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Dive into the research topics where Mufan Li is active.

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Featured researches published by Mufan Li.


Science | 2015

High-performance transition metal–doped Pt3Ni octahedra for oxygen reduction reaction

Xiaoqing Huang; Zipeng Zhao; Liang Cao; Y. Chen; Enbo Zhu; Zhaoyang Lin; Mufan Li; Aiming Yan; Alex Zettl; Y. Morris Wang; Xiangfeng Duan; Tim Mueller; Yu Huang

Molybdenum doping drives high activity Platinum (Pt) is an effective catalyst of the oxygen reduction reaction in fuel cells but is scarce. One approach to extend Pt availability is to alloy it with more abundant metals such as nickel (Ni). Although these catalysts can be highly active, they are often not durable because of Ni loss. Huang et al. show that doping the surface of octahedral Pt3Ni nanocrystals with molybdenum not only leads to high activity (∼80 times that of a commercial catalyst) but enhances their stability. Science, this issue p. 1230 Molybdenum-doped platinum-nickel nanocrystal catalysts exhibit high activity and durability for a key fuel cell reaction. Bimetallic platinum-nickel (Pt-Ni) nanostructures represent an emerging class of electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in fuel cells, but practical applications have been limited by catalytic activity and durability. We surface-doped Pt3Ni octahedra supported on carbon with transition metals, termed M‐Pt3Ni/C, where M is vanadium, chromium, manganese, iron, cobalt, molybdenum (Mo), tungsten, or rhenium. The Mo‐Pt3Ni/C showed the best ORR performance, with a specific activity of 10.3 mA/cm2 and mass activity of 6.98 A/mgPt, which are 81- and 73‐fold enhancements compared with the commercial Pt/C catalyst (0.127 mA/cm2 and 0.096 A/mgPt). Theoretical calculations suggest that Mo prefers subsurface positions near the particle edges in vacuum and surface vertex/edge sites in oxidizing conditions, where it enhances both the performance and the stability of the Pt3Ni catalyst.


Science | 2016

Ultrafine jagged platinum nanowires enable ultrahigh mass activity for the oxygen reduction reaction

Mufan Li; Zipeng Zhao; Tao Cheng; Alessandro Fortunelli; Chih-Yen Chen; Rong Yu; Qinghua Zhang; Lin Gu; Boris V. Merinov; Zhaoyang Lin; Enbo Zhu; Ted H. Yu; Qingying Jia; Jinghua Guo; Liang Zhang; William A. Goddard; Yu Huang; Xiangfeng Duan

An activity lift for platinum Platinum is an excellent but expensive catalyst for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), which is critical for fuel cells. Alloying platinum with other metals can create shells of platinum on cores of less expensive metals, which increases its surface exposure, and compressive strain in the layer can also boost its activity (see the Perspective by Stephens et al.). Bu et al. produced nanoplates—platinum-lead cores covered with platinum shells—that were in tensile strain. These nanoplates had high and stable ORR activity, which theory suggests arises from the strain optimizing the platinum-oxygen bond strength. Li et al. optimized both the amount of surface-exposed platinum and the specific activity. They made nanowires with a nickel oxide core and a platinum shell, annealed them to the metal alloy, and then leached out the nickel to form a rough surface. The mass activity was about double the best reported values from previous studies. Science, this issue p. 1410, p. 1414; see also p. 1378 Improving the platinum (Pt) mass activity for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) requires optimization of both the specific activity and the electrochemically active surface area (ECSA). We found that solution-synthesized Pt/NiO core/shell nanowires can be converted into PtNi alloy nanowires through a thermal annealing process and then transformed into jagged Pt nanowires via electrochemical dealloying. The jagged nanowires exhibit an ECSA of 118 square meters per gram of Pt and a specific activity of 11.5 milliamperes per square centimeter for ORR (at 0.9 volts versus reversible hydrogen electrode), yielding a mass activity of 13.6 amperes per milligram of Pt, nearly double previously reported best values. Reactive molecular dynamics simulations suggest that highly stressed, undercoordinated rhombus-rich surface configurations of the jagged nanowires enhance ORR activity versus more relaxed surfaces.


