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Dive into the research topics where Zetian Mi is active.

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Featured researches published by Zetian Mi.


Nano Letters | 2011

Wafer-level photocatalytic water splitting on GaN nanowire arrays grown by molecular beam epitaxy.

Defa Wang; Adrien Pierre; Golam Kibria; Kai Cui; Xueguang Han; Kirk H. Bevan; Hong Guo; Suzanne Paradis; Abou Rachid Hakima; Zetian Mi

We report on the achievement of wafer-level photocatalytic overall water splitting on GaN nanowires grown by molecular beam epitaxy with the incorporation of Rh/Cr(2)O(3) core-shell nanostructures acting as cocatalysts, through which H(2) evolution is promoted by the noble metal core (Rh) while the water forming back reaction over Rh is effectively prevented by the Cr(2)O(3) shell O(2) diffusion barrier. The decomposition of pure water into H(2) and O(2) by GaN nanowires is confirmed to be a highly stable photocatalytic process, with the turnover number per unit time well exceeding the value of any previously reported GaN powder samples.


Nano Letters | 2011

p-Type modulation doped InGaN/GaN dot-in-a-wire white-light-emitting diodes monolithically grown on Si(111).

Hieu Pham Trung Nguyen; Shaofei Zhang; Kai Cui; Xueguang Han; Saeed Fathololoumi; M. Couillard; Zetian Mi

Full-color, catalyst-free InGaN/GaN dot-in-a-wire light-emitting diodes (LEDs) were monolithically grown on Si(111) by molecular beam epitaxy, with the emission characteristics controlled by the dot properties in a single epitaxial growth step. With the use of p-type modulation doping in the dot-in-a-wire heterostructures, we have demonstrated the most efficient phosphor-free white LEDs ever reported, which exhibit an internal quantum efficiency of ∼56.8%, nearly unaltered CIE chromaticity coordinates with increasing injection current, and virtually zero efficiency droop at current densities up to ∼640 A/cm(2). The remarkable performance is attributed to the superior three-dimensional carrier confinement provided by the electronically coupled dot-in-a-wire heterostructures, the nearly defect- and strain-free GaN nanowires, and the significantly enhanced hole transport due to the p-type modulation doping.


Nature Communications | 2015

Visible light-driven efficient overall water splitting using p -type metal-nitride nanowire arrays

M. G. Kibria; Faqrul Alam Chowdhury; Songrui Zhao; B. AlOtaibi; Michel Trudeau; Hong Guo; Zetian Mi

Solar water splitting for hydrogen generation can be a potential source of renewable energy for the future. Here we show that efficient and stable stoichiometric dissociation of water into hydrogen and oxygen can be achieved under visible light by eradicating the potential barrier on nonpolar surfaces of indium gallium nitride nanowires through controlled p-type dopant incorporation. An apparent quantum efficiency of ∼12.3% is achieved for overall neutral (pH∼7.0) water splitting under visible light illumination (400-475 nm). Moreover, using a double-band p-type gallium nitride/indium gallium nitride nanowire heterostructure, we show a solar-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency of ∼1.8% under concentrated sunlight. The dominant effect of near-surface band structure in transforming the photocatalytic performance is elucidated. The stability and efficiency of this recyclable, wafer-level nanoscale metal-nitride photocatalyst in neutral water demonstrates their potential use for large-scale solar-fuel conversion.


Nano Letters | 2012

Controlling Electron Overflow in Phosphor-Free InGaN/GaN Nanowire White Light-Emitting Diodes

Hieu Pham Trung Nguyen; Kai Cui; Shaofei Zhang; Mehrdad Djavid; Andreas Korinek; Zetian Mi

We have investigated for the first time the impact of electron overflow on the performance of nanowire light-emitting diodes (LEDs) operating in the entire visible spectral range, wherein intrinsic white light emission is achieved from self-organized InGaN quantum dots embedded in defect-free GaN nanowires on a single chip. Through detailed temperature-dependent electroluminescence and simulation studies, it is revealed that electron leakage out of the device active region is primarily responsible for efficiency degradation in such nanowire devices, which in conjunction with the presence of nonradiative surface recombination largely determines the unique emission characteristics of nanowire light-emitting diodes. We have further demonstrated that electron overflow in nanowire LEDs can be effectively prevented with the incorporation of a p-doped AlGaN electron blocking layer, leading to the achievement of phosphor-free white light-emitting diodes that can exhibit for the first time virtually zero efficiency droop for injection currents up to ~2200 A/cm(2). This study also provides unambiguous evidence that Auger recombination is not the primary mechanism responsible for efficiency droop in GaN-based nanowire light-emitting diodes.


Nature Communications | 2014

Tuning the surface Fermi level on p-type gallium nitride nanowires for efficient overall water splitting

M. G. Kibria; Songrui Zhao; Faqrul Alam Chowdhury; Qi Wang; Hieu Pham Trung Nguyen; Michel Trudeau; Hong Guo; Zetian Mi

Solar water splitting is one of the key steps in artificial photosynthesis for future carbon-neutral, storable and sustainable source of energy. Here we show that one of the major obstacles for achieving efficient and stable overall water splitting over the emerging nanostructured photocatalyst is directly related to the uncontrolled surface charge properties. By tuning the Fermi level on the nonpolar surfaces of gallium nitride nanowire arrays, we demonstrate that the quantum efficiency can be enhanced by more than two orders of magnitude. The internal quantum efficiency and activity on p-type gallium nitride nanowires can reach ~51% and ~4.0 mol hydrogen h(-1) g(-1), respectively. The nanowires remain virtually unchanged after over 50,000 μmol gas (hydrogen and oxygen) is produced, which is more than 10,000 times the amount of photocatalyst itself (~4.6 μmol). The essential role of Fermi-level tuning in balancing redox reactions and in enhancing the efficiency and stability is also elucidated.


