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Dive into the research topics where Shichuan Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Shichuan Chen.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Ultrathin Black Phosphorus Nanosheets for Efficient Singlet Oxygen Generation.

Hui Wang; Xian-Zhu Yang; Wei Shao; Shichuan Chen; Junfeng Xie; Xiaodong Zhang; Jun Wang; Yi Xie

Benefiting from its strong oxidizing properties, the singlet oxygen has garnered serious attentions in physical, chemical, as well as biological studies. However, the photosensitizers for the generation of singlet oxygen bear in low quantum yields, lack of long wavelength absorption band, poor biocompatibility, undegradable in living tissues, and so on. Here we first demonstrate the exfoliated black phosphorus nanosheets to be effective photosensitizers for the generation of singlet oxygen with a high quantum yield of about 0.91, rendering their attractive applications in catalysis and photodynamic therapy. Through in vitro and in vivo studies, the water dispersible black phosphorus nanosheets show notable cancer therapy ability. In addition, the photodegradable character of black phosphorus from element to biocompatible phosphorus oxides further highlights its therapeutic potential against cancer. This study will not only expand the breadth of study in black phosphorus but also offer an efficient catalyst and photodynamic therapy agent.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Enhanced Singlet Oxygen Generation in Oxidized Graphitic Carbon Nitride for Organic Synthesis.

Hui Wang; Shenlong Jiang; Shichuan Chen; Dandan Li; Xiaodong Zhang; Wei Shao; Xianshun Sun; Junfeng Xie; Zhi Zhao; Qun Zhang; Yupeng Tian; Yi Xie

Experimental data reveal that the incorporation of carbonyl groups into polymer matrix can significantly enhance singlet oxygen ((1) O2 ) generation and suppress production of other reactive oxygen species. Excitonic processes investigated by phosphorescence spectroscopy reveal enhanced triplet-exciton generation in the modified g-C3 N4 , which facilitate (1) O2 generation through an energy transfer process. Benefiting from this, the modified g-C3 N4 shows excellent conversion and selectivity in organic synthesis.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Giant Electron–Hole Interactions in Confined Layered Structures for Molecular Oxygen Activation

Hui Wang; Shichuan Chen; Dingyu Yong; Xiaodong Zhang; Shuang Li; Wei Shao; Xianshun Sun; B. C. Pan; Yi Xie

Numerous efforts have been devoted to understanding the excitation processes of photocatalysts, whereas the potential Coulomb interactions between photogenerated electrons and holes have been long ignored. Once these interactions are considered, excitonic effects will arise that undoubtedly influence the sunlight-driven catalytic processes. Herein, by taking bismuth oxyhalide as examples, we proposed that giant electron-hole interactions would be expected in confined layered structures, and excitons would be the dominating photoexcited species. Photocatalytic molecular oxygen activation tests were performed as a proof of concept, where singlet oxygen generation via energy transfer process was brightened. Further experiments verify that structural confinement is curial to the giant excitonic effects, where the involved catalytic process could be readily regulated via facet-engineering, thus enabling diverse reactive oxygen species generation. This study not only provides an excitonic prospective on photocatalytic processes, but also paves a new approach for pursuing systems with giant electron-hole interactions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Boosting Hot-Electron Generation: Exciton Dissociation at the Order–Disorder Interfaces in Polymeric Photocatalysts

Hui Wang; Xianshun Sun; Dandan Li; Xiaodong Zhang; Shichuan Chen; Wei Shao; Yupeng Tian; Yi Xie

Excitonic effects, arising from the Coulomb interactions between photogenerated electrons and holes, dominate the optical excitation properties of semiconductors, whereas their influences on photocatalytic processes have seldom been discussed. In view of the competitive generation of excitons and hot carriers, exciton dissociation is proposed as an alternative strategy for hot-carrier harvesting in photocatalysts. Herein, by taking heptazine-based melon as an example, we verified that enhanced hot-carrier generation could be obtained in semicrystalline polymeric photocatalysts, which is ascribed to the accelerated exciton dissociation at the abundant order-disorder interfaces. Moreover, driven by the accompanying electron injection toward ordered chains and hole blocking in disordered chains, semicrystalline heptazine-based melon showed an ∼7-fold promotion in electron concentration with respect to its pristine counterpart. Benefiting from these, the semicrystalline sample exhibited dramatic enhancements in electron-involved photocatalytic processes, such as superoxide radical production and selective alcohol oxidation. This work brightens excitonic aspects for the design of advanced photocatalysts.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Delocalized Spin States in 2D Atomic Layers Realizing Enhanced Electrocatalytic Oxygen Evolution

Shichuan Chen; Zhixiong Kang; Xin Hu; Xiaodong Zhang; Hui Wang; Junfeng Xie; XuSheng Zheng; Wensheng Yan; B. C. Pan; Yi Xie

The electrocatalytic activity of transition-metal-based compounds is strongly related to the spin states of metal atoms. However, the ways for regulation of spin states of catalysts are still limited, and the underlying relationship between the spin states and catalytic activities remains unclear. Herein, for the first time, by taking NiII -based compounds without high or low spin states for example, it is shown that their spin states can be delocalized after introducing structural distortion to the atomic layers. The delocalized spin states for Ni atoms can provide not only high electrical conductivity but also low adsorption energy between the active sites and reaction intermediates for the system. As expected, the ultrathin nanosheets of nickel-chalcogenides with structural distortions show dramatically enhanced activity in electrocatalytic oxygen evolution compared to their corresponding bulk samples. This work establishes new way for the design of advanced electrocatalysts in transition-metal-based compounds via regulation of spin states.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Oxygen Vacancy Mediated Exciton Dissociation in BiOBr for Boosting Charge-carrier-involved Molecular Oxygen Activation.

