Yueyu Zhang
Fudan University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yueyu Zhang.
ACS Nano | 2014
Wenjie Li; Peimei Da; Yueyu Zhang; Yongcheng Wang; Xuan Lin; Xingao Gong; Gengfeng Zheng
We developed a postgrowth modification method of two-dimensional WO3 nanoflakes by a simultaneous solution etching and reducing process in a weakly acidic condition. The obtained dual etched and reduced WO3 nanoflakes have a much rougher surface, in which oxygen vacancies are created during the simultaneous etching/reducing process for optimized photoelectrochemical performance. The obtained photoanodes show an enhanced photocurrent density of ∼1.10 mA/cm(2) at 1.0 V vs Ag/AgCl (∼1.23 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode), compared to 0.62 mA/cm(2) of pristine WO3 nanoflakes. The electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurement and the density functional theory calculation demonstrate that this improved performance of dual etched and reduced WO3 nanoflakes is attributed to the increase of charge carrier density as a result of the synergetic effect of etching and reducing.
ACS Nano | 2013
Yongcheng Wang; Yueyu Zhang; Jing Tang; Haoyu Wu; Ming Xu; Zheng Peng; Xingao Gong; Gengfeng Zheng
We developed a postgrowth doping method of TiO2 nanowire arrays by a simultaneous hydrothermal etching and doping in a weakly alkaline condition. The obtained tungsten-doped TiO2 core-shell nanowires have an amorphous shell with a rough surface, in which W species are incorporated into the amorphous TiO2 shell during this simultaneous etching/regrowth step for the optimization of photoelectrochemical performance. Photoanodes made of these W-doped TiO2 core-shell nanowires show a much enhanced photocurrent density of ~1.53 mA/cm(2) at 0.23 V vs Ag/AgCl (1.23 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode), almost 225% of that of the pristine TiO2 nanowire photoanodes. The electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurement and the density functional theory calculation demonstrate that the substantially improved performance of the dual W-doped and etched TiO2 nanowires is attributed to the enhancement of charge transfer and the increase of charge carrier density, resulting from the combination effect of etching and W-doping. This unconventional, simultaneous etching and doping of pregrown nanowires is facile and takes place under moderate conditions, and it may be extended for other dopants and host materials with increased photoelectrochemical performances.
Nano Letters | 2014
Jing Tang; Yueyu Zhang; Biao Kong; Yongcheng Wang; Peimei Da; Jun Li; Ahmed A. Elzatahry; Dongyuan Zhao; Xingao Gong; Gengfeng Zheng
We report a nitrogen-doped carbon nanodot (N-Cdot)/TiO2 nanowire photoanode for solar-driven, real-time, and sensitive photoelectrochemical probing of the cellular generation of H2S, an important endogenous gasotransmitter based on a tunable interfacial charge carrier transfer mechanism. Synthesized by a microwave-assisted solvothermal method and subsequent surface chemical conjugation, the obtained N-Cdot/TiO2 nanowire photoanode shows much enhanced photoelectrochemical photocurrent compared with pristine TiO2 nanowires. This photocurrent increase is attributed to the injection of photogenerated electrons from N-Cdots to TiO2 nanowires, confirmed by density functional theory simulation. In addition, the charge transfer efficiency is quenched by Cu(2+), whereas the introduction of H2S or S(2-) ions resets the charge transfer and subsequently the photocurrent, thus leading to sensitive photoelectrochemical recording of the H2S level in buffer and cellular environments. Moreover, this N-Cdot-TiO2 nanowire photoanode has been demonstrated for direct growth and interfacing of H9c2 cardiac myoblasts, with the capability of interrogating H2S cellular generation pathways by vascular endothelial growth factor stimulation as well as inhibition.
