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Michael Stadermann

Researcher at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Publications -  162
Citations -  9836

Michael Stadermann is an academic researcher from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: National Ignition Facility & Inertial confinement fusion. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 152 publications receiving 7998 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Stadermann include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & Stanford University.

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Fast Mass Transport Through Sub-2-Nanometer Carbon Nanotubes

TL;DR: Gas and water flow measurements through microfabricated membranes in which aligned carbon nanotubes with diameters of less than 2 nanometers serve as pores enable fundamental studies of mass transport in confined environments, as well as more energy-efficient nanoscale filtration.
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Ion exclusion by sub-2-nm carbon nanotube pores

TL;DR: It is shown that carbon nanotube membranes exhibit significant ion exclusion that can be as high as 98% under certain conditions, which strongly support a Donnan-type rejection mechanism, dominated by electrostatic interactions between fixed membrane charges and mobile ions.
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Advanced carbon aerogels for energy applications

TL;DR: In this article, the synthesis of carbon aerogels with hierarchical porosities for energy applications, including carbon nanotube and graphene composite carbon aeroglobels, as well as their functionalization by surface engineering are discussed.
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Capacitive desalination with flow-through electrodes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a flow-through electrode (FTE) capacitive desalination, where the feed water flows directly through electrodes along the primary electric field direction, which enables significant reduction in desalization time and can desalinate higher salinity feeds per charge.
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Mechanically robust 3D graphene macroassembly with high surface area

TL;DR: The synthesis of a three-dimensional macroassembly of graphene sheets with electrical conductivity and Young's modulus orders of magnitude higher than those previously reported, super-compressive deformation behavior, and surface areas approaching theoretically maximum values is reported.