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Guosheng Li

Researcher at Fuzhou University

Publications -  10
Citations -  1937

Guosheng Li is an academic researcher from Fuzhou University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carbon nitride & Photocatalysis. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 10 publications receiving 1227 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Optimizing Optical Absorption, Exciton Dissociation, and Charge Transfer of a Polymeric Carbon Nitride with Ultrahigh Solar Hydrogen Production Activity.

TL;DR: A facile bottom-up strategy to improve the activity of a carbon nitride to a level in which a majority of photons are really used to drive photoredox chemistry, which enables efficient photochemistry also with green light.
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Ionothermal Synthesis of Triazine-Heptazine-Based Copolymers with Apparent Quantum Yields of 60 % at 420 nm for Solar Hydrogen Production from "Sea Water".

TL;DR: This study highlights the construction of intermolecular D-A copolymers in NaCl/KCl molten salts with higher melting points but in the absence of lithium to modulate the chemical structure and properties of PCN.
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2D sp2 Carbon-Conjugated Covalent Organic Frameworks for Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production from Water

TL;DR: In this article, a two-dimensional sp2 carbon-conjugated covalent organic frameworks are designed to be fully π conjugated for harvesting a wide range of visible to near-infrared light and to constitute built-in donor-acceptor heterojunction interfaces for splitting excitons.
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Tailoring the Grain Boundary Chemistry of Polymeric Carbon Nitride for Enhanced Solar Hydrogen Production and CO2 Reduction

TL;DR: Improvements of the quantum efficiency and optical absorption in the relevant range can be readily addressed when 5-aminotetrazole, a monomer with high nitrogen content, is used for the synthesis of carbon nitride.
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Ultrafine Cobalt Catalysts on Covalent Carbon Nitride Frameworks for Oxygenic Photosynthesis.

TL;DR: Underlines the advantage of surface engineering to establish efficient advanced polymeric composites for water oxidation, and opens new insights into the architectural design of binary hybrid photocatalysts with high reactivity and further utilizations in the fields of energy and environment.