Nature Chemistry | 2016
Biao Kong; Jing Tang; Yueyu Zhang; Tao Jiang; Xingao Gong; Chengxin Peng; Jing Wei; Jianping Yang; Yongcheng Wang; Xianbiao Wang; Gengfeng Zheng; Cordelia Selomulya; Dongyuan Zhao
Over the past few decades the direct assembly of optical nanomaterials into ordered mesoporous frameworks has proved to be a considerable challenge. Here we propose the incorporation of ultrasmall (sub-5-nm) graphitic pencil nanodots into ordered mesoporous frameworks for the fabrication of optoelectronic materials. The nanodots, which were prepared from typical commercial graphite pencils by an electrochemical tailoring process, combine properties such as uniform size (∼3u2005nm), excellent dispersibility and high photoconversion efficiency (∼27%). These nanodots were incorporated into a variety of ordered mesoporous frameworks (TiO2, silica, carbon and silica-carbon materials) by co-assembly, driven by hydrogen bonding, with the frameworks precursors. The resulting materials showed a high degree of ordering, and a sharp increase in their optical performance (for example, photocurrent density). We envisage that the large-scale synthesis of ultrasmall carbon nanodots and their incorporation into ordered mesoporous frameworks may facilitate the preparation of materials with a variety of optical properties.
Analytical Chemistry | 2015
Jing Tang; Jun Li; Yueyu Zhang; Biao Kong; Yiliguma; Yang Wang; Yingzhou Quan; Hao Cheng; Abdullah M. Al-Enizi; Xingao Gong; Gengfeng Zheng
A three-dimensional (3D) mesoporous Fe2O3-CdS nanopyramid heterostructure is developed for solar-driven, real-time, and selective photoelectrochemical sensing of Cu(2+) in the living cells. Fabrication of the mesoporous Fe2O3 nanopyramids is realized by an interfacial aligned growth and self-assembly process, based on the van der drift model and subsequent selective in situ growth of CdS nanocrystals. The as-prepared mesoporous Fe2O3-CdS heterostructures achieve significant enhancement (∼3-fold) in the photocurrent density compared to pristine mesoporous Fe2O3, which is attributed to the unique mesoporous heterostructures with multiple features including excellent flexibility, high surface area (∼87 m(2)/g), and large pore size (∼20 nm), enabling the PEC performance enhancement by facilitating ion transport and providing more active electrochemical reaction sites. In addition, the introduction of Cu(2+) enables the activation of quenching the charge transfer efficiency, thus leading to sensitive photoelectrochemical recording of Cu(2+) level in buffer and cellular environments. Furthermore, real-time monitoring (∼0.5 nM) of Cu(2+) released from apoptotic HeLa cell is performed using the as-prepared 3D mesoporous Fe2O3-CdS sensor, suggesting the capability of studying the nanomaterial-cell interfaces and illuminating the role of Cu(2+) as trace element.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Tiance An; Jing Tang; Yueyu Zhang; Yingzhou Quan; Xingao Gong; Abdullah M. Al-Enizi; Ahmed A. Elzatahry; Lijuan Zhang; Gengfeng Zheng
Despite the recent progress of developing graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) as a metal-free photocatalyst, the synthesis of nanostructured g-C3N4 has still remained a complicated and time-consuming approach from its bulk powder, which substantially limits its photoelectrochemical (PEC) applications as well as the potential to form composites with other semiconductors. Different from the labor-intensive methods used before, such as exfoliation or assistant templates, herein, we developed a facile method to synthesize graphitic C3N4 quantum dots (g-CNQDs) directly grown on TiO2 nanowire arrays via a one-step quasi-chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process in a homemade system. The as-synthesized g-CNQDs uniformly covered over the surface of TiO2 nanowires and exhibited attractive photoluminescence (PL) properties. In addition, compared to pristine TiO2, the heterojunction of g-CNQD-decorated TiO2 nanowires showed a substantially enhanced PEC photocurrent density of 3.40 mA/cm(2) at 0 V of applied potential vs Ag/AgCl under simulated solar light (300 mW/cm(2)) and excellent stability with ∼82% of the photocurrent retained after over 10 h of continuous testing, attributed to the quantum and sensitization effects of g-CNQDs. Density functional theory calculations were further carried out to illustrate the synergistic effect of TiO2 and g-CNQD. Our method suggests that a variety of g-CNQD-based composites with other semiconductor nanowires can be synthesized for energy applications.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Yuhang Wang; Xiaoqi Cui; Yueyu Zhang; Lijuan Zhang; Xingao Gong; Gengfeng Zheng
