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Dive into the research topics where Peng g Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Peng g Chen.


Science | 2016

Polyelemental nanoparticle libraries.

Peng Cheng Chen; Xiaolong Liu; James L. Hedrick; Zhuang Xie; Shunzhi Wang; Qing Yuan Lin; Mark C. Hersam; Vinayak P. Dravid; Chad A. Mirkin

Multimetal nanoparticle synthesis Multicomponent nanoparticles can be difficult to synthesize. Rather than mixing in one type of particle, the compounds often separate and form distinct particles. Using dip-pen lithography, Chen et al. show how adding reactants to very small volumes forces the reactants to form single particles containing various combinations of five different transition metal ions. Scanning transmission electron microscopy and energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy revealed the shapes of the nanoparticles and how metallic composition varied within them. For example, the quinary particle containing gold, silver, cobalt, copper, and nickel consisted of three domains of binary alloys. Science, this issue p. 1565 Nanoparticles of every combination of five metallic elements were synthesized by means of polymer nanoreactor–mediated synthesis. Multimetallic nanoparticles are useful in many fields, yet there are no effective strategies for synthesizing libraries of such structures, in which architectures can be explored in a systematic and site-specific manner. The absence of these capabilities precludes the possibility of comprehensively exploring such systems. We present systematic studies of individual polyelemental particle systems, in which composition and size can be independently controlled and structure formation (alloy versus phase-separated state) can be understood. We made libraries consisting of every combination of five metallic elements (Au, Ag, Co, Cu, and Ni) through polymer nanoreactor–mediated synthesis. Important insight into the factors that lead to alloy formation and phase segregation at the nanoscale were obtained, and routes to libraries of nanostructures that cannot be made by conventional methods were developed.


Small | 2015

Apertureless cantilever-free pen arrays for scanning photochemical printing.

Yu Zhou; Zhuang Xie; Keith A. Brown; Daniel J. Park; Xiaozhu Zhou; Peng Cheng Chen; Michael Hirtz; Qing Yuan Lin; Vinayak P. Dravid; George C. Schatz; Zijian Zheng; Chad A. Mirkin

A novel, apertureless, cantilever-free pen array can be used for dual scanning photochemical and molecular printing. Serial writing with light is enabled by combining self-focusing pyramidal pens with an opaque backing between pens. The elastomeric pens also afford force-tuned illumination and simultaneous delivery of materials and optical energy. These attributes make the technique a promising candidate for maskless high-resolution photopatterning and combinatorial chemistry.


ACS Nano | 2016

Hard Transparent Arrays for Polymer Pen Lithography

James L. Hedrick; Keith A. Brown; Edward J. Kluender; Maria D. Cabezas; Peng Cheng Chen; Chad A. Mirkin

Patterning nanoscale features across macroscopic areas is challenging due to the vast range of length scales that must be addressed. With polymer pen lithography, arrays of thousands of elastomeric pyramidal pens can be used to write features across centimeter-scales, but deformation of the soft pens limits resolution and minimum feature pitch, especially with polymeric inks. Here, we show that by coating polymer pen arrays with a ∼175 nm silica layer, the resulting hard transparent arrays exhibit a force-independent contact area that improves their patterning capability by reducing the minimum feature size (∼40 nm), minimum feature pitch (<200 nm for polymers), and pen to pen variation. With these new arrays, patterns with as many as 5.9 billion features in a 14.5 cm(2) area were written using a four hundred thousand pyramid pen array. Furthermore, a new method is demonstrated for patterning macroscopic feature size gradients that vary in feature diameter by a factor of 4. Ultimately, this form of polymer pen lithography allows for patterning with the resolution of dip-pen nanolithography across centimeter scales using simple and inexpensive pen arrays. The high resolution and density afforded by this technique position it as a broad-based discovery tool for the field of nanocombinatorics.


Small | 2016

Liquid-Phase Beam Pen Lithography

Shu He; Zhuang Xie; Daniel J. Park; Xing Liao; Keith A. Brown; Peng Cheng Chen; Yu Zhou; George C. Schatz; Chad A. Mirkin

Beam pen lithography (BPL) in the liquid phase is evaluated. The effect of tip-substrate gap and aperture size on patterning performance is systematically investigated. As a proof-of-concept experiment, nanoarrays of nucleotides are synthesized using BPL in an organic medium, pointing toward the potential of using liquid phase BPL to perform localized photochemical reactions that require a liquid medium.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

On-Tip Photo-Modulated Molecular Printing.

