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Dive into the research topics where Ming Zheng is active.

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Featured researches published by Ming Zheng.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Isolation of Specific Small‐Diameter Single‐Wall Carbon Nanotube Species via Aqueous Two‐Phase Extraction

Jeffrey A. Fagan; Constantine Y. Khripin; Carlos A. Silvera Batista; Jeffrey R. Simpson; Erik H. Hároz; Angela R. Hight Walker; Ming Zheng

Aqueous two-phase extraction is demonstrated to enable isolation of single semiconducting and metallic single-wall carbon nanotube species from a synthetic mixture. The separation is rapid and robust, with remarkable tunability via modification of the surfactant environment set for the separation.


Nature Communications | 2012

Chirality-controlled synthesis of single-wall carbon nanotubes using vapour-phase epitaxy

Jia Liu; Chuan Wang; Xiaomin Tu; Bilu Liu; Liang Chen; Ming Zheng; Chongwu Zhou

Chirality-controlled synthesis of single-wall carbon nanotubes with predefined chiralities has been an important but elusive goal for almost two decades. Here we demonstrate a general strategy for producing carbon nanotubes with predefined chiralities by using purified single-chirality nanotubes as seeds for subsequent metal catalyst free growth, resembling vapour-phase epitaxy commonly used for semiconductor films. In particular, we have successfully synthesized (7, 6), (6, 5) and (7, 7) nanotubes, and used Raman spectroscopy to show unambiguously that the original chiralities of the nanotube seeds are preserved. Furthermore, we have performed electrical measurements on synthesized individual (7, 6) and (6, 5) nanotubes, confirming their semiconducting nature. The vapour-phase epitaxy approach is found to be highly robust and should enable a wide range of fundamental studies and technological developments.


ACS Nano | 2012

Chiral Index Dependence of the G+ and G– Raman Modes in Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes

Hagen Telg; Juan G. Duque; Matthias Staiger; Xiaomin Tu; Frank Hennrich; Manfred M. Kappes; Ming Zheng; Janina Maultzsch; Christian Thomsen; Stephen K. Doorn

Raman spectroscopy on the radial breathing mode is a common tool to determine the diameter d or chiral indices (n,m) of single-wall carbon nanotubes. In this work we present an alternative technique to determine d and (n,m) based on the high-energy G(-) mode. From resonant Raman scattering experiments on 14 highly purified single chirality (n,m) samples we obtain the diameter, chiral angle, and family dependence of the G(-) and G(+) peak position. Considering theoretical predictions we discuss the origin of these dependences with respect to rehybridization of the carbon orbitals, confinement, and electron-electron interactions. The relative Raman intensities of the two peaks have a systematic chiral angle dependence in agreement with theories considering the symmetry of nanotubes and the associated phonons.


Nano Letters | 2013

Chirality-Dependent Vapor-Phase Epitaxial Growth and Termination of Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes

Bilu Liu; Jia Liu; Xiaomin Tu; Jialu Zhang; Ming Zheng; Chongwu Zhou

Structurally uniform and chirality-pure single-wall carbon nanotubes are highly desired for both fundamental study and many of their technological applications, such as electronics, optoelectronics, and biomedical imaging. Considerable efforts have been invested in the synthesis of nanotubes with defined chiralities by tuning the growth recipes but the approach has only limited success. Recently, we have shown that chirality-pure short nanotubes can be used as seeds for vapor-phase epitaxial cloning growth, opening up a new route toward chirality-controlled carbon nanotube synthesis. Nevertheless, the yield of vapor-phase epitaxial growth is rather limited at the present stage, due in large part to the lack of mechanistic understanding of the process. Here we report chirality-dependent growth kinetics and termination mechanism for the vapor-phase epitaxial growth of seven single-chirality nanotubes of (9, 1), (6, 5), (8, 3), (7, 6), (10, 2), (6, 6), and (7, 7), covering near zigzag, medium chiral angle, and near armchair semiconductors, as well as armchair metallic nanotubes. Our results reveal that the growth rates of nanotubes increase with their chiral angles while the active lifetimes of the growth hold opposite trend. Consequently, the chirality distribution of a nanotube ensemble is jointly determined by both growth rates and lifetimes. These results correlate nanotube structures and properties with their growth behaviors and deepen our understanding of chirality-controlled growth of nanotubes.


Nano Letters | 2015

Redox Sorting of Carbon Nanotubes

Hui Gui; Jason K. Streit; Jeffrey A. Fagan; Angela R. Hight Walker; Chongwu Zhou; Ming Zheng

This work expands the redox chemistry of single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) by investigating its role in a number of SWCNT sorting processes. Using a polyethylene glycol (PEG)/dextran (DX) aqueous two-phase system, we show that electron-transfer between redox molecules and SWCNTs triggers reorganization of the surfactant coating layer, leading to strong modulation of nanotube partition in the two phases. While the DX phase is thermodynamically more favored by an oxidized SWCNT mixture, the mildly reducing PEG phase is able to recover SWCNTs from oxidation and extract them successively from the DX phase. Remarkably, the extraction order follows SWCNT bandgap: semiconducting nanotubes of larger bandgap first, followed by semiconducting nanotubes of smaller bandgap, then nonarmchair metallic tubes of small but nonvanishing bandgap, and finally armchair metallic nanotubes of zero bandgap. Furthermore, we show that redox-induced surfactant reorganization is a common phenomenon, affecting nanotube buoyancy in a density gradient field, affinity to polymer matrices, and solubility in organic solvents. These findings establish redox modulation of surfactant coating structures as a general mechanism for tuning a diverse range of SWCNT sorting processes and demonstrate for the first time that armchair and nonarmchair metallic SWCNTs can be separated by their differential response to redox.


