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Dive into the research topics where Zishan Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Zishan Wu.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Electrochemical CO2 Reduction to Hydrocarbons on a Heterogeneous Molecular Cu Catalyst in Aqueous Solution

Zhe Weng; Jianbing Jiang; Yueshen Wu; Zishan Wu; Xiaoting Guo; Kelly L. Materna; Wen Liu; Victor S. Batista; Gary W. Brudvig; Hailiang Wang

Exploration of heterogeneous molecular catalysts combining the atomic-level tunability of molecular structures and the practical handling advantages of heterogeneous catalysts represents an attractive approach to developing high-performance catalysts for important and challenging chemical reactions such as electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction which holds the promise for converting emissions back to fuels utilizing renewable energy. Thus, far, efficient and selective electroreduction of CO2 to deeply reduced products such as hydrocarbons remains a big challenge. Here, we report a molecular copper-porphyrin complex (copper(II)-5,10,15,20-tetrakis(2,6-dihydroxyphenyl)porphyrin) that can be used as a heterogeneous electrocatalyst with high activity and selectivity for reducing CO2 to hydrocarbons in aqueous media. At -0.976 V vs the reversible hydrogen electrode, the catalyst is able to drive partial current densities of 13.2 and 8.4 mA cm(-2) for methane and ethylene production from CO2 reduction, corresponding to turnover frequencies of 4.3 and 1.8 molecules·site(-1)·s(-1) for methane and ethylene, respectively. This represents the highest catalytic activity to date for hydrocarbon production over a molecular CO2 reduction electrocatalyst. The unprecedented catalytic performance is attributed to the built-in hydroxyl groups in the porphyrin structure and the reactivity of the copper(I) metal center.


Nature Communications | 2017

Highly selective and active CO 2 reduction electrocatalysts based on cobalt phthalocyanine/carbon nanotube hybrid structures

Xing Zhang; Zishan Wu; Xiao Zhang; Liewu Li; Yanyan Li; Haomin Xu; Xiaoxiao Li; Xiaolu Yu; Zisheng Zhang; Yongye Liang; Hailiang Wang

Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide with renewable energy is a sustainable way of producing carbon-neutral fuels. However, developing active, selective and stable electrocatalysts is challenging and entails material structure design and tailoring across a range of length scales. Here we report a cobalt-phthalocyanine-based high-performance carbon dioxide reduction electrocatalyst material developed with a combined nanoscale and molecular approach. On the nanoscale, cobalt phthalocyanine (CoPc) molecules are uniformly anchored on carbon nanotubes to afford substantially increased current density, improved selectivity for carbon monoxide, and enhanced durability. On the molecular level, the catalytic performance is further enhanced by introducing cyano groups to the CoPc molecule. The resulting hybrid catalyst exhibits >95% Faradaic efficiency for carbon monoxide production in a wide potential range and extraordinary catalytic activity with a current density of 15.0 mA cm−2 and a turnover frequency of 4.1 s−1 at the overpotential of 0.52 V in a near-neutral aqueous solution.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Ultrathin dendrimer–graphene oxide composite film for stable cycling lithium–sulfur batteries

Wen Liu; Jianbing Jiang; Ke R. Yang; Yingying Mi; Piranavan Kumaravadivel; Yiren Zhong; Qi Fan; Zhe Weng; Zishan Wu; Judy J. Cha; Henghui Zhou; Victor S. Batista; Gary W. Brudvig; Hailiang Wang

Significance The promise of lithium–sulfur batteries for future electric transportation and stationary energy storage is being limited by their poor cycling stability. Previous approaches to improvement often involve incorporating additional components with significant dead weight or volume in battery structures. We develop an ultrathin functionalized dendrimer–graphene oxide composite film which can be applied to virtually any sulfur cathode to alleviate capacity fading over battery cycling without compromising the energy or power density of the entire battery. The design provides a new strategy for confining lithium polysulfide intermediates and thus stabilizing lithium–sulfur batteries. It also brings a suitable platform for elucidating the underlying materials and surface chemistry. Lithium–sulfur batteries (Li–S batteries) have attracted intense interest because of their high specific capacity and low cost, although they are still hindered by severe capacity loss upon cycling caused by the soluble lithium polysulfide intermediates. Although many structure innovations at the material and device levels have been explored for the ultimate goal of realizing long cycle life of Li–S batteries, it remains a major challenge to achieve stable cycling while avoiding energy and power density compromises caused by the introduction of significant dead weight/volume and increased electrochemical resistance. Here we introduce an ultrathin composite film consisting of naphthalimide-functionalized poly(amidoamine) dendrimers and graphene oxide nanosheets as a cycling stabilizer. Combining the dendrimer structure that can confine polysulfide intermediates chemically and physically together with the graphene oxide that renders the film robust and thin (<1% of the thickness of the active sulfur layer), the composite film is designed to enable stable cycling of sulfur cathodes without compromising the energy and power densities. Our sulfur electrodes coated with the composite film exhibit very good cycling stability, together with high sulfur content, large areal capacity, and improved power rate.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Surface Chemistry in Cobalt Phosphide-Stabilized Lithium–Sulfur Batteries

