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Featured researches published by Yuchen Ding.


Nanoscale | 2016

Standalone anion- and co-doped titanium dioxide nanotubes for photocatalytic and photoelectrochemical solar-to-fuel conversion

Yuchen Ding; Prashant Nagpal

Several strategies are currently being investigated for conversion of incident sunlight into renewable sources of energy, and photocatalytic or photoelectrochemical production of solar fuels can provide an important alternative. Titanium dioxide (TiO2) has been heavily investigated as a material of choice due to its excellent optoelectronic properties and stability, and anion-doping proposed as a pathway to improve light absorption as well as improving the efficiency of oxygen production. While several studies have used morphological tuning, elemental doping, and surface engineering in TiO2 to extend its absorption, there is a need to optimize simultaneously charge transport and improve interfacial chemical reaction kinetics. Here we show anion-doped (nitrogen, carbon) standalone TiO2 nanotube membranes that absorb visible light for the water-splitting reaction, using both wireless (photocatalysis) and wired (photoelectrochemical) solar-to-fuel conversion (STFC) cells. Using simulated solar radiation, we show generation of hydrogen as a solar fuel using visible light photocatalysis. Furthermore, using a model we elucidate detailed photophysics and photoelectrochemical properties of these nanotubes, and explain the kinetics of photogenerated charge carriers following light absorption. We show that while visible light induces a superlinear photoresponse for catalytic reduction and may benefit from higher incident light intensity, ultraviolet light shows a linear photoresponse and saturation with higher light flux due to trapping of photogenerated charges (mainly electrons). These results can have important implications for design of other metal-oxide membranes for solar fuel generation, and appropriate design of dopants and induced energy levels in these photocatalysts.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Titanium-dioxide nanotube p-n homojunction diode

Yahya Alivov; Yuchen Ding; Vivek Singh; Prashant Nagpal

Application of semiconductors in functional optoelectronic devices requires precise control over their doping and formation of junction between p- and n-doped semiconductors. While doped thin films have led to several semiconductor devices, need for high-surface area nanostructured devices for photovoltaic, photoelectrochemical, and photocatalytic applications has been hindered by lack of desired doping in nanostructures. Here, we show titanium-dioxide (TiO2) nanotubes doped with nitrogen (N) and niobium (Nb) as acceptors and donors, respectively, and formation of TiO2 nanotubes p-n homojunction. This TiO2:N/TiO2:Nb homojunction showed distinct diode-like behaviour with rectification ratio of 1115 at ±5 V and exhibited good photoresponse for ultraviolet light (λ = 365 nm) with sensitivity of 0.19 A/W at reverse bias of −5 V. These results can have important implications for development of nanostructured metal-oxide solar-cells, photodiodes, LEDs, photocatalysts, and photoelectrochemical devices.


Frontiers in chemistry | 2018

Designing Superoxide-Generating Quantum Dots for Selective Light-Activated Nanotherapy

Samuel M. Goodman; Max Levy; Fei-Fei Li; Yuchen Ding; Colleen M. Courtney; Partha P. Chowdhury; Annette H. Erbse; Anushree Chatterjee; Prashant Nagpal

The rapid emergence of superbugs, or multi-drug resistant (MDR) organisms, has prompted a search for novel antibiotics, beyond traditional small-molecule therapies. Nanotherapeutics are being investigated as alternatives, and recently superoxide-generating quantum dots (QDs) have been shown as important candidates for selective light-activated therapy, while also potentiating existing antibiotics against MDR superbugs. Their therapeutic action is selective, can be tailored by simply changing their quantum-confined conduction-valence band (CB-VB) positions and alignment with different redox half-reactions—and hence their ability to generate specific radical species in biological media. Here, we show the design of superoxide-generating QDs using optimal QD material and size well-matched to superoxide redox potential, charged ligands to modulate their uptake in cells and selective redox interventions, and core/shell structures to improve their stability for therapeutic action. We show that cadmium telluride (CdTe) QDs with conduction band (CB) position at −0.5 V with respect to Normal Hydrogen Electron (NHE) and visible 2.4 eV bandgap generate a large flux of selective superoxide radicals, thereby demonstrating the effective light-activated therapy. Although the positively charged QDs demonstrate large cellular uptake, they bind indiscriminately to cell surfaces and cause non-selective cell death, while negatively charged and zwitterionic QD ligands reduce the uptake and allow selective therapeutic action via interaction with redox species. The stability of designed QDs in biologically-relevant media increases with the formation of core-shell QD structures, but an appropriate design of core-shell structures is needed to minimize any reduction in charge injection efficiency to adsorbed oxygen molecules (to form superoxide) and maintain similar quantitative generation of tailored redox species, as measured using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). Using these findings, we demonstrate the rational design of QDs as selective therapeutic to kill more than 99% of a priority class I pathogen, thus providing an effective therapy against MDR superbugs.


Nanoscale | 2014

Copper plasmonics and catalysis: role of electron-phonon interactions in dephasing localized surface plasmons.

Qi-C. Sun; Yuchen Ding; Samuel M. Goodman; Hans H. Funke; Prashant Nagpal


Nanoscale | 2014

Doping of wide-bandgap titanium-dioxide nanotubes: optical, electronic and magnetic properties

Yahya Alivov; Vivek Singh; Yuchen Ding; Logan Jerome Cerkovnik; Prashant Nagpal


Nanotechnology | 2014

Transparent conducting oxide nanotubes

Yahya Alivov; Vivek Singh; Yuchen Ding; Prashant Nagpal


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2017

Titanium dioxide nanotube membranes for solar energy conversion: effect of deep and shallow dopants

Yuchen Ding; Prashant Nagpal


Archive | 2014

NANOSTRUCTURED PHOTOCATALYSTS AND DOPED WIDE-BANDGAP SEMICONDUCTORS

Prashant Nagpal; Vivek Singh; Ignacio Castellanos Beltran; Yahya Alivov; Yuchen Ding; Logan Jerome Cerkovnik


ACS Applied Bio Materials | 2018

Assessing Different Reactive Oxygen Species as Potential Antibiotics: Selectivity of Intracellular Superoxide Generation Using Quantum Dots

Max Levy; Colleen M. Courtney; Partha P. Chowdhury; Yuchen Ding; Emerson L. Grey; Samuel M. Goodman; Anushree Chatterjee; Prashant Nagpal


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Using surfaces, ligands, and dimensionality to obtain desired nanostructure properties

Prashant Nagpal; Vivek Singh; Yuchen Ding

Collaboration


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Prashant Nagpal

University of Colorado Boulder

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Vivek Singh

University of Colorado Boulder

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Yahya Alivov

University of Colorado Boulder

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Logan Jerome Cerkovnik

University of Colorado Boulder

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Samuel M. Goodman

University of Colorado Boulder

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Anushree Chatterjee

University of Colorado Boulder

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Colleen M. Courtney

University of Colorado Boulder

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Max Levy

University of Colorado Boulder

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Partha P. Chowdhury

University of Colorado Boulder

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Annette H. Erbse

University of Colorado Boulder

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