Lien-Yang Chou
Boston College
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lien-Yang Chou.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Chun-Hong Kuo; Yang Tang; Lien-Yang Chou; Brian T. Sneed; Casey N. Brodsky; Zipeng Zhao; Chia-Kuang Tsung
A general synthetic strategy for yolk-shell nanocrystal@ZIF-8 nanostructures has been developed. The yolk-shell nanostructures possess the functions of nanoparticle cores, microporous shells, and a cavity in between, which offer great potential in heterogeneous catalysis. The synthetic strategy involved first coating the nanocrystal cores with a layer of Cu(2)O as the sacrificial template and then a layer of polycrystalline ZIF-8. The clean Cu(2)O surface assists in the formation of the ZIF-8 coating layer and is etched off spontaneously and simultaneously during this process. The yolk-shell nanostructures were characterized by transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and nitrogen adsorption. To study the catalytic behavior, hydrogenations of ethylene, cyclohexene, and cyclooctene as model reactions were carried out over the Pd@ZIF-8 catalysts. The microporous ZIF-8 shell provides excellent molecular-size selectivity. The results show high activity for the ethylene and cyclohexene hydrogenations but not in the cyclooctene hydrogenation. Different activation energies for cyclohexene hydrogenation were obtained for nanostructures with and without the cavity in between the core and the shell. This demonstrates the importance of controlling the cavity because of its influence on the catalysis.
ACS Nano | 2014
Jia Zhuang; Chun-Hong Kuo; Lien-Yang Chou; De-Yu Liu; Eranthie Weerapana; Chia-Kuang Tsung
We have developed a general synthetic route to encapsulate small molecules in monodisperse zeolitic imid-azolate framework-8 (ZIF-8) nanospheres for drug delivery. Electron microscopy, powder X-ray diffraction, and elemental analysis show that the small-molecule-encapsulated ZIF-8 nanospheres are uniform 70 nm particles with single-crystalline structure. Several small molecules, including fluorescein and the anticancer drug camptothecin, were encapsulated inside of the ZIF-8 framework. Evaluation of fluorescein-encapsulated ZIF-8 nanospheres in the MCF-7 breast cancer cell line demonstrated cell internalization and minimal cytotoxicity. The 70 nm particle size facilitates cellular uptake, and the pH-responsive dissociation of the ZIF-8 framework likely results in endosomal release of the small-molecule cargo, thereby rendering the ZIF-8 scaffold an ideal drug delivery vehicle. To confirm this, we demonstrate that camptothecin encapsulated ZIF-8 particles show enhanced cell death, indicative of internalization and intracellular release of the drug. To demonstrate the versatility of this ZIF-8 system, iron oxide nanoparticles were also encapsulated into the ZIF-8 nanospheres, thereby endowing magnetic features to these nanospheres.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Fa-Kuen Shieh; Shao-Chun Wang; Chia-I Yen; Chang-Cheng Wu; Saikat Dutta; Lien-Yang Chou; Joseph V. Morabito; Pan Hu; Ming-Hua Hsu; Kevin C.-W. Wu; Chia-Kuang Tsung
We develop a new concept to impart new functions to biocatalysts by combining enzymes and metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). The proof-of-concept design is demonstrated by embedding catalase molecules into uniformly sized ZIF-90 crystals via a de novo approach. We have carried out electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, nitrogen sorption, electrophoresis, thermogravimetric analysis, and confocal microscopy to confirm that the ~10 nm catalase molecules are embedded in 2 μm single-crystalline ZIF-90 crystals with ~5 wt % loading. Because catalase is immobilized and sheltered by the ZIF-90 crystals, the composites show activity in hydrogen peroxide degradation even in the presence of protease proteinase K.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Pan Hu; Jia Zhuang; Lien-Yang Chou; Hiang Kwee Lee; Xing Yi Ling; Yu-Chun Chuang; Chia-Kuang Tsung
Composite nanomaterials are attractive for a diverse range of applications in catalysis, plasmonics, sensing, imaging, and biology. In such composite nanomaterials, it is desired, yet still challenging to create a controlled alignment between components with lattices in disparate scales. To address this challenge, we report a new concept of colloidal synthesis, in which self-assembled molecular layers control the alignment between materials during the synthesis. To illustrate this concept, self-assembled cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) molecules are used to control interfaces in a core-shell nanocomposite with a well-defined metal nanocrystal core and a metal-organic-framework (MOF) shell, which differ in structural dimensions by orders of magnitude. We show that single metal nanocrystals are captured individually in single-crystalline MOFs, and an alignment between the {100} planes of the metal and {110} planes of the MOFs is observed. By utilizing the same concept, a layer of mesostructured silica is formed over MOF crystals. These multilayered core-shell structures demonstrate a controlled alignment across a wide range of materials, from the metal nanocrystals, extending to nanoporous MOFs and mesostructured silica.