ACS Nano | 2013

One-step overall water splitting under visible light using multiband InGaN/GaN nanowire heterostructures.

Golam Kibria; Hieu Pham Trung Nguyen; Kai Cui; Songrui Zhao; Dongping Liu; Hong Guo; Michel Trudeau; Suzanne Paradis; Abou-Rachid Hakima; Zetian Mi

The conversion of solar energy into hydrogen via water splitting process is one of the key sustainable technologies for future clean, storable, and renewable source of energy. Therefore, development of visible light-responsive and efficient photocatalyst material has been of immense interest, but with limited success. Here, we show that overall water splitting under visible-light irradiation can be achieved using a single photocatalyst material. Multiband InGaN/GaN nanowire heterostructures, decorated with rhodium (Rh)/chromium-oxide (Cr2O3) core-shell nanoparticles can lead to stable hydrogen production from pure (pH ∼ 7.0) water splitting under ultraviolet, blue and green-light irradiation (up to ∼560 nm), the longest wavelength ever reported. At ∼440-450 nm wavelengths, the internal quantum efficiency is estimated to be ∼13%, the highest value reported in the visible spectrum. The turnover number under visible light well exceeds 73 in 12 h. Detailed analysis further confirms the stable photocatalytic activity of the nanowire heterostructures. This work establishes the use of metal-nitrides as viable photocatalyst for solar-powered artificial photosynthesis for the production of hydrogen and other solar fuels.


Optics Express | 2011

Optical performance of top-down fabricated InGaN/GaN nanorod light emitting diode arrays.

Qiming Li; Karl R. Westlake; Mary H. Crawford; Stephen R. Lee; Daniel D. Koleske; Jeffery J. Figiel; Karen Charlene Cross; Saeed Fathololoumi; Zetian Mi; George T. Wang

Vertically aligned InGaN/GaN nanorod light emitting diode (LED) arrays were created from planar LED structures using a new top-down fabrication technique consisting of a plasma etch followed by an anisotropic wet etch. The wet etch results in straight, smooth, well-faceted nanorods with controllable diameters and removes the plasma etch damage. 94% of the nanorod LEDs are dislocation-free and a reduced quantum confined Stark effect is observed due to reduced piezoelectric fields. Despite these advantages, the IQE of the nanorod LEDs measured by photoluminescence is comparable to the planar LED, perhaps due to inefficient thermal transport and enhanced nonradiative surface recombination.


Chemical Communications | 2013

Remarkably enhanced photocatalytic activity of laser ablated Au nanoparticle decorated BiFeO3 nanowires under visible-light

Shun Li; Jianming Zhang; Golam Kibria; Zetian Mi; Mohamed Chaker; Dongling Ma; Riad Nechache; Federico Rosei

Hybrid photocatalysts consisting of single crystalline BiFeO3 nanowires and laser ablated Au nanoparticles were synthesized by a functionalization-step-free solution process. The 1.0 wt% Au nanoparticle decorated BiFeO3 nanowires exhibit ~30 times higher photocatalytic activity for water oxidation than that exhibited by the parent wires during the first 4 h.


Nano Letters | 2013

Highly Stable Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting and Hydrogen Generation Using a Double-Band InGaN/GaN Core/Shell Nanowire Photoanode

Bandar AlOtaibi; Hieu Pham Trung Nguyen; Songrui Zhao; M. G. Kibria; S. Fan; Zetian Mi

We report on the first demonstration of stable photoelectrochemical water splitting and hydrogen generation on a double-band photoanode in acidic solution (hydrogen bromide), which is achieved by InGaN/GaN core/shell nanowire arrays grown on Si substrate using catalyst-free molecular beam epitaxy. The nanowires are doped n-type using Si to reduce the surface depletion region and increase current conduction. Relatively high incident-photon-to-current-conversion efficiency (up to ~27%) is measured under ultraviolet and visible light irradiation. Under simulated sunlight illumination, steady evolution of molecular hydrogen is further demonstrated.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

High efficiency green, yellow, and amber emission from InGaN/GaN dot-in-a-wire heterostructures on Si"111…

Yi-Lu Chang; J. L. Wang; Feng Li; Zetian Mi

The authors report on the achievement of nearly defect-free, vertically aligned InGaN/GaN dot-in-a-wire nanoscale heterostructures grown directly on Si(111) substrates by molecular beam epitaxy. Strong green, yellow, and amber emission, with a room temperature internal quantum efficiency of ∼45% of that measured at low temperature (∼10 K), was achieved. Detailed structural and optical studies further confirm that the emission characteristics are strongly influenced by the presence of In-rich nanoclusters, formed by phase segregation, in the InGaN dots.

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Hieu Pham Trung Nguyen

New Jersey Institute of Technology

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