Zhuang Xie; Yu Zhou; James L. Hedrick; Peng Cheng Chen; Shu He; Mohammad Mehdi Shahjamali; Shunzhi Wang; Zijian Zheng; Chad A. Mirkin

The concept of using cantilever-free scanning probe arrays as structures that can modulate nanoscale ink flow and composition with light is introduced and evaluated. By utilizing polymer pen arrays with an opaque gold layer surrounding the base of the transparent polymer pyramids, we show that inks with photopolymerizable or isomerizable constituents can be used in conjunction with light channelled through the pyramids to control ink viscosity or composition in a dynamic manner. This on-tip photo-modulated molecular printing provides novel chemically and mechanically controlled approaches to regulating ink transport and composition in real time and could be useful not only for rapidly adjusting feature size but also for studying processes including photoreactions and mass transport at the nanoscale, self-assembly, and cell-material interactions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Structural Evolution of Three-Component Nanoparticles in Polymer Nanoreactors

Peng Cheng Chen; Jingshan S. Du; Brian Meckes; Liliang Huang; Zhuang Xie; James L. Hedrick; Vinayak P. Dravid; Chad A. Mirkin

Recent developments in scanning probe block copolymer lithography (SPBCL) enable the confinement of multiple metal precursors in a polymer nanoreactor and their subsequent transformation into a single multimetallic heterostructured nanoparticle through thermal annealing. However, the process by which multimetallic nanoparticles form in SPBCL-patterned nanoreactors remains unclear. Here, we utilize the combination of PEO-b-P2VP and Au, Ag, and Cu salts as a model three-component system to investigate this process. The data suggest that the formation of single-component Au, Ag, or Cu nanoparticles within polymer nanoreactors consists of two stages: (I) nucleation, growth, and coarsening of the particles to yield a single particle in each reactor; (II) continued particle growth by depletion of the remaining precursor in the reactor until the particle reaches a stable size. Also, different aggregation rates are observed for single-component particle formation (Au > Ag > Cu). This behavior is also observed for two-component systems, where nucleation sites have greater Au content than the other metals. This information can be used to trap nanoparticles with kinetic structures. High-temperature treatment ultimately facilitates the structural evolution of the kinetic particle into a particle with a fixed structure. Therefore, with multicomponent systems, a third stage that involves elemental redistribution within the particle must be part of the description of the synthetic process. This work not only provides a glimpse at the mechanism underlying multicomponent nanoparticle formation in SPBCL-generated nanoreactors but also illustrates, for the first time, the utility of SPBCL as a platform for controlling the architectural evolution of multimetallic nanoparticles in general.


Nano Letters | 2018

DNA-Mediated Size-Selective Nanoparticle Assembly for Multiplexed Surface Encoding

Qing Yuan Lin; Edgar Palacios; Wenjie Zhou; Zhongyang Li; Jarad A. Mason; Zizhuo Liu; Haixin Lin; Peng Cheng Chen; Vinayak P. Dravid; Koray Aydin; Chad A. Mirkin

Multiplexed surface encoding is achieved by positioning two different sizes of gold nanocubes on gold surfaces with precisely defined locations for each particle via template-confined, DNA-mediated nanoparticle assembly. As a proof-of-concept demonstration, cubes with 86 and 63 nm edge lengths are assembled into arrangements that physically and spectrally encrypt two sets of patterns in the same location. These patterns can be decrypted by mapping the absorption intensity of the substrate at λ = 773 and 687 nm, respectively. This multiplexed encoding platform dramatically increases the sophistication and density of codes that can be written using colloidal nanoparticles, which may enable high-security, high-resolution encoding applications.


