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Lei Kong

Researcher at Wuhan University of Technology

Publications -  17
Citations -  849

Lei Kong is an academic researcher from Wuhan University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffusiophoresis & Mesoporous silica. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 15 publications receiving 563 citations. Previous affiliations of Lei Kong include Nanyang Technological University.

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Light-Steered Isotropic Semiconductor Micromotors

TL;DR: Independent of the Brownian motion of themselves, the as-proposed isotropic micromotors are able to continuously move with both motion direction and speed just controlled by light, as well as precisely manipulate particles for nanoengineering.
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Light-controlled propulsion, aggregation and separation of water-fuelled TiO2/Pt Janus submicromotors and their “on-the-fly” photocatalytic activities

TL;DR: Water-fuelled TiO2/Pt Janus submicromotors developed here have some outstanding advantages as "swimming" photocatalysts for organic pollutant remediation in the macro or microenvironment because of their small size, long-term stability, wirelessly controllable motion behaviors and long life span.
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Fuel-Free Light-Powered TiO2/Pt Janus Micromotors for Enhanced Nitroaromatic Explosives Degradation.

TL;DR: This work presents that light-powered TiO2/Pt Janus micromotors have high efficiency for the "on-the-fly" photocatalytic degradation of 2,4-DNT and 2, 4,6-TNT in pure water under UV irradiation and shows an efficient degradation of nitroaromatic compounds.
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Photocatalytic Micromotors Activated by UV to Visible Light for Environmental Remediation, Micropumps, Reversible Assembly, Transportation, and Biomimicry.

TL;DR: Due to the strong redox capacity and physical effects caused by the products or product gradients, photocatalytic micromotors have applications in environmental remediation, micropumps, reversible assembly, transportation, and biomimicry.
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Micromotor-assisted human serum glucose biosensing

TL;DR: The obtained chronoamperometric data show that Mg/Pt Janus micromotors play a synergistic role in enhancing the current response at millimolar concentrations of glucose in human serum and a linear relationship between current signal and glucose concentration was established.