Science | 2017

Three-dimensional holey-graphene/niobia composite architectures for ultrahigh-rate energy storage

Hongtao Sun; Lin Mei; Junfei Liang; Zipeng Zhao; C. O. Lee; Huilong Fei; Mengning Ding; Jonathan Lau; Mufan Li; Chen Wang; Xu Xu; Guolin Hao; Benjamin Papandrea; Imran Shakir; Bruce Dunn; Yu Huang; Xiangfeng Duan

As with donuts, the holes matter Improving the density of stored charge and increasing the speed at which it can move through a material are usually opposing objectives. Sun et al. developed a Nb2O5/holey graphene framework composite with tailored porosity. The three-dimensional, hierarchically porous holey graphene acted as a conductive scaffold to support Nb2O5. A high mass loading and improved power capability were reached by tailoring the porosity in the holey graphene backbone with higher charge transport in the composite architecture. The interconnected graphene network provided excellent electron transport, and the hierarchical porous structure in the graphene sheets facilitated rapid ion transport and mitigated diffusion limitations. Science, this issue p. 599 A graphene/Nb2O5 composite shows optimized electron and ion transport. Nanostructured materials have shown extraordinary promise for electrochemical energy storage but are usually limited to electrodes with rather low mass loading (~1 milligram per square centimeter) because of the increasing ion diffusion limitations in thicker electrodes. We report the design of a three-dimensional (3D) holey-graphene/niobia (Nb2O5) composite for ultrahigh-rate energy storage at practical levels of mass loading (>10 milligrams per square centimeter). The highly interconnected graphene network in the 3D architecture provides excellent electron transport properties, and its hierarchical porous structure facilitates rapid ion transport. By systematically tailoring the porosity in the holey graphene backbone, charge transport in the composite architecture is optimized to deliver high areal capacity and high-rate capability at high mass loading, which represents a critical step forward toward practical applications.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2014

A rational design of carbon-supported dispersive Pt-based octahedra as efficient oxygen reduction reaction catalysts

Xiaoqing Huang; Zipeng Zhao; Y. Chen; Enbo Zhu; Mufan Li; Xiangfeng Duan; Yu Huang

Bimetallic PtNi nanocrystals represent an emerging class of newly discovered electrocatalysts which are expected to exhibit exciting oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity. Colloidal syntheses have been proven to be suitable for controlling PtNi nanocrystals with well-defined morphologies and tunable compositions with the use of capping agents or ligands. However, these colloidal PtNi nanocrystals have inherent limitations associated with the ligand-covered surfaces, which not only limit the free access of surface active sites but also hinder electron transport between the catalyst and the support, leading to deteriorated ORR performance. Herein, we report a facile one-pot strategy to synthesize highly dispersive PtNi octahedra directly on various carbon materials without using any bulky capping agents, which enhances the surface exposure of the PtNi octahedra and their catalytic activity over ORR while largely reduces the preparation costs. The obtained octahedral PtNi/C catalysts have high ORR activities of 2.53 mA cm−2 and 1.62 A mgPt−1 at 0.9 V versus RHE, which are far better than those of commercial Pt/C catalysts (0.131 mA cm−2 and 0.092 A mgPt−1, all the ORR measurements were performed at room temperature in O2-purged 0.1 M HClO4 solutions at a sweep rate of 10 mV s−1). This strategy has been extended to fabricate trimetallic PtNiCo octahedra on carbon black with further enhanced activities up to 3.88 mA cm−2 and 2.33 A mgPt−1 at 0.9 V versus RHE. The octahedral PtNiCo/C catalyst is also more stable than the commercial Pt/C under the ORR conditions and shows small activity change after 6000 potential sweeps. The work demonstrates that the carbon-supported Pt-based materials reported herein are promising material candidates with enhanced performances for practical electrocatalytic applications.


Nano Letters | 2014

High density catalytic hot spots in ultrafine wavy nanowires.