Yiren Zhong; Li-Chang Yin; Peng He; Wen Liu; Zishan Wu; Hailiang Wang

Chemistry at the cathode/electrolyte interface plays an important role for lithium-sulfur batteries in which stable cycling of the sulfur cathode requires confinement of the lithium polysulfide intermediates and their fast electrochemical conversion on the electrode surface. While many materials have been found to be effective for confining polysulfides, the underlying chemical interactions remain poorly understood. We report a new and general lithium polysulfide-binding mechanism enabled by surface oxidation layers of transition-metal phosphide and chalcogenide materials. We for the first time find that CoP nanoparticles strongly adsorb polysulfides because their natural oxidation (forming Co-O-P-like species) activates the surface Co sites for binding polysulfides via strong Co-S bonding. With a surface oxidation layer capable of confining polysulfides and an inner core suitable for conducting electrons, the CoP nanoparticles are thus a desirable candidate for stabilizing and improving the performance of sulfur cathodes in lithium-sulfur batteries. We demonstrate that sulfur electrodes that hold a high mass loading of 7 mg cm-2 and a high areal capacity of 5.6 mAh cm-2 can be stably cycled for 200 cycles. We further reveal that this new surface oxidation-induced polysulfide-binding scheme applies to a series of transition-metal phosphide and chalcogenide materials and can explain their stabilizing effects for lithium-sulfur batteries.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Ferrocene-Promoted Long-Cycle Lithium–Sulfur Batteries

Yingying Mi; Wen Liu; Ke R. Yang; Jianbing Jiang; Qi Fan; Zhe Weng; Yiren Zhong; Zishan Wu; Gary W. Brudvig; Victor S. Batista; Henghui Zhou; Hailiang Wang

Confining lithium polysulfide intermediates is one of the most effective ways to alleviate the capacity fade of sulfur-cathode materials in lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries. To develop long-cycle Li-S batteries, there is an urgent need for material structures with effective polysulfide binding capability and well-defined surface sites; thereby improving cycling stability and allowing study of molecular-level interactions. This challenge was addressed by introducing an organometallic molecular compound, ferrocene, as a new polysulfide-confining agent. With ferrocene molecules covalently anchored on graphene oxide, sulfur electrode materials with capacity decay as low as 0.014 % per cycle were realized, among the best of cycling stabilities reported to date. With combined spectroscopic studies and theoretical calculations, it was determined that effective polysulfide binding originates from favorable cation-π interactions between Li+ of lithium polysulfides and the negatively charged cyclopentadienyl ligands of ferrocene.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Synthesis of Crystalline Black Phosphorus Thin Film on Sapphire

Cheng Li; Ye Wu; Bingchen Deng; Yujun Xie; Qiushi Guo; Shaofan Yuan; Xiaolong Chen; Maruf A. Bhuiyan; Zishan Wu; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Hailiang Wang; Judy J. Cha; Michael Snure; Yingwei Fei; Fengnian Xia

Black phosphorus (BP) has recently attracted significant attention due to its exceptional physical properties. Currently, high-quality few-layer and thin-film BP are produced primarily by mechanical exfoliation, limiting their potential in future applications. Here, the synthesis of highly crystalline thin-film BP on 5 mm sapphire substrates by conversion from red to black phosphorus at 700 °C and 1.5 GPa is demonstrated. The synthesized ≈50 nm thick BP thin films are polycrystalline with a crystal domain size ranging from 40 to 70 µm long, as indicated by Raman mapping and infrared extinction spectroscopy. At room temperature, field-effect mobility of the synthesized BP thin film is found to be around 160 cm2 V-1 s-1 along armchair direction and reaches up to about 200 cm2 V-1 s-1 at around 90 K. Moreover, red phosphorus (RP) covered by exfoliated hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) before conversion shows atomically sharp hBN/BP interface and perfectly layered BP after the conversion. This demonstration represents a critical step toward the future realization of large scale, high-quality BP devices and circuits.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Coupled Metal/Oxide Catalysts with Tunable Product Selectivity for Electrocatalytic CO2 Reduction

