scispace - formally typeset
J

Jacky Wing Yip Lam

Researcher at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Publications -  698
Citations -  55632

Jacky Wing Yip Lam is an academic researcher from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polymer & Polymerization. The author has an hindex of 106, co-authored 619 publications receiving 44048 citations. Previous affiliations of Jacky Wing Yip Lam include University of Hong Kong & Shenzhen University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Synthesis, thermal stability, and linear and nonlinear optical properties of hyperbranched polyarylenes containing carbazole and/or fluorene moieties

TL;DR: In this paper, three diyne monomers containing carbazolyl and/or fluorenyl chromophores, namely, 3,6-diethynyl-9,9-phenyl carbazole (1), 3, 6-diethenyl-nine-bis[6-(9-carbazoyl)hexyl] carbazyl]-hexyl]-fluorene (2), and 2,7-dithynyl]-9, 9,9bis[ 6-(9)-hexylhexyl-hexyl)-flu
Journal ArticleDOI

Realization of a Special Class of Admittances with One Damper and One Inerter for Mechanical Control

TL;DR: A condition is established on the topological property of the n -port network without a well-defined impedance to obtain an equivalent class of such networks so that the realizability condition is derived with realization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water‐Soluble Tetraphenylethene Derivatives as Fluorescent “Light‐Up” Probes for Nucleic Acid Detection and Their Applications in Cell Imaging

TL;DR: The nonemissive tetraphenylethene derivatives (TTAPE) are induced by DNA/RNA to emit, thereby showing a novel phenomenon of aggregation-induced emission (AIE) and enables the quantitation and visualization of nucleic acids in aqueous solution and electrophoretic gels, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Lysosome-Targeting AIEgen for Autophagy Visualization.

TL;DR: A morpholine-functionalized aggregation-induced emission luminogen (AIEgen), AIE-LysoY, provides a new platform for lysosome visualization with good biocompatibility, large Stokes shift, superior signal-to-noise ratio, and high photostability.