L
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.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Light-Steered Isotropic Semiconductor Micromotors
Chuanrui Chen,Chuanrui Chen,Fangzhi Mou,Leilei Xu,Shaofei Wang,Jianguo Guan,Zunpeng Feng,Quanwei Wang,Lei Kong,Wei Li,Joseph Wang,Qingjie Zhang +11 more
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.
Journal ArticleDOI
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.
Journal ArticleDOI
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.
Journal ArticleDOI
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.
Journal ArticleDOI
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.