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Dive into the research topics where Zhenmeng Peng is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhenmeng Peng.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Synthesis and Oxygen Reduction Electrocatalytic Property of Pt-on-Pd Bimetallic Heteronanostructures

Zhenmeng Peng; Hong Yang

Platinum-on-palladium bimetallic heterogeneous nanostructures were prepared using a sequential synthetic method, in which 3-nm Pt particles grew on the surfaces of 5-nm Pd nanoparticles. Electrochemical study of carbon-supported Pt-on-Pd heteronanostructures shows not only enhancement in electrocatalytic activity for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) but also much improved stability in comparison to a commercial platinum catalyst (E-TEK, 20 wt % Pt, diameter: 2.5 nm). The greatly suppressed hydroxyl adsorption on active sites by introducing Pd was attributed to the enhanced activity, while the retention of active surface area, morphology, and composition because of the large overall bimetallic particle size and unique architectures could be the key factors for the much improved stability over 30,000 cycles. Our work shows heterogeneous platinum-on-metal bimetallic nanostructures offer new opportunities to the design of hierarchically ordered multifunctional fuel cell catalysts.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Metallic Nickel Nitride Nanosheets Realizing Enhanced Electrochemical Water Oxidation

Kun Xu; Pengzuo Chen; Xiuling Li; Yun Tong; Hui Ding; Xiaojun Wu; Wangsheng Chu; Zhenmeng Peng; Changzheng Wu; Yi Xie

Exploring efficient and inexpensive oxygen evolution reaction (OER) electrocatalysts is of great importance for various electrochemical energy storage and conversion technologies. Ni-based electrocatalysts have been actively pursued because of their promising activity and earth abundance. However, the OER efficiency for most of the developed Ni-based electrocatalysts has been intrinsically limited due to their low electrical conductivity and poor active site exposure yield. Herein, we report metallic Ni3N nanosheets as an efficient OER electrocatalyst for the first time. The first-principles calculations and electrical transport property measurements unravel that the Ni3N is intrinsically metallic, and the carrier concentration can be remarkably improved with dimensional confinement. The EXAFS spectra provide solid evidence that the Ni3N nanosheets have disordered structure resultant of dimensional reduction, which then could provide more active sites for OER. Benefiting from enhanced electrical conductivity with metallic behavior and atomically disordered structure, the Ni3N nanosheets realize intrinsically improved OER activity compared with bulk Ni3N and NiO nanosheets. Our finding suggests that metallic nitride nanosheets could serve as a new group of OER electrocatalysts with excellent property.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Truncated Octahedral Pt3Ni Oxygen Reduction Reaction Electrocatalysts

Jianbo Wu; Junliang Zhang; Zhenmeng Peng; Shengchun Yang; Frederick T. Wagner; Hong Yang

This communication describes the preparation of carbon-supported truncated-octahedral Pt(3)Ni nanoparticle catalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction. Besides the composition, size, and shape controls, this work develops a new butylamine-based surface treatment approach for removing the long-alkane-chain capping agents used in the solution-phase synthesis. These Pt(3)Ni catalysts can have an area-specific activity as high as 850 muA/cm(2)(Pt) at 0.9 V, which is approximately 4 times better than the commercial Pt/C catalyst ( approximately 0.2 mA/cm(2)(Pt) at 0.9 V). The mass activity reached 0.53 A/mg(Pt) at 0.9 V, which is close to a factor of 4 increase in mass activity, the threshold value that allows fuel-cell power trains to become cost-competitive with their internal-combustion counterparts. Our results also show that the mass activities of these carbon-supported Pt(3)Ni nanoparticle catalysts strongly depend on the (111) surface fraction, which validates the results of studies based on Pt(3)Ni extended-single-crystal surfaces, suggesting that further development of catalysts with still higher mass activities is highly plausible.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Octahedral [email protected] Core–Shell Nanocrystals with Ultrathin PtNi Alloy Shells as Active Catalysts for Oxygen Reduction Reaction

Xu Zhao; Sheng Chen; Zhicheng Fang; Jia Ding; Wei Sang; Youcheng Wang; Jin Zhao; Zhenmeng Peng; Jie Zeng

Forming core-shell and alloy structures offers generally two ways to design efficient Pt-based catalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Here, we combined these two strategies and invented a versatile aqueous route to synthesize octahedral [email protected] core-shell nanocrystals. The Pt/Ni atomic ratios in the resultant shells can be varied from 0.6 to 1.8, simply by changing the amounts of Pt and Ni precursors, with the other conditions unchanged. Experimental studies showed that the mass activities of as-prepared catalysts were 5 times higher than that of the commercial Pt/C. We believe that the ultrathin PtNi shells enclosed by {111} facets made it possible to reduce the Pt content while retaining the catalytic activity toward ORR. This strategy may be extended to the preparation of other multimetallic nanocrystals with shaped and ultrathin alloy shells, which is conducive to design highly active catalysts.


