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Dive into the research topics where Wanlin Guo is active.

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Featured researches published by Wanlin Guo.


ACS Nano | 2013

Exceptional tunability of band energy in a compressively strained trilayer MoS2 sheet

Yeung Yu Hui; Xiaofei Liu; Wenjing Jie; Ngai Yui Chan; Jianhua Hao; Yu-Te Hsu; Lain-Jong Li; Wanlin Guo; S. P. Lau

Tuning band energies of semiconductors through strain engineering can significantly enhance their electronic, photonic, and spintronic performances. Although low-dimensional nanostructures are relatively flexible, the reported tunability of the band gap is within 100 meV per 1% strain. It is also challenging to control strains in atomically thin semiconductors precisely and monitor the optical and phonon properties simultaneously. Here, we developed an electromechanical device that can apply biaxial compressive strain to trilayer MoS2 supported by a piezoelectric substrate and covered by a transparent graphene electrode. Photoluminescence and Raman characterizations show that the direct band gap can be blue-shifted for ~300 meV per 1% strain. First-principles investigations confirm the blue-shift of the direct band gap and reveal a higher tunability of the indirect band gap than the direct one. The exceptionally high strain tunability of the electronic structure in MoS2 promising a wide range of applications in functional nanodevices and the developed methodology should be generally applicable for two-dimensional semiconductors.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

Strain-dependent electronic and magnetic properties of MoS2 monolayer, bilayer, nanoribbons and nanotubes

Peng Lu; Xiaojun Wu; Wanlin Guo; Xiao Cheng Zeng

We investigate the strain-dependent electronic and magnetic properties of two-dimensional (2D) monolayer and bilayer MoS(2), as well as 1D MoS(2) nanoribbons and nanotubes using first-principles calculations. For 2D monolayer MoS(2) subjected to isotropic or uniaxial tensile strain, the direct band gap of MoS(2) changes to an indirect gap that decreases monotonically with increasing strain; while under the compressive strain, the original direct band gap is enlarged first, followed by gap reduction when the strain is beyond -2%. The effect of isotropic strain is even stronger than that of uniaxial strain. For bilayer MoS(2) subjected to isotropic tensile strain, its indirect gap reduces monotonically to zero at strain about 6%; while under the isotropic compressive strain, its indirect gap increases first and then reduces and turns into direct gap when the strain is beyond -4%. For strained 1D metallic zigzag MoS(2) nanoribbons, the net magnetic moment increases slightly with axial strain from about -5% to 5%, but drops to zero when the compressive strain is beyond -5% or increases with a power law beyond 5%. For 1D armchair MoS(2) nanotubes, tensile or compressive axial strain reduces or enlarges the band gap linearly, and the gap can be fully closed for nanotubes with relatively small diameter or under large tensile strain. For zigzag MoS(2) nanotubes, the strain effect becomes nonlinear and the tensile strain can reduce the band gap, whereas compressive strain can initially enlarge the band gap and then decrease it. The strain induced change in projected orbitals energy of Mo and the coupling between the Mo atom d orbital and the S atom p orbital are analyzed to explain the strong strain effect on the band gap and magnetic properties.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Strain dependent resistance in chemical vapor deposition grown graphene

Xuewen Fu; Zhi-Min Liao; Jianxin Zhou; Yang-Bo Zhou; Han-Chun Wu; Rui Zhang; Guangyin Jing; Jun Xu; Xiaosong Wu; Wanlin Guo; Dapeng Yu

The strain dependence of conductance of monolayer graphene has been studied experimentally here. The results illustrate the notable transitions: the slight increase, the dramatic decrease, and the sudden dropping of the conductance by gradually increasing the uniaxial strain. The graphene conductance behaves reversibly by tuning of the elastic tensile strain up to 4.5%, while it fails to recover after the plastic deformation at 5%. The change in conductance due to strain is surprisingly high, which indicates the potential applications in electromechanical devices.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2014

Generating electricity by moving a droplet of ionic liquid along graphene

Jun Yin; Xuemei Li; Jin Yu; Zhuhua Zhang; Jianxin Zhou; Wanlin Guo

Since the early nineteenth century, it has been known that an electric potential can be generated by driving an ionic liquid through fine channels or holes under a pressure gradient. More recently, it has been reported that carbon nanotubes can generate a voltage when immersed in flowing liquids, but the exact origin of these observations is unclear, and generating electricity without a pressure gradient remains a challenge. Here, we show that a voltage of a few millivolts can be produced by moving a droplet of sea water or ionic solution over a strip of monolayer graphene under ambient conditions. Through experiments and density functional theory calculations, we find that a pseudocapacitor is formed at the droplet/graphene interface, which is driven forward by the moving droplet, charging and discharging at the front and rear of the droplet. This gives rise to an electric potential that is proportional to the velocity and number of droplets. The potential is also found to be dependent on the concentration and ionic species of the droplet, and decreases sharply with an increasing number of graphene layers. We illustrate the potential of this electrokinetic phenomenon by using it to create a handwriting sensor and an energy-harvesting device.


