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Hong Liu

Researcher at Shandong University

Publications -  2349
Citations -  79103

Hong Liu is an academic researcher from Shandong University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 1905 publications receiving 57561 citations. Previous affiliations of Hong Liu include Shanghai University & Guangzhou University.

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Nonenzymatic Wearable Sensor for Electrochemical Analysis of Perspiration Glucose

TL;DR: A fully integrated wristband is developed for continuous real-time monitoring of perspiration glucose during physical activities, and uploading the test result to a smartphone app via Bluetooth.
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Asymmetric One-Pot Sequential Mannich/Hydroamination Reaction by Organo- and Gold Catalysts: Synthesis of Spiro[pyrrolidin-3,2′-oxindole] Derivatives

TL;DR: An asymmetric organo- and gold-catalyzed one-pot sequential Mannich/hydroamination reaction has been developed and spiro[pyrrolidin-3,2'-oxindole] derivatives were synthesized in good yields and excellent enantioselectivities.
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The hybrid nanostructure of MnCo2O4.5 nanoneedle/carbon aerogel for symmetric supercapacitors with high energy density

TL;DR: This study synthesized a porous MnCo2O4.5 nanoneedle/carbon aerogel hybrid nanostructure that exhibits a high energy density and capacitance retention and is applicable to carbon-based supercapacitor applications.
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Graphene Nanostructure-Based Tactile Sensors for Electronic Skin Applications.

TL;DR: A summary of these cutting-edge developments intends to provide readers with a deep understanding of the future design of high-quality tactile sensing devices and paves a path for their future commercial applications in the field of E-skin.
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Microenvironment-Driven Bioelimination of Magnetoplasmonic Nanoassemblies and Their Multimodal Imaging-Guided Tumor Photothermal Therapy

TL;DR: The MPNAs for cancer theranostics pave a way toward biodegradable bio-nanomaterials for biomedical applications and respond to the local microenvironment with acidic pH and enzymes where they accumulated including tumors, liver, spleen, etc., collapse into small molecules and discrete nanoparticles, and finally be cleared from the body.