H
Hans-Conrad zur Loye
Researcher at University of South Carolina
Publications - 576
Citations - 14286
Hans-Conrad zur Loye is an academic researcher from University of South Carolina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Crystal structure & Magnetic susceptibility. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 541 publications receiving 13045 citations. Previous affiliations of Hans-Conrad zur Loye include University of Utah & Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
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Polymer Composite and Nanocomposite Dielectric Materials for Pulse Power Energy Storage
Peter Barber,Shiva Balasubramanian,Yogesh Kumar Anguchamy,Shushan Gong,Arief Wibowo,Hongsheng Gao,Harry J. Ploehn,Hans-Conrad zur Loye +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes the current state of polymer composites used as dielectric materials for energy storage, focusing on materials: polymers serving as the matrix, inorganic fillers used to increase the effective dielectrics constant, and various recent investigations of functionalization of metal oxide fillers to improve compatibility with polymers.
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Ligand-Directed Molecular Architectures: Self-Assembly of Two-Dimensional Rectangular Metallacycles and Three-Dimensional Trigonal or Tetragonal Prisms
TL;DR: Three angular ditopic ligands (1,3-bis(benzimidazol-1-ylmethyl)-4,6-dimethylbenzene L(1), 1,3/2, and 1,4/2 are shape-specific designed ligands, representing an alternative strategy to assembling a trigonal prism, and three structures assembled from three linearly coordinated Ag(+) or Cu(+) ions and two tripodal ligands are presented.
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Exceptionally stable, hollow tubular metal-organic architectures: synthesis, characterization, and solid-state transformation study.
TL;DR: An effective solvothermal procedure has been developed to synthesize the new three-dimensional metal-organic framework, [ZnF(AmTAZ], suggesting a possible route for preparing one-dimensional crystalline nanomaterials.
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Materials discovery by flux crystal growth: quaternary and higher order oxides.
TL;DR: A large variety of recent quaternary and higher oxides that have been grown as crystals from fluxes are used to illustrate the power of the flux method to grow oxide crystals containing specific elements.
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Hydrogen production via the direct cracking of methane over Ni/SiO2: catalyst deactivation and regeneration
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors showed that a 15.5% Ni/SiO 2 catalyst can be fully regenerated at 923 K with steam for up to 10 successive cracking/regeneration cycles without any significant loss of catalytic activity.