Engineering Fracture Mechanics | 1993

Elastoplastic three dimensional crack border field—I. Singular structure of the field

Wanlin Guo

Abstract The structure of stress and strain fields at the border of three dimensional cracks in a tension field is investigated for elastoplastic materials treated by a deformation theory. The investigation is based upon the physics of the problem and is conducted with mathematical rigour. It is found that the character of singular stresses is as follows: σij = rf(z)−2∼σij(θ, Tz) (i,j = x,y), where f(z) is a function of triaxial stress constraint Tz. The transverse shear stresses σyz and σxz are of the order of unity. The corresponding in-plane strains eij (i,j = x, y) have singularity of order n(f(z) − 2), while eyz and exz are of the order of unity, ezz has the same order as in-plane strains at corner points but may be much weaker in the interior of the crack border. Further, it is argued that the problem can be simplified to a quasi-planar problem with the triaxial stress constraint Tz being considered. When the solution is degenerated into a plane problem by enforcing the confinement, the exact solution for a plane strain crack is obtained and some interesting phenomena are discussed in detail.


ACS Nano | 2011

Tunable Magnetism in Strained Graphene with Topological Line Defect

Liangzhi Kou; Chun Tang; Wanlin Guo; Changfeng Chen

We examine the magnetic properties of two-dimensional graphene with topological line defect using first-principles calculations and predict a weak ferromagnetic ground state with spin-polarized electrons localized along the extended line defect. Our results show that tensile strain along the zigzag direction can greatly enhance local magnetic moments and ferromagnetic stability of the system. In sharp contrast, tensile strain applied along the armchair direction quickly diminishes these magnetic moments. A detailed analysis reveals that this intriguing magnetism modulation by strain stems from the redistribution of spin-polarized electrons induced by local lattice distortion. It suggests a sensitive and effective way to control magnetic properties of graphene which is critical for its applications in nanoscale devices.


Nature Communications | 2013

Top–down fabrication of sub-nanometre semiconducting nanoribbons derived from molybdenum disulfide sheets

Xiaofei Liu; Tao Xu; Xing Wu; Zhuhua Zhang; Jin Yu; Hao Qiu; Jin-Hua Hong; Chuanhong Jin; Ji-Xue Li; Xinran Wang; Litao Sun; Wanlin Guo

Developments in semiconductor technology are propelling the dimensions of devices down to 10 nm, but facing great challenges in manufacture at the sub-10 nm scale. Nanotechnology can fabricate nanoribbons from two-dimensional atomic crystals, such as graphene, with widths below the 10 nm threshold, but their geometries and properties have been hard to control at this scale. Here we find that robust ultrafine molybdenum-sulfide ribbons with a uniform width of 0.35 nm can be widely formed between holes created in a MoS2 sheet under electron irradiation. In situ high-resolution transmission electron microscope characterization, combined with first-principles calculations, identifies the sub-1 nm ribbon as a Mo5S4 crystal derived from MoS2, through a spontaneous phase transition. Further first-principles investigations show that the Mo5S4 ribbon has a band gap of 0.77 eV, a Young’s modulus of 300GPa and can demonstrate 9% tensile strain before fracture. The results show a novel top–down route for controllable fabrication of functional building blocks for sub-nanometre electronics.


Advanced Materials | 2009

Electronic and Mechanical Coupling in Bent ZnO Nanowires

Xiaobing Han; Liangzhi Kou; Xiaoli Lang; Jianbai Xia; Ning Wang; Rui Qin; Jing Lu; Jun Xu; Zhi-Min Liao; Xinzheng Zhang; Xudong Shan; Xuefeng Song; Jingyun Gao; Wanlin Guo; Dapeng Yu

A red shift of the exciton of ZnO nanowires is efficiently produced by bending strain, as demonstrated by a low-temperature (81 K) cathodoluminescence (CL) study of ZnO nanowires bent into L- or S-shapes. The figure shows a nanowire (Fig. a) with the positions of CL measurements marked. The corresponding CL spectra-revealing a peak shift and broadening in the region of the bend-are shown in Figure b.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Two-Dimensional Tetragonal TiC Monolayer Sheet and Nanoribbons

Zhuhua Zhang; Xiaofei Liu; Boris I. Yakobson; Wanlin Guo

We report a two-dimensional tetragonal Titanium Carbide (TiC) monolayer sheet with distinguished structure and properties based on comprehensive first-principles calculations. The TiC sheet exhibits a novel zigzag-shaped buckling structure with all atoms being quasiplanar tetracoordinate, as favored by strong in-plane C2p-Ti3d bonding and synergetic out-of-plane electronic delocalization. This unique structure endows the sheet with high kinetic stability and anisotropic mechanical properties. Moreover, the TiC sheet displays orientation-dependent electronic properties derived from its special rectangular symmetry, with indirect band gap of ~0.2 eV and substantial ferromagnetism along its edges, thus promising for wide applications in nanoelectronics.


ACS Nano | 2010

Transport properties of single-file water molecules inside a carbon nanotube biomimicking water channel.

Guangchao Zuo; Rong Shen; Shaojie Ma; Wanlin Guo

The single-file water transport through a biomimic water channel consisting of a (6,6) carbon nanotube (CNT) with different types of external point charges is studied using molecular dynamics simulations. It is demonstrated that, as in the aquaporins, asymmetrically positioned charges cannot generate robust unidirectional water flow in the CNT. Thermal fluctuation in bulk water competes with charge affinity to steer the water transport, resulting in nonmonotonic flow with intermittent reversal of transport direction. The energetic analysis suggests that the water-water interaction, determined by dipole orientation configuration, influences the transport rate significantly. These findings can provide correct biomimic understanding of water transport properties and will benefit the design of efficient functional nanofluidic devices.

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Yufeng Guo

Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics

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Jun Yin

Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics

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Chun Tang

Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics

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Jianxin Zhou

Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics

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Xiaofei Liu

Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics

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Xuemei Li

Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics

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Liangzhi Kou

Queensland University of Technology

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Chun Li

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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