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Dive into the research topics where Yuanjing Lin is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuanjing Lin.


Advanced Materials | 2016

3D Arrays of 1024-Pixel Image Sensors based on Lead Halide Perovskite Nanowires

Leilei Gu; Mohammad Mahdi Tavakoli; Daquan Zhang; Qianpeng Zhang; Aashir Waleed; Yiqun Xiao; Kwong Hoi Tsui; Yuanjing Lin; Lei Liao; Jiannong Wang; Zhiyong Fan

Large-scale and highly ordered 3D perov-skite nanowire (NW) arrays are achieved in nanoengineering templates by a unique vapor-solid-solid reaction process. The excellent material properties, in conjunction with the high integration density of the NW arrays, make them promising for 3D integrated nanoelectronics/optoelectronics. Image sensors with 1024 pixels are assembled and characterized to demonstrate the technological potency.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Printable Fabrication of Nanocoral‐Structured Electrodes for High‐Performance Flexible and Planar Supercapacitor with Artistic Design

Yuanjing Lin; Zhiyong Fan

Planar supercapacitors with high flexibility, desirable operation safety, and high performance are considered as attractive candidates to serve as energy-storage devices for portable and wearable electronics. Here, a scalable and printable technique is adopted to construct novel and unique hierarchical nanocoral structures as the interdigitated electrodes on flexible substrates. The as-fabricated flexible all-solid-state planar supercapacitors with nanocoral structures achieve areal capacitance up to 52.9 mF cm-2 , which is 2.5 times that of devices without nanocoral structures, and this figure-of-merit is among the highest in the literature for the same category of devices. More interestingly, due to utilization of the inkjet-printing technique, excellent versatility on electrode-pattern artistic design is achieved. Particularly, working supercapacitors with artistically designed patterns are demonstrated. Meanwhile, the high scalability of such a printable method is also demonstrated by fabrication of large-sized artistic supercapacitors serving as energy-storage devices in a wearable self-powered system as a proof of concept.


Nano Research | 2017

Broadband omnidirectional light detection in flexible and hierarchical ZnO/Si heterojunction photodiodes

Seongdong Lim; Doo-Seung Um; Minjeong Ha; Qianpeng Zhang; Youngsu Lee; Yuanjing Lin; Zhiyong Fan; Hyunhyub Ko

The development of flexible photodetectors has received great attention for future optoelectronic applications including flexible image sensors, biomedical imaging, and smart, wearable systems. Previously, omnidirectional photodetectors were only achievable by integration of a hemispherical microlens assembly on multiple photodetectors. Herein, a hierarchical photodiode design of ZnO nanowires (NWs) on honeycomb-structured Si (H-Si) membranes is demonstrated to exhibit excellent omnidirectional light-absorption ability and thus maintain high photocurrents over broad spectral ranges (365 to 1,100 nm) for wide incident angles (0° to 70°), which enabled broadband omnidirectional light detection in flexible photodetectors. Furthermore, the stress-relieving honeycomb pattern within the photodiode micromembranes provided photodetectors with excellent mechanical flexibility (10% decrease in photocurrent at a bending radius of 3 mm) and durability (minimal change in photocurrent over 10,000 bending cycles). When employed in semiconductor thin films, the hierarchical NW/honeycomb heterostructure design acts as an efficient platform for various optoelectronic devices requiring mechanical flexibility and broadband omnidirectional light detection.


Nanoscale Research Letters | 2015

A Highly Controllable Electrochemical Anodization Process to Fabricate Porous Anodic Aluminum Oxide Membranes.

Yuanjing Lin; Qingfeng Lin; Xue Liu; Jin He; Wenli Wang; Zhiyong Fan

Due to the broad applications of porous alumina nanostructures, research on fabrication of anodized aluminum oxide (AAO) with nanoporous structure has triggered enormous attention. While fabrication of highly ordered nanoporous AAO with tunable geometric features has been widely reported, it is known that its growth rate can be easily affected by the fluctuation of process conditions such as acid concentration and temperature during electrochemical anodization process. To fabricate AAO with various geometric parameters, particularly, to realize precise control over pore depth for scientific research and commercial applications, a controllable fabrication process is essential. In this work, we revealed a linear correlation between the integrated electric charge flow throughout the circuit in the stable anodization process and the growth thickness of AAO membranes. With this understanding, we developed a facile approach to precisely control the growth process of the membranes. It was found that this approach is applicable in a large voltage range, and it may be extended to anodization of other metal materials such as Ti as well.


