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Dive into the research topics where Mengtao Sun is active.

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Featured researches published by Mengtao Sun.


Advanced Materials | 2010

Aqueous‐Processable Noncovalent Chemically Converted Graphene–Quantum Dot Composites for Flexible and Transparent Optoelectronic Films

Xiumei Geng; Liang Niu; Zhenyuan Xing; Rensheng Song; Guangtong Liu; Mengtao Sun; Guosheng Cheng; Haijian Zhong; Zhenghui Liu; Zhijun Zhang; Lianfeng Sun; Hongxing Xu; Li Lu; Liwei Liu

The preparation and optoelectronic response of flexible composites via non-covalent coupling of quantum dots to chemically converted graphene is presented. The photoincluced charge transfer is confirmed by photoconductivity measurements and the photosensitivity is improved with increasing loadings of quantum dots. This opens up a new effective route to form composites for future large-area flexible and transparent optoelectronic devices.


ACS Nano | 2011

Reduced Graphene Oxide Electrically Contacted Graphene Sensor for Highly Sensitive Nitric Oxide Detection

Weiwei Li; Xiumei Geng; Yufen Guo; Jizan Rong; Youpin Gong; Liqiong Wu; Xuemin Zhang; Peng Li; Jianbao Xu; Guosheng Cheng; Mengtao Sun; Liwei Liu

We develop graphene-based devices fabricated by alternating current dielectrophoresis (ac-DEP) for highly sensitive nitric oxide (NO) gas detection. The novel device comprises the sensitive channels of palladium-decorated reduced graphene oxide (Pd-RGO) and the electrodes covered with chemical vapor deposition (CVD)-grown graphene. The highly sensitive, recoverable, and reliable detection of NO gas ranging from 2 to 420 ppb with response time of several hundred seconds has been achieved at room temperature. The facile and scalable route for high performance suggests a promising application of graphene devices toward the human exhaled NO and environmental pollutant detections.


Scientific Reports | 2012

In-situ plasmon-driven chemical reactions revealed by high vacuum tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy

Mengtao Sun; Zhenglong Zhang; Hairong Zheng; Hongxing Xu

With strong surface plasmons excited at the metallic tip, tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) has both high spectroscopic sensitivity and high spatial resolution, and is becoming an essential tool for chemical analysis. It is a great challenge to combine TERS with a high vacuum system due to the poor optical collection efficiency. We used our innovatively designed home-built high vacuum TERS (HV-TERS) to investigate the plasmon-driven in-situ chemical reaction of 4-nitrobenzenethiol dimerizing to dimercaptoazobenzene. The chemical reactions can be controlled by the plasmon intensity, which in turn can be controlled by the incident laser intensity, tunneling current and bias voltage. The temperature of such a chemical reaction can also be obtained by the clearly observed Stokes and Anti-Stokes HV-TERS peaks. Our findings offer a new way to design a highly efficient HV-TERS system and its applications to chemical catalysis and synthesis of molecules, and significantly extend the studies of chemical reactions.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

Photoinduced Intramolecular Charge Transfer and S2 Fluorescence in Thiophene-π-Conjugated Donor–Acceptor Systems: Experimental and TDDFT Studies†

Guang-Jiu Zhao; Ruikui Chen; Mengtao Sun; Jianyong Liu; Guang-Yue Li; Yun-Ling Gao; Ke-Li Han; Xichuan Yang; Licheng Sun

Experimental and theoretical methods were used to study newly synthesized thiophene-pi-conjugated donor-acceptor compounds, which were found to exhibit efficient intramolecular charge-transfer emission in polar solvents with relatively large Stokes shifts and strong solvatochromism. To gain insight into the solvatochromic behavior of these compounds, the dependence of the spectra on solvent polarity was studied on the basis of Lippert-Mataga models. We found that intramolecular charge transfer in these donor-acceptor systems is significantly dependent on the electron-withdrawing substituents at the thienyl 2-position. The dependence of the absorption and emission spectra of these compounds in methanol on the concentration of trifluoroacetic acid was used to confirm intramolecular charge-transfer emission. Moreover, the calculated absorption and emission energies, which are in accordance with the experimental values, suggested that fluorescence can be emitted from different geometric conformations. In addition, a novel S(2) fluorescence phenomenon for some of these compounds was also be observed. The fluorescence excitation spectra were used to confirm the S(2) fluorescence. We demonstrate that S(2) fluorescence can be explained by the calculated energy gap between the S(2) and S(1) states of these molecules. Furthermore, nonlinear optical behavior of the thiophene-pi-conjugated compound with diethylcyanomethylphosphonate substituents was predicted in theory.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Control of structure and photophysical properties by protonation and subsequent intramolecular hydrogen bonding