Nano Letters | 2010

Electrochemical Synthesis and Catalytic Property of Sub-10 nm Platinum Cubic Nanoboxes

Zhenmeng Peng; Hongjun You; Jianbo Wu; Hong Yang

We report an electrochemical synthesis of ultrafine Pt cubic nanoboxes from Pt-on-Ag heteronanostructures. These cubic nanoboxes have an average edge length of about 6 nm and a wall thickness of 1.5 nm. Several reaction parameters including the profile of applied potentials were examined to develop an optimal procedure for controlling the size, shape, and surface morphology of the nanoboxes. A strong shape-dependent catalytic property is observed for Pt cubic nanoboxes, which is 1.5 times more active than hollow spheres in terms of turn over frequency for catalytic oxidation of methanol.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Solid-State Chemistry-Enabled Scalable Production of Octahedral Pt−Ni Alloy Electrocatalyst for Oxygen Reduction Reaction

Changlin Zhang; Sang Youp Hwang; Alexis Trout; Zhenmeng Peng

Although octahedral Pt-Ni alloy nanoparticles possess an excelling property in oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and are of great potential as an electrocatalyst for polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs), mass production of the materials at low cost remains a big challenge. By combining the advantages of both solid-state chemistry and wet synthetic chemistry, we developed one scalable, surfactant-free, and cost-effective method for producing octahedral Pt-Ni alloy nanoparticles on carbon support. The octahedral Pt-Ni samples were prepared with different compositions and studied for the ORR property. They exhibit a much improved reaction activity compared to the commercial catalyst. The experiments demonstrate an innovative strategy for preparing shaped metal nanoparticles and make significant progress in the ORR catalyst research.


ACS Nano | 2010

Composition-Dependent Formation of Platinum Silver Nanowires

Zhenmeng Peng; Hongjun You; Hong Yang

The understanding of shape control of colloidal nanoparticles is still rather limited even after well over a decade of intensive research efforts. While surface capping agents can greatly influence the growth habit of nanocrystals in solution, the formation of certain morphology can hardly be understood based on both experimental data and simulations. Without a good understanding of the origins for shape formation, deterministic approaches to the synthesis of nanostructures can be hard to realize. In this paper, we describe the synthesis and formation of PtAg alloy nanowires in the presence of oleylamine and oleic acid through the oriented attachment. Transmission electron microscopy study shows the formation of wormlike nanowires occurs largely at the composition around Pt(50)Ag(50). Both Pt and Ag rich alloy nanostructures form sphere-like or faceted nanoparticles under the same reaction conditions. Density functional theory calculation is used to understand the interactions between the functional groups of capping agents and low index planes of PtAg alloys. The structural order of interfaces after collision between primary particles is obtained by molecular dynamic simulation. The results indicate that the formation of alloy nanowires is mostly driven by the interplay between the binding energy of capping agents on alloy surfaces and the diffusion of atoms at the interface upon the collision of primary nanoparticles.


ACS Nano | 2008

Electrocatalytic Properties of Pt Nanowires Supported on Pt and W Gauzes

Eric P. Lee; Zhenmeng Peng; Wei Chen; Shaowei Chen; Hong Yang; Younan Xia

This paper describes the preparation of Pt- or W-supported Pt nanowires by directly growing them on the surface of Pt or W gauze. The growth direction of the nanowires was determined to be along the <111> axis. Electrochemical measurements were performed to investigate their catalytic performance toward methanol oxidation. It was found from cyclic voltammetry that the Pt nanowires supported on Pt gauze had the largest electrochemically active surface area with the greatest activity toward methanol oxidation reaction. They also exhibited a slightly slower current decay over time, indicating a higher tolerance to CO-like intermediates. Furthermore, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurements showed that the catalytic performance of the supported Pt nanowires prepared with a H(2)PtCl(6) precursor concentration of 40 mM is significantly better for methanol oxidation than the samples prepared at a concentration of 80 mM. This was due partially to the incomplete removal of poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVP) from the more concentrated sample. In contrast, the Pt nanowires supported on W gauze performed the worst.


ACS Nano | 2012

Effects of Surface Chemistry on the Generation of Reactive Oxygen Species by Copper Nanoparticles

Miao Shi; Hyun Soo Kwon; Zhenmeng Peng; Alison Elder; Hong Yang

Mercaptocarboxylic acids with different carbon chain lengths were used for stabilizing uniform 15 nm copper nanoparticles. The effects of surface chemistry such as ligand type and surface oxidation on the reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by the copper nanoparticles were examined. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM), powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), UV-vis spectroscopy, and an acellular ROS assay show that ROS generation is closely related to the surface oxidation of copper nanoparticles. It was found that the copper nanoparticles with longer chain ligands had surfaces that were better protected from oxidation and a corresponding lower ROS generating capacity than did particles with shorter chain ligands. Conversely, the copper nanoparticles with greater surface oxidation also had higher ROS generating capacity.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Engineering the Electronic State of a Perovskite Electrocatalyst for Synergistically Enhanced Oxygen Evolution Reaction

Y. Guo; Yun Tong; Pengzuo Chen; Kun Xu; Jiyin Zhao; Yue Lin; Wangsheng Chu; Zhenmeng Peng; Changzheng Wu; Yi Xie

A surface hydrogen effect to modulate the pure electronic-state transition in perovskite Ca0.9 Yb0.1 MnO3 synergistically generates a more suitable eg electron filling status and better conductivity. This achieves 100 times higher catalytic activity compared to that of a pristine sample.

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Qianwang Chen

University of Science and Technology of China

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Jun Wang

South China University of Technology

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Jie Zeng

University of Science and Technology of China

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Mingzai Wu

University of Science and Technology of China

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Alexis T. Bell

University of California

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Xiangkai Kong

University of Science and Technology of China

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Ying Xiong

University of Science and Technology of China

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