J
Jennifer I. L. Chen
Researcher at Keele University
Publications - 45
Citations - 1868
Jennifer I. L. Chen is an academic researcher from Keele University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Photonic crystal & Colloidal gold. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 44 publications receiving 1662 citations. Previous affiliations of Jennifer I. L. Chen include University of Massachusetts Amherst & York University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Amplified photochemistry with slow photons
Jennifer I. L. Chen,G. von Freymann,Sung Yeun Choi,Vladimir Kitaev,Vladimir Kitaev,Geoffrey A. Ozin +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of photonic properties on organic photochemistry was investigated by tracing out the wavelength-dependent rate of photoisomerization of azobenzene anchored on silica opals.
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Plasmonic nanoparticle dimers for optical sensing of DNA in complex media.
TL;DR: A new sensing modality based on the actuation of discrete gold nanoparticle dimers that yields a spectral blue shift in the hybridized plasmon mode as detected by single nanostructure scattering spectroscopy to distinguish the target from nonspecific binding and to detect the target in complex media like serum.
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Synergy of slow photon and chemically amplified photochemistry in platinum nanocluster-loaded inverse titania opals.
TL;DR: The photodegradation efficiency of TiO2 has been amplified 4-fold via the cooperativity of slow photons in photonic crystal and the incorporation of Pt nanoclusters and this work demonstrates a synergistic optical and chemical enhancement for the first time.
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Block copolymers under periodic, strong three-dimensional confinement.
André C. Arsenault,David A. Rider,Nicolas Tétreault,Jennifer I. L. Chen,Neil Coombs,Geoffrey A. Ozin,Ian Manners +6 more
TL;DR: The influence of strong 3D confinement on the self-assembly of diblock copolymers containing a polyferrocenylsilane metallopolymer segment is studied.
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Slow photons in the fast lane in chemistry
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors look at slow photons mainly through the eye of chemistry and highlight some recent developments in this exciting and emerging field that demonstrate the potential of slow photons in materials chemistry and nanochemistry.