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Ha L. Nguyen

Researcher at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Publications -  45
Citations -  1677

Ha L. Nguyen is an academic researcher from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 32 publications receiving 893 citations. Previous affiliations of Ha L. Nguyen include United Arab Emirates University & Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City.

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A Titanium–Organic Framework as an Exemplar of Combining the Chemistry of Metal– and Covalent–Organic Frameworks

TL;DR: This MOF represents the first example of combining metal cluster chemistry with dynamic organic covalent bond formation to give a new crystalline, extended framework of titanium metal, which is rarely used in MOFs.
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A Porous Covalent Organic Framework with Voided Square Grid Topology for Atmospheric Water Harvesting.

TL;DR: A new porous, two-dimensional imine-linked COF with a voided square grid topology, termed COF-432, which meets the requirements desired for water harvesting from air in that it exhibits an 'S'-shaped water sorption isotherm with a steep pore-filling step at low relative humidity and without hysteretic behavior.
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A Titanium–Organic Framework: Engineering of the Band-Gap Energy for Photocatalytic Property Enhancement

TL;DR: A visible-light-responsive metal-organic framework based on titanium hexameric cluster and high conjugation system of organic linker building block termed MOF-902 was synthesized and fully characterized as discussed by the authors.
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Reticulating 1D Ribbons into 2D Covalent Organic Frameworks by Imine and Imide Linkages.

TL;DR: The ability to link infinite building blocks, such as the ribbons of COF-76, into higher dimensionality COFs, paves the way to covalent frameworks composed of hierachical chemical structures.
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Designing bipyridine-functionalized zirconium metal–organic frameworks as a platform for clean energy and other emerging applications

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the design and applications of materials from the viewpoint of materials design and the necessity and importance of installing complexity to achieve synergistic interactions is presented. And an emphasis is placed on the preparation of BPY-functionalized Zr-MOFs, their characterization, and subsequent applications, such as electrocatalytic or photocatalytic hydrogen evolution reactions, heterogeneous molecular catalysis, and gas storage for renewable energy.