Chemsuschem | 2013
Chun-Hong Kuo; Leo K. Lamontagne; Casey N. Brodsky; Lien-Yang Chou; Jia Zhuang; Brian T. Sneed; Margaret K. Sheehan; Chia-Kuang Tsung
The effect of lattice strain on the catalytic properties of Pd nanoparticles is systematically studied. Synthetic strategies for the preparation of a series of shape-controlled Pd nanocrystals with lattice strain generated from different sources has been developed. All of these nanocrystals were created with the same capping agent under similar reaction conditions. First, a series of Pd nanoparticles was synthesized that were enclosed in {111} surfaces: Single-crystalline Pd octahedra, single-crystalline AuPd core-shell octahedra, and twinned Pd icosahedra. Next, various {100}-terminated particles were synthesized: Single-crystalline Pd cubes and single-crystalline AuPd core-shell cubes. Different extents of lattice strain were evident by comparing the X-ray diffraction patterns of these particles. During electrocatalysis, decreased potentials for CO stripping and increased current densities for formic-acid oxidation were observed for the strained nanoparticles. In the gas-phase hydrogenation of ethylene, the activities of the strained nanoparticles were lower than those of the single-crystalline Pd nanoparticles, perhaps owing to a larger amount of cetyl trimethylammonium bromide on the surface.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Fu-Siang Liao; Wei-Shang Lo; Yu-Shen Hsu; Chang-Cheng Wu; Shao-Chun Wang; Fa-Kuen Shieh; Joseph V. Morabito; Lien-Yang Chou; Kevin C.-W. Wu; Chia-Kuang Tsung
We show that an enzyme maintains its biological function under a wider range of conditions after being embedded in metal-organic framework (MOF) microcrystals via a de novo approach. This enhanced stability arises from confinement of the enzyme molecules in the mesoporous cavities in the MOFs, which reduces the structural mobility of enzyme molecules. We embedded catalase (CAT) into zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIF-90 and ZIF-8), and then exposed both embedded CAT and free CAT to a denature reagent (i.e., urea) and high temperatures (i.e., 80 °C). The embedded CAT maintains its biological function in the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide even when exposed to 6 M urea and 80 °C, with apparent rate constants kobs (s-1) of 1.30 × 10-3 and 1.05 × 10-3, respectively, while free CAT shows undetectable activity. A fluorescence spectroscopy study shows that the structural conformation of the embedded CAT changes less under these denaturing conditions than free CAT.
Small | 2015
Jia Zhuang; Lien-Yang Chou; Brian T. Sneed; Yingze Cao; Pan Hu; Lin Feng; Chia-Kuang Tsung
Fracture-free and conformal Pd-UiO-66@ZIF-8 core-shell metal-organic framework material is synthesized by a surfactant-mediated method. The hierarchical nanoporous material exhibits great size-selective hydrogenation catalysis and demonstrates potentials for many different applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Hiang Kwee Lee; Yih Hong Lee; Joseph V. Morabito; Yejing Liu; Charlynn Sher Lin Koh; In Yee Phang; Srikanth Pedireddy; Xuemei Han; Lien-Yang Chou; Chia-Kuang Tsung; Xing Yi Ling
We demonstrate a molecular-level observation of driving CO2 molecules into a quasi-condensed phase on the solid surface of metal nanoparticles (NP) under ambient conditions of 1 bar and 298 K. This is achieved via a CO2 accumulation in the interface between a metal-organic framework (MOF) and a metal NP surface formed by coating NPs with a MOF. Using real-time surface-enhanced Raman scattering spectroscopy, a >18-fold enhancement of surface coverage of CO2 is observed at the interface. The high surface concentration leads CO2 molecules to be in close proximity with the probe molecules on the metal surface (4-methylbenzenethiol), and transforms CO2 molecules into a bent conformation without the formation of chemical bonds. Such linear-to-bent transition of CO2 is unprecedented at ambient conditions in the absence of chemical bond formation, and is commonly observed only in pressurized systems (>105 bar). The molecular-level observation of a quasi-condensed phase induced by MOF coating could impact the future design of hybrid materials in diverse applications, including catalytic CO2 conversion and ambient solid-gas operation.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Joseph V. Morabito; Lien-Yang Chou; Zhehui Li; Cesar M. Manna; Christopher A. Petroff; Rutvin J. Kyada; Joseph M. Palomba; Jeffery A. Byers; Chia-Kuang Tsung
Nanoscale | 2015
Lien-Yang Chou; Pan Hu; Jia Zhuang; Joseph V. Morabito; Ka Chon Ng; Ya-Chuan Kao; Shao-Chun Wang; Fa-Kuen Shieh; Chun-Hong Kuo; Chia-Kuang Tsung