Hui Wang; Dingyu Yong; Shichuan Chen; Shenlong Jiang; Xiaodong Zhang; Wei Shao; Qun Zhang; Wensheng Yan; B. C. Pan; Yi Xie

Excitonic effects mediated by Coulomb interactions between photogenerated electrons and holes play crucial roles in photoinduced processes of semiconductors. In terms of photocatalysis, however, efforts have seldom been devoted to the relevant aspects. For the catalysts with giant excitonic effects, the coexisting, competitive exciton generation serves as a key obstacle to the yield of free charge carriers, and hence, transformation of excitons into free carriers would be beneficial for optimizing the charge-carrier-involved photocatalytic processes. Herein, by taking bismuth oxybromide (BiOBr) as a prototypical model system, we demonstrate that excitons can be effectively dissociated into charge carriers with the incorporation of oxygen vacancy, leading to excellent performances in charge-carrier-involved photocatalytic reactions such as superoxide generation and selective organic syntheses under visible-light illumination. This work not only establishes an in-depth understanding of defective structures in photocatalysts but also paves the way for excitonic regulation via defect engineering.


ACS central science | 2017

Highly Active Fe Sites in Ultrathin Pyrrhotite Fe7S8 Nanosheets Realizing Efficient Electrocatalytic Oxygen Evolution

Shichuan Chen; Zhixiong Kang; Xiaodong Zhang; Junfeng Xie; Hui Wang; Wei Shao; XuSheng Zheng; Wensheng Yan; B. C. Pan; Yi Xie

Identification of active sites in an electrocatalyst is essential for understanding of the mechanism of electrocatalytic water splitting. To be one of the most active oxygen evolution reaction catalysts in alkaline media, Ni–Fe based compounds have attracted tremendous attention, while the role of Ni and Fe sites played has still come under debate. Herein, by taking the pyrrhotite Fe7S8 nanosheets with mixed-valence states and metallic conductivity for examples, we illustrate that Fe could be a highly active site for electrocatalytic oxygen evolution. It is shown that the delocalized electrons in the ultrathin Fe7S8 nanosheets could facilitate electron transfer processes of the system, where d orbitals of FeII and FeIII would be overlapped with each other during the catalytic reactions, rendering the ultrathin Fe7S8 nanosheets to be the most efficient Fe-based electrocatalyst for water oxidation. As expected, the ultrathin Fe7S8 nanosheets exhibit promising electrocatalytic oxygen evolution activities, with a low overpotential of 0.27 V and a large current density of 300 mA cm–2 at 0.5 V. This work provides solid evidence that Fe could be an efficient active site for electrocatalytic water splitting.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Optically Switchable Photocatalysis in Ultrathin Black Phosphorus Nanosheets

Hui Wang; Shenlong Jiang; Wei Shao; Xiaodong Zhang; Shichuan Chen; Xianshun Sun; Qun Zhang; Yi Luo; Yi Xie

Recently low-dimensional materials hold great potential in the field of photocatalysis, whereas the concomitantly promoted many-body effects have long been ignored. Such Coulomb interaction-mediated effects would lead to some intriguing, nontrivial band structures, thus promising versatile photocatalytic performances and optimized strategies. Here, we demonstrate that ultrathin black phosphorus (BP) nanosheets exhibit an exotic, excitation-energy-dependent, optical switching effect in photocatalytic reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. It is, for the first time, observed that singlet oxygen (1O2) and hydroxyl radical (•OH) are the dominant ROS products under visible- and ultraviolet-light excitations, respectively. Such an effect can be understood as a result of subband structure, where energy-transfer and charge-transfer processes are feasible under excitations in the first and second subband systems, respectively. This work not only establishes an in-depth understanding on the influence of many-body effects on photocatalysis but also paves the way for optimizing catalytic performances via controllable photoexcitation.


Archive | 2017

CHAPTER 5. Liquid Phase Synthesis of Two-dimensional Crystals: from Top-down to Bottom-up

Hui Wang; Wei Shao; Shichuan Chen; Xiaodong Zhang

Recently, great effort has been devoted to the exploration of two-dimensional (2D) materials with atomic thickness, for their extraordinary electronic structures with respect to corresponding bulk counterparts, giving promising applications in various fields such as electronics, optoelectronics, catalysis, and energy storage. Nevertheless, relatively limited synthetic methods for preparing these 2D nanosheets undoubtedly restrict further progress, especially for materials with non-layered structures or quasi-layered structures containing relatively strong bonds and van der Waals forces between layers. Therefore, developing novel synthetic methods for 2D nanosheet preparation will not only enrich the family of 2D crystals with atomic thickness, but also bring us unprecedented surprises. Liquid-phase synthetic methods show great potential for preparing 2D crystals with atomic thickness when compared with traditional methods, especially for non-layered and quasi-layered materials. In this chapter, we focus on advances in liquid-phase synthetic strategies for preparing atomically-thick 2D crystals using top-down and bottom-up strategies.


Chemical Science | 2017

Insights into the excitonic processes in polymeric photocatalysts

Hui Wang; Shenlong Jiang; Shichuan Chen; Xiaodong Zhang; Wei Shao; Xianshun Sun; Zhi Zhao; Qun Zhang; Yi Luo; Yi Xie

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Hui Wang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Xiaodong Zhang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Wei Shao

University of Science and Technology of China

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Yi Xie

University of Science and Technology of China

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B. C. Pan

University of Science and Technology of China

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Qun Zhang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Shenlong Jiang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Xianshun Sun

University of Science and Technology of China

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Junfeng Xie

Shandong Normal University

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Wensheng Yan

University of Science and Technology of China

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