Yuren Wang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Yuren Wang.
Applied Physics Letters | 2006
Guonian Wang; Yuren Wang; Yue-Yang Liu; M. X. Pan; D.Q. Zhao; Wei Hua Wang
The authors report the observations of periodic morphology evolution on fracture surface of a brittle metallic glassy ribbon, suggesting a wavy local stress intensity factor along the crack propagation. The authors find that the formation of nanoscale damage cavity structure is a common characteristic morphology on the fracture surfaces. On the surface of the hackle zone, these cavities assemble and generate the nanoscale swirling periodic corrugations. The elastic waves interfering with the plastic process zone on the crack front is proposed to explain such dynamic crack instability. The authors’ observations support the notion of an impinging effect of elastic waves on propagating crack front.
Applied Physics Letters | 2007
Zhongyu Zheng; Xizhe Liu; Yanhong Luo; Bingying Cheng; Daozhong Zhang; Qingbo Meng; Yuren Wang
A concise pressure controlled isothermal heating vertical deposition (PCIHVD) method is developed, which provides an optimal growing condition with better stability and reproducibility for fabricating photonic crystals (PCs) without the limitation of colloidal sphere materials and sizes. High quality PCs are fabricated with PCIHVD from polystyrene spheres with diameters ranging from 200 nm to 1 mu m. The deep photonic band gap and steep photonic band edge of the samples are most favorable for realizing ultrafast optical devices, photonic chips, and communications. This method makes a meaningful advance in the quality and diversity of PCs and greatly promotes their wide applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Zhongyu Zheng; Kuiyi Gao; Yanhong Luo; Dongmei Li; Qingbo Meng; Yuren Wang; Daozhong Zhang
In this paper, cooperative self-assembly (CSA) of colloidal spheres with different sizes was studied. It was found that a complicated jamming effect makes it difficult to achieve an optimal self-assembling condition for construction of a well-ordered stacking of colloidal spheres in a relatively short growth time by CSA. Through the use of a characteristic infrared (IR) technique to significantly accelerate local evaporation on the growing interface without changing the bulk growing environment, a concise three-parameter (temperature, pressure, and IR intensity) CSA method to effectively overcome the jamming effect has been developed. Mono- and multiscale inverse opals in a large range of lattice scales can be prepared within a growth time (15-30 min) that is remarkably shorter than the growth times of several hours for previous methods. Scanning electron microscopy images and transmittance spectra demonstrated the superior crystalline and optical qualities of the resulting materials. More importantly, the new method enables optimal conditions for CSA without limitations on sizes and materials of multiple colloids. This strategy not only makes a meaningful advance in the applicability and universality of colloidal crystals and ordered porous materials but also can be an inspiration to the self-assembly systems widely used in many other fields, such as nanotechnology and molecular bioengineering.
Applied Physics Letters | 2005
Jungang Zhang; Desheng Jiang; Qian Sun; Jingxia Wang; Yuren Wang; J. P. Liu; J. Chen; R. Q. Jin; J.J. Zhu; H. Yang; T. Dai; Qi Jia
The influence of dislocations on photoluminescence (PL) of InGaN/GaN multiple quantum wells (MQWs) is investigated by triple-axis x-ray diffraction (TAXRD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and PL spectra. The omega scan of every satellite peak by TAXRD is adopted to evaluate the mean screw and edge dislocation densities in MQWs. The results show that dislocations can lead to a reduction of the PL-integrated intensity of InGaN/GaN MQWs under certain conditions, with edge dislocations playing a decisive role. Additionally, the dislocations can broaden the PL peak, but the effect becomes evident only under the condition when the interface roughness is relatively low
Journal of Physics D | 2002
Jun Wang; D. G. Zhao; Yuping Sun; L H Duan; Yuren Wang; Suyun Zhang; Hui Yang; Shengqiang Zhou; Mingfang Wu
The structural evolution and temperature dependence of the Schottky barrier heights of Pt contacts on n-GaN epilayer at various annealing temperatures were investigated extensively by Rutherford backscattering spectrometry, x-ray diffraction measurements, Auger electron spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy and current–voltage measurements. The temperature dependence of the Schottky barrier heights may be attributed to changes of surface morphology of Pt films on the surface and variation of nonstoichiometric defects at the interface vicinity. Experimental results indicated the degradation of Pt contacts on n-GaN above 600uC.