Xiaoqing Huang; Zipeng Zhao; Y. Chen; Chin-Yi Chiu; Lingyan Ruan; Yuan Liu; Mufan Li; Xiangfeng Duan; Yu Huang

Structural defects/grain boundaries in metallic materials can exhibit unusual chemical reactivity and play important roles in catalysis. Bulk polycrystalline materials possess many structural defects, which is, however, usually inaccessible to solution reactants and hardly useful for practical catalytic reactions. Typical metallic nanocrystals usually exhibit well-defined crystalline structure with few defects/grain boundaries. Here, we report the design of ultrafine wavy nanowires (WNWs) with a high density of accessible structural defects/grain boundaries as highly active catalytic hot spots. We show that rhodium WNWs can be readily synthesized with controllable number of structural defects and demonstrate the number of structural defects can fundamentally determine their catalytic activity in selective oxidation of benzyl alcohol by O2, with the catalytic activity increasing with the number of structural defects. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and cyclic voltammograms (CVs) studies demonstrate that the structural defects can significantly alter the chemical state of the Rh WNWs to modulate their catalytic activity. Lastly, our systematic studies further demonstrate that the concept of defect engineering in WNWs for improved catalytic performance is general and can be readily extended to other similar systems, including palladium and iridium WNWs.


Nature Catalysis | 2018

General synthesis and definitive structural identification of MN 4 C 4 single-atom catalysts with tunable electrocatalytic activities

Huilong Fei; J. Dong; Yexin Feng; Christopher S. Allen; Chengzhang Wan; Boris Volosskiy; Mufan Li; Zipeng Zhao; Yiliu Wang; Hongtao Sun; Pengfei An; Wenxing Chen; Zhiying Guo; C. O. Lee; Dongliang Chen; Imran Shakir; Mingjie Liu; Tiandou Hu; Yadong Li; Angus I. Kirkland; Xiangfeng Duan; Yu Huang

AbstractSingle-atom catalysts (SACs) have recently attracted broad research interest as they combine the merits of both homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts. Rational design and synthesis of SACs are of immense significance but have so far been plagued by the lack of a definitive correlation between structure and catalytic properties. Here, we report a general approach to a series of monodispersed atomic transition metals (for example, Fe, Co, Ni) embedded in nitrogen-doped graphene with a common MN4C4 moiety, identified by systematic X-ray absorption fine structure analyses and direct transmission electron microscopy imaging. The unambiguous structure determination allows density functional theoretical prediction of MN4C4 moieties as efficient oxygen evolution catalysts with activities following the trend Ni > Co > Fe, which is confirmed by electrochemical measurements. Determination of atomistic structure and its correlation with catalytic properties represents a critical step towards the rational design and synthesis of precious or nonprecious SACs with exceptional atom utilization efficiency and catalytic activities.Atomically dispersed metal catalysts are of increasing importance in many catalytic processes, but clear structural identification is challenging. Here, a general synthesis of metal (nickel, iron and cobalt) single-atom catalysts on nitrogen-doped graphene allows the authors to identify a common structure and furthermore correlate structure with electrocatalytic activity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Synthesis of Stable Shape-Controlled Catalytically Active β-Palladium Hydride

Zipeng Zhao; Xiaoqing Huang; Mufan Li; Gongming Wang; C. O. Lee; Enbo Zhu; Xiangfeng Duan; Yu Huang

We have developed an efficient strategy for the production of stable β-palladium hydride (PdH0.43) nanocrystals with controllable shapes and remarkable stability. The as-synthesized PdH0.43 nanocrystals showed impressive stability in air at room temperature for over 10 months, which has enabled the investigation of their catalytic property for the first time. The prepared PdH0.43 nanocrystals served as highly efficient catalysts in the oxidation of methanol, showing higher activity than their Pd counterparts. These studies opened a door for further exploration of β-palladium hydride-based nanomaterials as a new class of promising catalytic materials and beyond.


