Xijun Wang
University of Science and Technology of China
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Publication
Featured researches published by Xijun Wang.
Advanced Materials | 2014
Rui Li; Jiahua Hu; Mingsen Deng; Helin Wang; Xijun Wang; Yingli Hu; Hai-Long Jiang; Jun Jiang; Qun Zhang; Yi Xie; Yujie Xiong
Ultrafast spectroscopy demonstrates that charge transfer can occur between photoexcited inorganic semiconductors and metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), supplying long-lifetime electrons for the reduction of gas molecules adsorbed on the MOF. As a proof of concept, a unique method is developed for synthesizing Cu3 (BTC)2 @TiO2 core-shell structures with macroporous semiconductor shells that allow gas molecules to be captured in the cores.
Angewandte Chemie | 2014
Lili Wang; Jing Ge; Ailun Wang; Mingsen Deng; Xijun Wang; Song Bai; Rui Li; Jun Jiang; Qun Zhang; Yi Luo; Yujie Xiong
A practical strategy is proposed to facilitate the migration of holes in semiconductor (the low rate of which limits photocatalytic efficiency) by taking advantage of the Schottky barrier between p-type semiconductor and metal. A high work function is found to serve as an important selection rule for building such desirable Schottky junction between semiconductor surface facets and metal. The intrinsic charge spatial distribution has to be taken into account when selecting the facets, as it results in accumulation of photoexcited electrons and holes on certain semiconductor facets. Importantly, the facets have a high work function, the same characteristic required for the formation of Schottky junction in a p-type semiconductor-metal hybrid structure. As a result, the semiconductor crystals in the hybrid design may be better enclosed by single facets with high work function, so as to synergize the two effects: Schottky barrier versus charge spatial separation.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Nana Du; Chengming Wang; Xijun Wang; Yue Lin; Jun Jiang; Yujie Xiong
PtFeCo alloy nanostructures in a TriStar shape with tunable Fe and Co content are developed for the electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). With electronic and surface structures well-tailored, the PtFeCo nanostructures exhibit dramatically enhanced performance in HER against commercial Pt/C and other Pt-based nanoparticles.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Yu Bai; Wenhua Zhang; Zhenhua Zhang; Jie Zhou; Xijun Wang; Chengming Wang; Weixin Huang; Jun Jiang; Yujie Xiong
Heterogeneous catalysis often involves charge transfer from catalyst surface to adsorbed molecules, whose activity thus depends on the surface charge density of catalysts. Here, we demonstrate a unique solution-phase approach to achieve controllable interfacial lengths in oxide-metal hybrid structures. Resulting from their different work functions, surface polarization is induced by the Ag-CuO interface and acts to tailor the surface charge state of CuO. As a result, the designed hybrid catalysts exhibit enhanced intrinsic activities in catalyzing CO oxidation in terms of apparent activation energy, as compared with their counterparts. Moreover, the CO conversion rate can be enhanced by maximizing the Ag-CuO interfacial length and thus the number of active sites on the CuO. This work provides a new strategy for tuning catalytic performance by controlling interface in hybrid catalysts.
Small | 2016
Wenya Jiang; Song Bai; Limin Wang; Xijun Wang; Li Yang; Yanrui Li; Dong Liu; Xiaonong Wang; Zhengquan Li; Jun Jiang; Yujie Xiong
Utilization of visible and near-infrared light has always been the pursuit of photocatalysis research. In this article, an approach is developed to integrate dual plasmonic nanostructures with TiO2 semiconductor nanosheets for photocatalytic hydrogen production in visible and near-infrared spectral regions. Specifically, the Au nanocubes and nanocages used in this work can harvest visible and near-infrared light, respectively, and generate and inject hot electrons into TiO2 . Meanwhile, Pd nanocubes that can trap the energetic electrons from TiO2 and efficiently participate in the hydrogen evolution reaction are employed as co-catalysts for improved catalytic activity. Enabled by this unique integration design, the hydrogen production rate achieved is dramatically higher than those of its counterpart structures. This work represents a step toward the rational design of semiconductor-metal hybrid structures for broad-spectrum photocatalysis.
Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2015
Xingxing Sun; Xijun Wang; Xinyang Li; Jing Ge; Qun Zhang; Jun Jiang; Guoqing Zhang
For a singlet-triplet coupled molecular system, the efficiency of forward and reverse intersystem crossing processes can be enhanced by reducing the energy gap between the singlet and triplet excited states (ΔEST ), thus prolonging the exciton lifetimes. This has been proven beneficial for many emerging applications such as molecular luminescence, optoelectronics, and photonics. Here, a strategy is proposed to create small ΔEST by polymerizing fluorescent dye molecules, the efficacy of which is justified by density functional theory calculations and ultrafast spectroscopy. Thus, singlet-triplet exciton communication through polymerization-enhanced intersystem crossing is also proposed.
Nature Communications | 2017
Li Yang; Xiyu Li; Guozhen Zhang; Peng Cui; Xijun Wang; Xiang Jiang; Jin Zhao; Yi Luo; Jun Jiang
The challenge of safe hydrogen storage has limited the practical application of solar-driven photocatalytic water splitting. It is hard to isolate hydrogen from oxygen products during water splitting to avoid unwanted reverse reaction or explosion. Here we propose a multi-layer structure where a carbon nitride is sandwiched between two graphene sheets modified by different functional groups. First-principles simulations demonstrate that such a system can harvest light and deliver photo-generated holes to the outer graphene-based sheets for water splitting and proton generation. Driven by electrostatic attraction, protons penetrate through graphene to react with electrons on the inner carbon nitride to generate hydrogen molecule. The produced hydrogen is completely isolated and stored with a high-density level within the sandwich, as no molecules could migrate through graphene. The ability of integrating photocatalytic hydrogen generation and safe capsule storage has made the sandwich system an exciting candidate for realistic solar and hydrogen energy utilization.
Chemical Communications | 2016
Xiyu Li; Peng Cui; Wenhui Zhong; Jun Li; Xijun Wang; Zhaowu Wang; Jun Jiang
Based on DFT calculations, we propose a TM@CN hybrid structure, in which the single-atom transition metal (TM = Pt, Pd, Co, Ni, Cu) is supported by graphitic carbon nitride (g-CN), as a promising high-performance OER catalyst. Our work reveals the importance of local TM coordination in catalysts for the OER, which would lead to a new class of low-cost, durable and efficient OER catalysts.
Scientific Reports | 2013
Yue Yuan; Xijun Wang; Bin Mei; Dongxin Zhang; Anming Tang; Linna An; Xiaoxiao He; Jun Jiang; Gaolin Liang
Using N-(2-Aminoethyl)maleimide-cysteine(StBu) (Mal-Cys) as a medium, protein thiols were converted into N-terminal cysteines. After a biocompatible condensation reaction between the N-terminal cysteine and fluorescent probe 2-cyanobenzothiazole-Gly-Gly-Gly-fluorescein isothiocyanate (CBT-GGG-FITC), a new fluorogenic structure Luciferin-GGG-FITC was obtained. The latter exhibits near one order of magnitude (7 folds) enhanced fluorescence emission compared to the precursor moiety due to fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) effect between the newly formed luciferin structure and the FITC motif. Theoretical investigations revealed the underlying mechanism that satisfactorily explained the experimental results. With this method, enhanced fluorescence imaging of thiols on proteins, outer membranes of living cells, translocation of membrane proteins, and endothelial cell layers of small arteries was successfully achieved.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Meng Shen; Ali Han; Xijun Wang; Yun Goo Ro; Yue Lin; Hua Guo; Pingwu Du; Jun Jiang; Jingyu Zhang; Shadi A. Dayeh; Bin Xiang
Catalysts play a significant role in clean renewable hydrogen fuel generation through water splitting reaction as the surface of most semiconductors proper for water splitting has poor performance for hydrogen gas evolution. The catalytic performance strongly depends on the atomic arrangement at the surface, which necessitates the correlation of the surface structure to the catalytic activity in well-controlled catalyst surfaces. Herein, we report a novel catalytic performance of simple-synthesized porous NiO nanowires (NWs) as catalyst/co-catalyst for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). The correlation of catalytic activity and atomic/surface structure is investigated by detailed high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) exhibiting a strong dependence of NiO NW photo- and electrocatalytic HER performance on the density of exposed high-index-facet (HIF) atoms, which corroborates with theoretical calculations. Significantly, the optimized porous NiO NWs offer long-term electrocatalytic stability of over one day and 45 times higher photocatalytic hydrogen production compared to commercial NiO nanoparticles. Our results open new perspectives in the search for the development of structurally stable and chemically active semiconductor-based catalysts for cost-effective and efficient hydrogen fuel production at large scale.