Mengtao Sun

Protonation and subsequent intramolecular hydrogen bonding as methods to control chain structure and tune luminescence in heteroatomic conjugated polymers were reported experimentally [A. P. Monkman et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 124, 6049 (2002)]. In this paper, the structure and photophysical properties of the model teraryl compound of phenylene-pyridylene copolymer before and after protonation are theoretically studied with quantum chemistry methods. From the optimized ground states, intramolecular hydrogen bonding to the adjacent oxygen atom in the alkoxy substituent planarizes the backbone of the molecules, and the optimized detailed results of compound 9 before and after protonation, such as the dihedral angles between the central benzene and the two pyridyl rings, the bond lengths, and the bond angles, are consistent with the experimental results. From the results of the calculated excited states, the protonation and subsequent intramolecular hydrogen bonding result in the redshifts of the absorption, the increase of the ionization energy, the increase of the electron affinity, the decrease of the energy difference of the highest occupied molecular orbital and lowest unoccupied molecular orbital, the decrease of the binding gap, and the delocalization of the electron-hole coherence. The photophysical properties of compound 9 before and after protonation are further studied with a three-dimensional real-space analysis method of transition and charge difference densities (study transition dipole moment and charge transfer in the absorption and fluorescence processes) and two-dimensional real-space analysis method of transition density matrices (study the electron-hole coherence and the excitation delocalization). The calculated results show theoretically an insight understanding on the influence of the protonation and subsequent intramolecular hydrogen bonding to chain structure and photophysical properties.


Scientific Reports | 2013

High-Density Three-Dimension Graphene Macroscopic Objects for High-Capacity Removal of Heavy Metal Ions

Weiwei Li; Song Gao; Liqiong Wu; Shengqiang Qiu; Yufen Guo; Xiumei Geng; Mingliang Chen; Shutian Liao; Chao Zhu; Youpin Gong; Mingsheng Long; Jianbao Xu; Xiangfei Wei; Mengtao Sun; Liwei Liu

The chemical vapor deposition (CVD) fabrication of high-density three-dimension graphene macroscopic objects (3D-GMOs) with a relatively low porosity has not yet been realized, although they are desirable for applications in which high mechanical and electrical properties are required. Here, we explore a method to rapidly prepare the high-density 3D-GMOs using nickel chloride hexahydrate (NiCl2·6H2O) as a catalyst precursor by CVD process at atmospheric pressure. Further, the free-standing 3D-GMOs are employed as electrolytic electrodes to remove various heavy metal ions. The robust 3D structure, high conductivity (~12 S/cm) and large specific surface area (~560 m2/g) enable ultra-high electrical adsorption capacities (Cd2+ ~ 434 mg/g, Pb2+ ~ 882 mg/g, Ni2+ ~ 1,683 mg/g, Cu2+ ~ 3,820 mg/g) from aqueous solutions and fast desorption. The current work has significance in the studies of both the fabrication of high-density 3D-GMOs and the removal of heavy metal ions.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

Optical properties of low band gap alternating copolyfluorenes for photovoltaic devices

Nils-Krister Persson; Mengtao Sun; Pär Kjellberg; Tõnu Pullerits; Olle Inganäs

In a joint experimental and theoretical work the optical response and excited-state character of two novel conjugated polymers for photovoltaic applications are studied. The polymers, alternating polyfluorene (APFO) Green 1 and APFO Green 2, are both copolymers of fluorene, thiophene, and electron accepting groups. The band gaps are extended into the red and near infrared with onsets of 780 and 1000 nm, respectively, due to alternating donor and acceptor moieties along the polymer chain. Spectroscopic ellipsometry and subsequent modeling made it possible to extract the dielectric function in the range of 260-1200 nm. Semiempirical quantum chemical calculations (ZINDO) revealed the character of the main electronic transitions in the studied spectral region. The spectral band just above 400 nm was assigned to a delocalized pi-pi* transition for both polymers. The red band lying at 622 and 767 nm in the two polymers corresponds to an electronic state mainly occupying the acceptor units and having a strong charge-transfer character. We show that the ZINDO transition energies are valuable input to the application of Lorentz oscillators in modeling of the dielectric function of the polymer material.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Ultrafast Dynamics of Plasmon-Exciton Interaction of Ag Nanowire- Graphene Hybrids for Surface Catalytic Reactions

