrectly labelled ‘S (%)’; it should have been ‘–S (%)’. Also, the link for the Supplementary Video was missing from the online version of the Article. These errors have now been corrected.