Shengjuan Huo; Zhe Weng; Zishan Wu; Yiren Zhong; Yueshen Wu; Jianhui Fang; Hailiang Wang

One major challenge to the electrochemical conversion of CO2 to useful fuels and chemical products is the lack of efficient catalysts that can selectively direct the reaction to one desirable product and avoid the other possible side products. Making use of strong metal/oxide interactions has recently been demonstrated to be effective in enhancing electrocatalysis in the liquid phase. Here, we report one of the first systematic studies on composition-dependent influences of metal/oxide interactions on electrocatalytic CO2 reduction, utilizing Cu/SnOx heterostructured nanoparticles supported on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as a model catalyst system. By adjusting the Cu/Sn ratio in the catalyst material structure, we can tune the products of the CO2 electrocatalytic reduction reaction from hydrocarbon-favorable to CO-selective to formic acid-dominant. In the Cu-rich regime, SnOx dramatically alters the catalytic behavior of Cu. The Cu/SnOx-CNT catalyst containing 6.2% of SnOx converts CO2 to CO with a high faradaic efficiency (FE) of 89% and a jCO of 11.3 mA·cm-2 at -0.99 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode, in stark contrast to the Cu-CNT catalyst on which ethylene and methane are the main products for CO2 reduction. In the Sn-rich regime, Cu modifies the catalytic properties of SnOx. The Cu/SnOx-CNT catalyst containing 30.2% of SnOx reduces CO2 to formic acid with an FE of 77% and a jHCOOH of 4.0 mA·cm-2 at -0.99 V, outperforming the SnOx-CNT catalyst which only converts CO2 to formic acid in an FE of 48%.


Topics in Catalysis | 2018

Structure and Electrocatalytic Reactivity of Cobalt Phosphosulfide Nanomaterials

Quan Gan; Zishan Wu; Xiaolin Li; Wen Liu; Hailiang Wang

Structure and electrocatalytic reactivity of cobalt mono-phosphosulfide nanoparticles supported on carbon nanotubes are investigated. Employing two different synthetic methods, we successfully synthesize cobalt mono-phosphosulfide nanoparticles adopting either the CoP crystal structure (CoP|S with the S/P ratio < 93%) or the CoS crystal structure (CoS|P with the P/S ratio < 73%). S substitution in the CoP structure makes the surface P atoms more oxidized whereas the S atoms stay completely reduced. P substitution in the CoS structure makes the surface S atoms more reduced but the Co atoms more oxidized whereas the P atoms stay completely oxidized. All the cobalt phosphosulfide nanoparticles exhibit relatively P-rich surface. The electrocatalytic performance of the nanoparticles for the hydrogen evolution reaction is studied. In acidic electrolyte, CoP|S nanoparticles show negligible dependence of activity on composition, whereas CoS|P nanoparticles are not stable enough to give any steady activity. In alkaline electrolyte, the activity of CoP|S nanoparticles decreases as the S substitution level increases, whereas that of CoS|P nanoparticles is weakly composition dependent.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Introducing Fe2+ into Nickel–Iron Layered Double Hydroxide: Local Structure Modulated Water Oxidation Activity

Zhao Cai; Daojin Zhou; Maoyu Wang; Seong-Min Bak; Yueshen Wu; Zishan Wu; Yang Tian; Xuya Xiong; Yaping Li; Wen Liu; Samira Siahrostami; Yun Kuang; Xiao Qing Yang; Haohong Duan; Zhenxing Feng; Hailiang Wang; Xiaoming Sun

Exploring materials with regulated local structures and understanding how the atomic motifs govern the reactivity and durability of catalysts are a critical challenge for designing advanced catalysts. Herein we report the tuning of the local atomic structure of nickel-iron layered double hydroxides (NiFe-LDHs) by partially substituting Ni2+ with Fe2+ to introduce Fe-O-Fe moieties. These Fe2+ -containing NiFe-LDHs exhibit enhanced oxygen evolution reaction (OER) activity with an ultralow overpotential of 195 mV at the current density of 10 mA cm-2 , which is among the best OER catalytic performance to date. In-situ X-ray absorption, Raman, and electrochemical analysis jointly reveal that the Fe-O-Fe motifs could stabilize high-valent metal sites at low overpotentials, thereby enhancing the OER activity. These results reveal the importance of tuning the local atomic structure for designing high efficiency electrocatalysts.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2017

Iron-Doped Cobalt Monophosphide Nanosheet/Carbon Nanotube Hybrids as Active and Stable Electrocatalysts for Water Splitting

Xing Zhang; Xiao Zhang; Haomin Xu; Zishan Wu; Hailiang Wang; Yongye Liang

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Yiren Zhong

University College West

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Zhe Weng

University College West

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