A new design strategy for polyimides/carbon nanotube networks is reported, aiming to passivate the hydrogen-evolution mechanism on the molecular structures of electrodes, thus substantially boosting their aqueous energy-storage capabilities. The intrinsic sluggish hydrogen-evolution activity of polyimides is further passivated via Li(+) association during battery charging, leading to a much wider voltage window and exceptional energy-storage capability.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Biao Kong; Jing Tang; Yueyu Zhang; Cordelia Selomulya; Xingao Gong; Yang Liu; Wei Zhang; Jianping Yang; Wenshuo Wang; Xiaotian Sun; Yufei Wang; Gengfeng Zheng; Dongyuan Zhao
The direct production of branched semiconductor arrays with highly ordered orientation has proven to be a considerable challenge over the last two decades. Here we report a mesoporous interfacial atomic rearrangement (MIAR) method to directly produce highly crystalline, finger-like branched iron oxide nanoarrays from the mesoporous nanopyramids. This method has excellent versatility and flexibility for heteroatom doping of metallic elements, including Sn, Bi, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, and W, in which the mesoporous nanopyramids first absorb guest-doping molecules into the mesoporous channels and then convert the mesoporous pyramids into branching artificial nanofingers. The crystalline structure can provide more optoelectronic active sites of the nanofingers by interfacial atomic rearrangements of doping molecules and mesopore channels at the porous solid-solid interface. As a proof-of-concept, the Sn-doped Fe2O3 artificial nanofingers (ANFs) exhibit a high photocurrent density of ∼1.26 mA/cm(2), ∼5.25-fold of the pristine mesoporous Fe2O3 nanopyramid arrays. Furthermore, with surface chemical functionalization, the Sn-doped ANF biointerfaces allow nanomolar level recognition of metabolism-related biomolecules (∼5 nm for glutathione). This MIAR method suggests a new growth means of branched mesostructures, with enhanced optoelectronic applications.
Advanced Materials | 2018
Sisi He; Yueyu Zhang; Longbin Qiu; Longsheng Zhang; Yun Xie; Jian Pan; Peining Chen; Bingjie Wang; Xiaojie Xu; Yajie Hu; Cao Thang Dinh; Phil De Luna; Mohammad Norouzi Banis; Zhiqiang Wang; Tsun-Kong Sham; Xingao Gong; Bo Zhang; Huisheng Peng; Edward H. Sargent
The ability to release, as electrical energy, potential energy stored at the water:carbon interface is attractive, since water is abundant and available. However, many previous reports of such energy converters rely on either flowing water or specially designed ionic aqueous solutions. These requirements restrict practical application, particularly in environments with quiescent water. Here, a carbon-based chemical-to-electricity device that transfers the chemical energy to electrical form when coming into contact with quiescent deionized water is reported. The device is built using carbon nanotube yarns, oxygen content of which is modulated using oxygen plasma-treatment. When immersed in water, the device discharges electricity with a power density that exceeds 700 mW m-2 , one order of magnitude higher than the best previously published result. X-ray absorption and density functional theory studies support a mechanism of operation that relies on the polarization of sp2 hybridized carbon atoms. The devices are incorporated into a flexible fabric for powering personal electronic devices.
arXiv: Materials Science | 2013
Zheng-Lu Li; Hai-Yuan Cao; Ji-Hui Yang; Qiang Shu; Yueyu Zhang; Hongjun Xiang; Xingao Gong
We have developed a new global optimization method for the determination of the interface structure based on the differential evolution algorithm. Here, we applied this method to search for the ground state atomic structures of the grain boundary (GB) between armchair and zigzag oriented graphene. We find two new grain boundary structures with a considerably lower formation energy of about 1 eV nm(-1) than those of the previously widely used structural models. We also systematically investigate the symmetric GBs with the GB angle ranging from 0° to 60°, and find some new GB structures. Surprisingly, for an intermediate GB angle, the formation energy does not depend monotonically on the defect concentration. We also discovered an interesting linear relationship between the GB density and the GB angle. Our new method provides an important novel route for the determination of GB structures and other interface structures, and our comprehensive study on GB structures could provide new structural information and guidelines to this area.