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Dive into the research topics where Yingling Tan is active.

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Featured researches published by Yingling Tan.


Science Advances | 2016

Self-assembly of highly efficient, broadband plasmonic absorbers for solar steam generation

Lin Zhou; Yingling Tan; Dengxin Ji; Bin Zhu; Pei Zhang; Jun Xu; Qiaoqiang Gan; Z. Yu; Jia Zhu

A self-assembling plasmonic absorber absorbs light efficiently across a wide range of wavelengths and could be used in nanophotonic devices. The study of ideal absorbers, which can efficiently absorb light over a broad range of wavelengths, is of fundamental importance, as well as critical for many applications from solar steam generation and thermophotovoltaics to light/thermal detectors. As a result of recent advances in plasmonics, plasmonic absorbers have attracted a lot of attention. However, the performance and scalability of these absorbers, predominantly fabricated by the top-down approach, need to be further improved to enable widespread applications. We report a plasmonic absorber which can enable an average measured absorbance of ~99% across the wavelengths from 400 nm to 10 μm, the most efficient and broadband plasmonic absorber reported to date. The absorber is fabricated through self-assembly of metallic nanoparticles onto a nanoporous template by a one-step deposition process. Because of its efficient light absorption, strong field enhancement, and porous structures, which together enable not only efficient solar absorption but also significant local heating and continuous stream flow, plasmonic absorber–based solar steam generation has over 90% efficiency under solar irradiation of only 4-sun intensity (4 kW m−2). The pronounced light absorption effect coupled with the high-throughput self-assembly process could lead toward large-scale manufacturing of other nanophotonic structures and devices.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Tailoring Graphene Oxide‐Based Aerogels for Efficient Solar Steam Generation under One Sun

Xiaozhen Hu; Weichao Xu; Lin Zhou; Yingling Tan; Yang Wang; Shining Zhu; Jia Zhu

Graphene oxide-based aerogels with carefully tailored properties are developed to enable efficient solar steam generation. Aerogels, with inherent porous structures, are excellent thermal insulators and provide channels for water supply and vapor escape. With enhanced absorption and hydrophilicity by incorporation of carbon nanotubes and sodium alginate, the resulting aerogels can enable efficient (≈83%) solar steam generation under one-sun illumination.


Nano Letters | 2016

Direct Conversion of Perovskite Thin Films into Nanowires with Kinetic Control for Flexible Optoelectronic Devices

Pengchen Zhu; Shuai Gu; Xinpeng Shen; Ning Xu; Yingling Tan; Shendong Zhuang; Yu Deng; Zhenda Lu; Zhenlin Wang; Jia Zhu

With significant progress in the past decade, semiconductor nanowires have demonstrated unique features compared to their thin film counterparts, such as enhanced light absorption, mechanical integrity and reduced therma conductivity, etc. However, technologies of semiconductor thin film still serve as foundations of several major industries, such as electronics, displays, energy, etc. A direct path to convert thin film to nanowires can build a bridge between these two and therefore facilitate the large-scale applications of nanowires. Here, we demonstrate that methylammonium lead iodide (CH3NH3PbI3) nanowires can be synthesized directly from perovskite film by a scalable conversion process. In addition, with fine kinetic control, morphologies, and diameters of these nanowires can be well-controlled. Based on these perovskite nanowires with excellent optical trapping and mechanical properties, flexible photodetectors with good sensitivity are demonstrated.


Nano Letters | 2015

Scalable Production of Si Nanoparticles Directly from Low Grade Sources for Lithium-Ion Battery Anode

Bin Zhu; Yan Jin; Yingling Tan; Linqi Zong; Yue Hu; Lei Chen; Yanbin Chen; Qiao Zhang; Jia Zhu

Silicon, one of the most promising candidates as lithium-ion battery anode, has attracted much attention due to its high theoretical capacity, abundant existence, and mature infrastructure. Recently, Si nanostructures-based lithium-ion battery anode, with sophisticated structure designs and process development, has made significant progress. However, low cost and scalable processes to produce these Si nanostructures remained as a challenge, which limits the widespread applications. Herein, we demonstrate that Si nanoparticles with controlled size can be massively produced directly from low grade Si sources through a scalable high energy mechanical milling process. In addition, we systematically studied Si nanoparticles produced from two major low grade Si sources, metallurgical silicon (∼99 wt % Si,


Nano Letters | 2015

Simultaneous Purification and Perforation of Low-Grade Si Sources for Lithium-Ion Battery Anode

Yan Jin; Su Zhang; Bin Zhu; Yingling Tan; Xiaozhen Hu; Linqi Zong; Jia Zhu

1/kg) and ferrosilicon (∼83 wt % Si,


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Nanopurification of silicon from 84% to 99.999% purity with a simple and scalable process