Science and Technology of Advanced Materials | 2005
Shuzhi Li; Xuekui Xi; Y.X. Wei; Q. Luo; Yuren Wang; Mingjie Tang; Bo Zhang; Z.F. Zhao; R. Wang; M. X. Pan; D.Q. Zhao; Wei Hua Wang
Abstract A series of new families of heavy rare-earth (RE) based bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) with excellent glass-forming ability and high thermal stability have been obtained by a copper mold casting method. Compared with the light RE-based BMGs, the heavy RE-based BMGs have much higher glass transition and crystallization temperatures and higher elastic moduli. It is found that the thermal stability is closely correlated with the elastic constants in the RE-based BMGs. The correlations found are useful for guiding BMG-forming alloy design to enhance stability.
Applied Physics Letters | 2004
Jianping Liu; Yuren Wang; H. Yang; Desheng Jiang; Uwe Jahn; Klaus H. Ploog
The characteristics of V-defects in quaternary AlInGaN epilayers and their correlation with fluctuations of the In distribution are investigated. The geometric size of the V-defects is found to depend on the In composition of the alloy. The V-defects are nucleated within the AlInGaN layer and associated with threading dislocations. Line scan cathodoluminescence (CL) shows a redshift of the emission peak and an increase of the half width of the CL spectra as the electron beam approaches the apex of the V-defect. The total redshift decreases with decreasing In mole fraction in the alloy samples. Although the strain reduction may partially contribute to the CL redshift, indium segregation is suggested to be responsible for the V-defect formation and has a main influence on the respective optical properties
Applied Physics Letters | 1999
X. L. Sun; Hui Yang; Liu Zheng; Duanfu Xu; Junbo Li; Yuren Wang; Guihua Li; Z.G. Wang
The thermal stability of cubic-phase GaN (c-GaN) films are investigated by photoluminescence (PL) and Raman scattering spectroscopy. C-GaN films are grown on GaAs (001) substrates by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition. PL measurements show that the near-band-edge emissions in the as-grown GaN layers and thermally treated samples are mainly from c-GaN. No degradation of the optical qualities is observed after thermal annealing. Raman scattering spectroscopy shows that the intensity of the E-2 peak from hexagonal GaN grains increases with annealing temperature for the samples with poor crystal quality, while thermal annealing up to 1000 degrees C has no obvious effect on the samples with high crystal quality
Applied Physics Letters | 1999
Zhong Pan; Yuren Wang; Y. Zhuang; Y. W. Lin; Zuyao Zhou; Lianhe Li; R. H. Wu; Qisheng Wang
Periodicity fluctuations of layer thickness and composition in a superlattice not only decrease the intensity, they also broaden the width of the satellite peaks in the x-ray diffraction pattern. In this letter, we develop a method that is dependent on the width of satellite peaks to assess periodicity fluctuations of a superlattice quickly. A linear relation of the magnitude of fluctuations, peak width and peak order has been derived from x-ray diffraction kinematical theory. By means of this method, periodicity fluctuations in strained (GaNAs)(1)(GaAs)(m) superlattices grown on GaAs substrates by molecular beam epitaxy have been studied. Distinct satellite peaks indicate that the superlattices are of high quality. The N composition of 0.25 and its fluctuation of 20% in a strained GaNxAs1-x monolayer are obtained from simulations of the measured diffraction pattern. The x-ray simulations and in situ observation results of reflection high-energy electron diffraction are in good agreement
Journal of Applied Physics | 1999
Z. Pan; Yuren Wang; L. Li; H. Wang; Zhixiang Wei; Z.Q Zhou; Yuze Lin
A series of samples consisting of a strained layer of GaNxAs1−x of different thickness, covered by a GaAs cap layer of 100 nm were grown by molecular-beam epitaxy. The samples have been characterized by high-resolution x-ray diffraction and simulations based on the dynamical theory in order to determine the strain relaxation in GaNxAs1−x layers. It is found that there is a huge difference between the critical thickness determined by x-ray diffraction and the theoretical calculations according to the Matthews and Blakeslee model. The critical thickness of GaNxAs1−x on GaAs is ten times smaller than the theoretical value. The strain relaxation is a crucial point that affects the quality of GaNAs. Photoluminescence measurements are in good agreement with the x-ray diffraction results. The optical properties degraded rapidly when the GaNxAs1−x thickness exceeded the critical thickness determined above.