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Jun Chen

Researcher at Shanghai Jiao Tong University

Publications -  2300
Citations -  100809

Jun Chen is an academic researcher from Shanghai Jiao Tong University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 136, co-authored 1856 publications receiving 77368 citations. Previous affiliations of Jun Chen include Peking Union Medical College & Nankai University.

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Dual-Strategy of Cation-Doping and Nanoengineering Enables Fast and Stable Sodium-Ion Storage in a Novel Fe/Mn-Based Layered Oxide Cathode.

TL;DR: A dual‐strategy is developed to boost the Na‐storage performance of the Fe/Mn‐based layered oxide cathode by copper (Cu) doping and nanoengineering, which symbolizes a step forward in the development of Fe-based layered oxides as high‐performance cathodes for SIBs.
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Three-Dimensional Porous Cobalt Phosphide Nanocubes Encapsulated in a Graphene Aerogel as an Advanced Anode with High Coulombic Efficiency for High-Energy Lithium-Ion Batteries

TL;DR: This synthesis protocol could be an instructive precedent for fabricating transition-metal-phosphide-based 3D porous composites with excellent electrochemical performances.
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Hexagonal Boron Nitride as a Multifunctional Support for Engineering Efficient Electrocatalysts toward the Oxygen Reduction Reaction

TL;DR: H-BN nanosheets is reported as a multifunctional support for constructing efficient electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) because the strong interaction between h-BN and Pd downshifts the Pd d-band center, and hence optimizes the affinity with the reaction intermediates.
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Cadmium(II)–Triazole Framework as a Luminescent Probe for Ca2+ and Cyano Complexes

TL;DR: Luminescent properties indicate that 1 shows excellent selectivity for Ca(2+) and cyano complexes and to the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first example of a luminescent probe for Ca (2+) based on triazole derivatives.
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Shock responses of nanoporous aluminum by molecular dynamics simulations

TL;DR: In this paper, a continuum wave reflection theory and a resolved shear stress model were proposed to explain the distribution of dislocation nucleation sites in the low latitude region near the equator of the spherical void surfaces.