ACS Nano | 2011

Violation of the Condon Approximation in Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes

Juan G. Duque; Hang Chen; Anna K. Swan; Andrew P. Shreve; Svetlana Kilina; Sergei Tretiak; Xiaomin Tu; Ming Zheng; Stephen K. Doorn

The Condon approximation is widely applied in molecular and condensed matter spectroscopy and states that electronic transition dipoles are independent of nuclear positions. This approximation is related to the Franck-Condon principle, which in its simplest form holds that electronic transitions are instantaneous on the time scale of nuclear motion. The Condon approximation leads to a long-held assumption in Raman spectroscopy of carbon nanotubes: intensities arising from resonance with incident and scattered photons are equal. Direct testing of this assumption has not been possible due to the lack of homogeneous populations of specific carbon nanotube chiralities. Here, we present the first complete Raman excitation profiles (REPs) for the nanotube G band for 10 pure semiconducting chiralities. In contrast to expectations, a strong asymmetry is observed in the REPs for all chiralities, with the scattered resonance always appearing weaker than the incident resonance. The observed behavior results from violation of the Condon approximation and originates in changes in the electronic transition dipole due to nuclear motion (non-Condon effect), as confirmed by our quantum chemical calculations. The agreement of our calculations with the experimental REP asymmetries and observed trends in family dependence indicates the behavior is intrinsic.


ACS Nano | 2017

Chirality-Controlled Synthesis and Applications of Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes

Bilu Liu; Fanqi Wu; Hui Gui; Ming Zheng; Chongwu Zhou

Preparation of chirality-defined single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) is the top challenge in the nanotube field. In recent years, great progress has been made toward preparing single-chirality SWCNTs through both direct controlled synthesis and postsynthesis separation approaches. Accordingly, the uses of single-chirality-dominated SWCNTs for various applications have emerged as a new front in nanotube research. In this Review, we review recent progress made in the chirality-controlled synthesis of SWCNTs, including metal-catalyst-free SWCNT cloning by vapor-phase epitaxy elongation of purified single-chirality nanotube seeds, chirality-specific growth of SWCNTs on bimetallic solid alloy catalysts, chirality-controlled synthesis of SWCNTs using bottom-up synthetic strategy from carbonaceous molecular end-cap precursors, etc. Recent major progresses in postsynthesis separation of single-chirality SWCNT species, as well as methods for chirality characterization of SWCNTs, are also highlighted. Moreover, we discuss some examples where single-chirality SWCNTs have shown clear advantages over SWCNTs with broad chirality distributions. We hope this review could inspire more research on the chirality-controlled preparation of SWCNTs and equally important inspire the use of single-chirality SWCNT samples for more fundamental studies and practical applications.


Nature Chemistry | 2018

Narrow-band single-photon emission through selective aryl functionalization of zigzag carbon nanotubes

Avishek Saha; Brendan J. Gifford; Xiaowei He; Geyou Ao; Ming Zheng; Hiromichi Kataura; Han Htoon; Svetlana Kilina; Sergei Tretiak; Stephen K. Doorn

The introduction of sp3 defects into single-walled carbon nanotubes through covalent functionalization can generate new light-emitting states and thus dramatically expand their optical functionality. This may open up routes to enhanced imaging, photon upconversion, and room-temperature single-photon emission at telecom wavelengths. However, a significant challenge in harnessing this potential is that the nominally simple reaction chemistry of nanotube functionalization introduces a broad diversity of emitting states. Precisely defining a narrow band of emission energies necessitates constraining these states, which requires extreme selectivity in molecular binding configuration on the nanotube surface. We show here that such selectivity can be obtained through aryl functionalization of so-called ‘zigzag’ nanotube structures to achieve a threefold narrowing in emission bandwidth. Accompanying density functional theory modelling reveals that, because of the associated structural symmetry, the defect states become degenerate, thus limiting emission energies to a single narrow band. We show that this behaviour can only result from a predominant selectivity for ortho binding configurations of the aryl groups on the nanotube lattice.Aryl functionalization of carbon nanotubes generates sp3 defects capable of quantum light emission. A multiplicity of possible binding configurations, however, leads to spectrally diverse emission bands. Now, it is shown that the structural symmetry of zigzag nanotubes and a high chemical selectivity for ortho configurations results in defect-state emission from a single narrow band.


Nanoscale | 2013

Fundamental optical processes in armchair carbon nanotubes

Erik Haroz; Juan G. Duque; Xiaomin Tu; Ming Zheng; Angela R. Hight Walker; Robert H. Hauge; Stephen K. Doorn; Junichiro Kono


Nanoscale | 2016

A facile and low-cost length sorting of single-wall carbon nanotubes by precipitation and applications for thin-film transistors.

Hui Gui; Haitian Chen; Constantine Y. Khripin; Bilu Liu; Jeffrey A. Fagan; Chongwu Zhou; Ming Zheng

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Xiaomin Tu

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Jeffrey A. Fagan

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Stephen K. Doorn

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Juan G. Duque

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Angela R. Hight Walker

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Chongwu Zhou

University of Southern California

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Bilu Liu

University of Southern California

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Jason K. Streit

University of Southern California

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