ACS Nano | 2017

Scalable Indium Phosphide Thin-Film Nanophotonics Platform for Photovoltaic and Photoelectrochemical Devices

Qingfeng Lin; Debarghya Sarkar; Yuanjing Lin; Matthew Yeung; Louis Blankemeier; Jubin Hazra; Wei Wang; Shanyuan Niu; Jayakanth Ravichandran; Zhiyong Fan; Rehan Kapadia

Recent developments in nanophotonics have provided a clear roadmap for improving the efficiency of photonic devices through control over absorption and emission of devices. These advances could prove transformative for a wide variety of devices, such as photovoltaics, photoelectrochemical devices, photodetectors, and light-emitting diodes. However, it is often challenging to physically create the nanophotonic designs required to engineer the optical properties of devices. Here, we present a platform based on crystalline indium phosphide that enables thin-film nanophotonic structures with physical morphologies that are impossible to achieve through conventional state-of-the-art material growth techniques. Here, nanostructured InP thin films have been demonstrated on non-epitaxial alumina inverted nanocone (i-cone) substrates via a low-cost and scalable thin-film vapor-liquid-solid growth technique. In this process, indium films are first evaporated onto the i-cone structures in the desired morphology, followed by a high-temperature step that causes a phase transformation of the indium into indium phosphide, preserving the original morphology of the deposited indium. Through this approach, a wide variety of nanostructured film morphologies are accessible using only control over evaporation process variables. Critically, the as-grown nanotextured InP thin films demonstrate excellent optoelectronic properties, suggesting this platform is promising for future high-performance nanophotonic devices.


Nano Research | 2018

Recent progress on printable power supply devices and systems with nanomaterials

Yuanjing Lin; Fang Fang; Zhiyong Fan

In recent years, tremendous research interest has been triggered in the fields of flexible, wearable and miniaturized power supply devices and self-powered energy sources, in which energy harvesting/conversion devices are integrated with energy storage devices into an infinitely self-powered energy system. As opposed to conventional fabrication methods, printing techniques hold promising potency for fabrication of power supply devices with practical scalability and versatility, especially for applications in wearable and portable electronics. To further enhance the performance of the as-fabricated devices, the utilization of nanomaterials is one of the promising strategies, owing to their unique properties. In this review, an overview on the progress of printable strategies to revolutionize the fabrication of power supply devices and integrated system with attractive form factors is provided. The advantages and limitations of the commonly adopted printing techniques for power supply device fabrication are first summarized. Thereafter, the research progress on novel developed printable energy harvesting and conversion devices, including solar cells, nanogenerators and biofuel cells, and the research advances on printable energy storage devices, namely, supercapacitors and rechargeable batteries, are presented, respectively. Although exciting advances on printable material modification, innovative fabrication methods and device performance improvement have been witnessed, there are still several challenges to be addressed to realize fully printable fabrication of integrated self-powered energy sources.


Nano Energy | 2016

High performance thin film solar cells on plastic substrates with nanostructure-enhanced flexibility

Qingfeng Lin; Linfeng Lu; Mohammad Mahdi Tavakoli; Chi Zhang; Ga Ching Lui; Zhuo Chen; Xiaoyuan Chen; Lei Tang; Daquan Zhang; Yuanjing Lin; Pai-Chun Chang; Dongdong Li; Zhiyong Fan


Nanoscale | 2016

Three-dimensional nanotube electrode arrays for hierarchical tubular structured high-performance pseudocapacitors

Yuanjing Lin; Jiaqi Chen; Qingfeng Lin; Yue Wu; Wenjun Su; Wenli Wang; Zhiyong Fan


Nanoscale | 2017

Accelerating ion diffusion with unique three-dimensionally interconnected nanopores for self-membrane high-performance pseudocapacitors

Yuanjing Lin; Zehua Peng; Qingfeng Zhou; Zhiyong Fan


Advanced Materials | 2016

Perovskite Nanowires: 3D Arrays of 1024-Pixel Image Sensors based on Lead Halide Perovskite Nanowires (Adv. Mater. 44/2016)

Leilei Gu; Mohammad Mahdi Tavakoli; Daquan Zhang; Qianpeng Zhang; Aashir Waleed; Yiqun Xiao; Kwong-Hoi Tsui; Yuanjing Lin; Lei Liao; Jiannong Wang; Zhiyong Fan

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Zhiyong Fan

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Qingfeng Lin

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Daquan Zhang

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Mohammad Mahdi Tavakoli

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Qianpeng Zhang

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Aashir Waleed

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Jiannong Wang

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Leilei Gu

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Xue Liu

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Yiqun Xiao

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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