ACS Nano | 2017

Solution-Phase Photochemical Nanopatterning Enabled by High-Refractive-Index Beam Pen Arrays

Zhuang Xie; Pavlo Gordiichuk; Qing Yuan Lin; Brian Meckes; Peng Cheng Chen; Lin Sun; Jingshan S. Du; Jinghan Zhu; Yuan Liu; Vinayak P. Dravid; Chad A. Mirkin

A high-throughput, solution-based, scanning-probe photochemical nanopatterning approach, which does not require the use of probes with subwavelength apertures, is reported. Specifically, pyramid arrays made from high-refractive-index polymeric materials were constructed and studied as patterning tools in a conventional liquid-phase beam pen lithography experiment. Two versions of the arrays were explored with either metal-coated or metal-free tips. Importantly, light can be channeled through both types of tips and the appropriate solution phase (e.g., H2O or CH3OH) and focused on subwavelength regions of a substrate to effect a photoreaction in solution that results in localized patterning of a self-assembled monolayer (SAM)-coated Au thin film substrate. Arrays with as many as 4500 pyramid-shaped probes were used to simultaneously initiate thousands of localized free-radical photoreactions (decomposition of a lithium acylphosphinate photoinitiator in an aqueous solution) that result in oxidative removal of the SAM. The technique is attractive since it allows one to rapidly generate features less than 200 nm in diameter, and the metal-free tips afford more than 10-fold higher intensity than the tips with nanoapertures over a micrometer propagation length. In principle, this mask-free method can be utilized as a versatile tool for performing a wide variety of photochemistries across multiple scales that may be important in high-throughput combinatorial screening applications related to chemistry, biology, and materials science.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Catalyst design by scanning probe block copolymer lithography

Liliang Huang; Peng Cheng Chen; Mohan Liu; Xianbiao Fu; Pavlo Gordiichuk; Yanan Yu; C. Wolverton; Yijin Kang; Chad A. Mirkin

Significance It is a major challenge in catalysis to uncover structure–performance relationships that drive the design and optimization of high-performance/low-cost catalysts. When one considers the number of potential elemental combinations for catalysts and then includes variables, such as particle size and elemental stoichiometry, the number of possibilities is daunting. There are also significant challenges facing the synthetic chemist, who is tasked with making and characterizing such complex architectures. Indeed, a way of substantially narrowing the field is essential. In this work, we introduce an effective approach that combines computational prediction, experimental verification using a well-defined nanomodel, and finally production of high-performance catalysts in bulk as a powerful tool for discovering and designing catalysts for energy conversion and storage. Scanning probe block copolymer lithography (SPBCL), in combination with density-functional theory (DFT), has been used to design and synthesize hydrogen evolution catalysts. DFT was used to calculate the hydrogen adsorption energy on a series of single-element, bimetallic, and trimetallic (Au, Pt, Ni, and Cu) substrates to provide leads that could be synthesized in the form of alloy or phase-separated particles via SPBCL. PtAuCu (18 nm, ∼1:1:1 stoichiometry) has been identified as a homogeneous alloy phase that behaves as an effective hydrogen evolution catalyst in acidic aqueous media, even when it is made in bulk form via solution phase methods. Significantly, the bulk-prepared PtAuCu/C nanocatalyst discovered via this process exhibits an activity seven times higher than that of the state-of-the-art commercial Pt/C catalyst (based upon Pt content). The advantage of using SPBCL in the discovery process is that one can uniformly make particles, each consisting of a uniform phase combination (e.g., all alloy or all phase-segregated species) at a fixed elemental ratio, an important consideration when working with polyelemental species where multiple phases may exist.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

The Structural Fate of Individual Multicomponent Metal-Oxide Nanoparticles in Polymer Nanoreactors

Jingshan S. Du; Peng Cheng Chen; Brian Meckes; Zhuang Xie; Jinghan Zhu; Yuan Liu; Vinayak P. Dravid; Chad A. Mirkin

Multicomponent nanoparticles can be synthesized with either homogeneous or phase-segregated architectures depending on the synthesis conditions and elements incorporated. To understand the parameters that determine their structural fate, multicomponent metal-oxide nanoparticles consisting of combinations of Co, Ni, and Cu were synthesized by using scanning probe block copolymer lithography and characterized using correlated electron microscopy. These studies revealed that the miscibility, ratio of the metallic components, and the synthesis temperature determine the crystal structure and architecture of the nanoparticles. A Co-Ni-O system forms a rock salt structure largely owing to the miscibility of CoO and NiO, while Cu-Ni-O, which has large miscibility gaps, forms either homogeneous oxides, heterojunctions, or alloys depending on the annealing temperature and composition. Moreover, a higher-ordered structure, Co-Ni-Cu-O, was found to follow the behavior of lower ordered systems.

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Zhuang Xie

Northwestern University

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Brian Meckes

Northwestern University

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Yu Zhou

Northwestern University

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