Nano Research | 2016

In situ development of highly concave and compositionconfined PtNi octahedra with high oxygen reduction reaction activity and durability

Enbo Zhu; Yongjia Li; Chin-Yi Chiu; Xiaoqing Huang; Mufan Li; Zipeng Zhao; Yuan Liu; Xiangfeng Duan; Yu Huang

Controlled syntheses of PtNi metal nanocrystals with unique structures for catalyzing oxygen reduction reactions (ORRs) have attracted great interest. Here, we report the one-step synthesis of single-crystal PtNi octahedra with in situ-developed highly concave features and self-confined composition that are optimal for ORR. Detailed studies revealed that the Pt-rich seeding, subsequent Pt/Ni co-reduction, and Pt–Ni interfusion resulted in uniform single-crystal PtNi octahedra, and that the combination of Ni facet segregation and oxygen etching of a Ni-rich surface led to the concavity and confined Ni content. The concave PtNi nanocrystals exhibited much higher ORR performance than the commercially available Pt/C catalyst in terms of both specific activity (29.1 times higher) and mass activity (12.9 times higher) at 0.9 V (vs. reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE)). The performance was also higher than that of PtNi octahedra without concavity, confirming that the higher activity was closely related to its morphology. Moreover, the concave octahedra also exhibited remarkable stability in ORR (93% mass activity remained after 10,000 cycles between 0.6 and 1.1 V vs. RHE) owing to the passivation of the unstable sites.


Nano Research | 2015

Reduced graphene oxide/silicon nanowire heterostructures with enhanced photoactivity and superior photoelectrochemical stability

Xing Zhong; Gongming Wang; Benjamin Papandrea; Mufan Li; Yuxi Xu; Yu Chen; Chih-Yen Chen; Hailong Zhou; Teng Xue; Yongjia Li; Dehui Li; Yu Huang; Xiangfeng Duan

Silicon nanowires (SiNWs) have been widely studied as light harvesting antennas in photocatalysts due to their ability to absorb broad-spectrum solar radiation, but they are typically limited by poor photoelectrochemical stability. Here, we report the synthesis of reduced graphene oxide-SiNW (rGO-SiNW) heterostructures to achieve greatly improved photocatalytic activity and stability. The SiNWs were synthesized through a metal-assisted electroless etching process and functionalized with reduced graphene oxide (rGO) flakes through a chemical absorption process. Here, the rGO not only functions as a physical protection layer to isolate the SiNWs from the harsh electrochemical environment but also serves as a charge mediator to facilitate the charge separation and transport processes. Furthermore, the rGO may also function as a redox catalyst to ensure efficient utilization of photo-carriers for the desired chemical reactions. Photocatalytic dye degradation studies show that the photoactivity of the heterostructures can be significantly enhanced with an initial activation process and maintained without apparent decay over repeated reaction cycles. Electrochemical and photoelectrochemical studies indicate that the enhanced photoactivity and photostability can be attributed to the more efficient separation of photoexcited charge carriers in SiNWs and the reduced self-oxidation of the surface of the SiNWs during the photocatalytic dye degradation process. The ability to significantly improve the photocatalytic activity and stability in rGO-SiNW heterostructures can not only lead to more opportunities for the application of silicon-based photocatalysts/photoelectrodes for solar energy harvesting but also provide new insights into the stabilization of other unstable photocatalytic systems.


Chemical Communications | 2016

Composition tunable ternary Pt–Ni–Co octahedra for optimized oxygen reduction activity

Zipeng Zhao; Miao Feng; Jihan Zhou; Zeyan Liu; Mufan Li; Zheng Fan; Oshton Tsen; Jianwei Miao; Xiangfeng Duan; Yu Huang

Herein, we report a one-step synthesis method for octahedral Pt-Ni-Co ternary catalysts with tunable compositions and fixed shapes. Impressively, the composition optimized octahedral PtNi0.55Co0.1/C demonstrated a significant improvement in ORR activity compared to those of previously reported Pt-Ni-Co alloy octahedra, showing an outstanding specific activity of 5.05 mA cm-2 and a mass activity of 2.80 mA μgPt-1, which are around 20.2 times and 14.7 times higher than those of the commercial Pt/C catalyst (0.25 mA cm-2 and 0.19 mA μgPt-1).

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Xiangfeng Duan

University of California

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Yu Huang

University of California

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Zipeng Zhao

University of California

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Enbo Zhu

University of California

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Xiaoqing Huang

University of California

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Yuan Liu

University of California

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Zhaoyang Lin

University of California

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C. O. Lee

University of California

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Chen Wang

University of California

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