Linqi Zong; Bin Zhu; Zhenda Lu; Yingling Tan; Yan Jin; Nian Liu; Yue Hu; Shuai Gu; Jia Zhu; Yi Cui

0.6/kg). It is found that nanoparticles produced from ferrosilicon sources contain FeSi2, which can serve as a buffer layer to alleviate the mechanical fractures of volume expansion, whereas nanoparticles from metallurgical Si sources have higher capacity and better kinetic properties because of higher purity and better electronic transport properties. Ferrosilicon nanoparticles and metallurgical Si nanoparticles demonstrate over 100 stable deep cycling after carbon coating with the reversible capacities of 1360 mAh g(-1) and 1205 mAh g(-1), respectively. Therefore, our approach provides a new strategy for cost-effective, energy-efficient, large scale synthesis of functional Si electrode materials.


Materials Research Express | 2016

Anodic aluminum oxide with fine pore size control for selective and effective particulate matter filtering

Su Zhang; Yang Wang; Yingling Tan; Jianfeng Zhu; Kai Liu; Jia Zhu

Silicon is regarded as one of the most promising candidates for lithium-ion battery anodes because of its abundance and high theoretical capacity. Various silicon nanostructures have been heavily investigated to improve electrochemical performance by addressing issues related to structure fracture and unstable solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI). However, to further enable widespread applications, scalable and cost-effective processes need to be developed to produce these nanostructures at large quantity with finely controlled structures and morphologies. In this study, we develop a scalable and low cost process to produce porous silicon directly from low grade silicon through ball-milling and modified metal-assisted chemical etching. The morphology of porous silicon can be drastically changed from porous-network to nanowire-array by adjusting the component in reaction solutions. Meanwhile, this perforation process can also effectively remove the impurities and, therefore, increase Si purity (up to 99.4%) significantly from low-grade and low-cost ferrosilicon (purity of 83.4%) sources. The electrochemical examinations indicate that these porous silicon structures with carbon treatment can deliver a stable capacity of 1287 mAh g(-1) over 100 cycles at a current density of 2 A g(-1). This type of purified porous silicon with finely controlled morphology, produced by a scalable and cost-effective fabrication process, can also serve as promising candidates for many other energy applications, such as thermoelectrics and solar energy conversion devices.


Optical Nanostructures and Advanced Materials for Photovoltaics | 2015

Broadband Plasmonic Absorbers for Highly efficient Solar Steam Generation

Lin Zhou; Yingling Tan; Jia Zhu

Significance Achieving precise purity control in semiconductors is a crucial step in the development of semiconductor devices. However, the production of high-purity semiconductors, including Si, is still of high capital cost, high energy consumption, and heavy pollution. Taking advantage of small size and large surface to volume ratio of nanomaterials, we develop a scalable and low-cost nanopurification process to produce and purify Si directly from low-grade ferrosilicon [84% (wt %) Si; ∼


Nature Photonics | 2016

3D self-assembly of aluminium nanoparticles for plasmon-enhanced solar desalination

Lin Zhou; Yingling Tan; Jingyang Wang; Weichao Xu; Ye Yuan; Wenshan Cai; Shining Zhu; Jia Zhu

1/kg]. Purity as high as 99.999% (wt %) is achieved, making it one of few techniques that can achieve this high purity without any high-temperature (energy-intensive) processes. This nanopurification process opens tremendous opportunities to recover low-quality materials for commercially viable materials through an energy-efficient and inexpensive path. Silicon, with its great abundance and mature infrastructure, is a foundational material for a range of applications, such as electronics, sensors, solar cells, batteries, and thermoelectrics. These applications rely on the purification of Si to different levels. Recently, it has been shown that nanosized silicon can offer additional advantages, such as enhanced mechanical properties, significant absorption enhancement, and reduced thermal conductivity. However, current processes to produce and purify Si are complex, expensive, and energy-intensive. Here, we show a nanopurification process, which involves only simple and scalable ball milling and acid etching, to increase Si purity drastically [up to 99.999% (wt %)] directly from low-grade and low-cost ferrosilicon [84% (wt %) Si; ∼


Nano Energy | 2017

Self-assembled spectrum selective plasmonic absorbers with tunable bandwidth for solar energy conversion

Lin Zhou; Shendong Zhuang; Chengyu He; Yingling Tan; Zhenlin Wang; Jia Zhu

1/kg]. It is found that the impurity-rich regions are mechanically weak as breaking points during ball milling and thus, exposed on the surface, and they can be conveniently and effectively removed by chemical etching. We discovered that the purity goes up with the size of Si particles going down, resulting in high purity at the sub–100-nm scale. The produced Si nanoparticles with high purity and small size exhibit high performance as Li ion battery anodes, with high reversible capacity (1,755 mAh g−1) and long cycle life (73% capacity retention over 500 cycles). This nanopurification process provides a complimentary route to produce Si, with finely controlled size and purity, in a diverse set of applications.

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