Qianqian Ding; Ying Shi; Maodu Chen; Hui Li; Xianzhong Yang; Yingqi Qu; Wenjie Liang; Mengtao Sun

Using the ultrafast pump-probe transient absorption spectroscopy, the femtosecond-resolved plasmon-exciton interaction of graphene-Ag nanowire hybrids is experimentally investigated, in the VIS-NIR region. The plasmonic lifetime of Ag nanowire is about 150 ± 7 femtosecond (fs). For a single layer of graphene, the fast dynamic process at 275 ± 77 fs is due to the excitation of graphene excitons, and the slow process at 1.4 ± 0.3 picosecond (ps) is due to the plasmonic hot electron interaction with phonons of graphene. For the graphene-Ag nanowire hybrids, the time scale of the plasmon-induced hot electron transferring to graphene is 534 ± 108 fs, and the metal plasmon enhanced graphene plasmon is about 3.2 ± 0.8 ps in the VIS region. The graphene-Ag nanowire hybrids can be used for plasmon-driven chemical reactions. This graphene-mediated surface-enhanced Raman scattering substrate significantly increases the probability and efficiency of surface catalytic reactions co-driven by graphene-Ag nanowire hybridization, in comparison with reactions individually driven by monolayer graphene or single Ag nanowire. This implies that the graphene-Ag nanowire hybrids can not only lead to a significant accumulation of high-density hot electrons, but also significantly increase the plasmon-to-electron conversion efficiency, due to strong plasmon-exciton coupling.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2015

Recent progress in the applications of graphene in surface-enhanced Raman scattering and plasmon-induced catalytic reactions

Leilei Kang; Jiayu Chu; Hongtao Zhao; Ping Xu; Mengtao Sun

Graphene continues to attract tremendous interest, owing to its excellent optical and electronic properties. Based on its unique features, graphene has been employed in the ever-expanding research fields. Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) may be one of the significant applied fields where graphene can make a difference. Since its discovery, the SERS technique has been capable of ultra sensitively detecting chemical and biological molecules at very low concentration, even at the single molecule level, but some problems, such as irreproducible SERS signals, should be overcome before being practically applied for spectral analysis. Graphene can be a promising candidate to make up the deficiency of a conventional metal SERS substrate. Furthermore, graphene, serving as an enhancement material, is usually deemed as a chemically inert substance to isolate the interactions between metal and probe molecules. While, irradiated by laser, structure changes of graphene under specific conditions and the contributions of its high electron mobility in plasmon-induced catalytic reactions are often ignored. In this review, we mainly focus on the state-of-the-art applications of graphene in the fields of SERS and laser-induced catalytic reactions. The advances in informative Raman spectra of graphene are firstly reviewed. Then, the graphene related SERS substrates, including graphene-enhanced Raman scattering (GERS) and graphene-mediated SERS (G-SERS), are summarized. We finally highlight the catalytic reactions occurring on graphene itself and molecules adsorbed onto graphene upon laser irradiation.


Nanoscale | 2013

Insights into the nature of plasmon-driven catalytic reactions revealed by HV-TERS

Zhenglong Zhang; Li Chen; Mengtao Sun; Panpan Ruan; Hairong Zheng; Hongxing Xu

The nature of plasmon-driven chemical reactions is experimentally investigated using high vacuum tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (HV-TERS). It is revealed that the coupling between the tip and the substrate can produce intense plasmon resonance, which then decays to produce sufficient hot electrons and thus catalyses the chemical reaction. The photoelectron emission from the laser illuminated silver substrate alone cannot drive the reaction.

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Zhenglong Zhang

Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology

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Yurui Fang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yuanzuo Li

Northeast Forestry University

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Maodu Chen

Dalian University of Technology

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Guohe Sha

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Liwei Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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