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Nasser A.M. Barakat

Researcher at Minia University

Publications -  270
Citations -  9900

Nasser A.M. Barakat is an academic researcher from Minia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanofiber & Electrospinning. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 250 publications receiving 8243 citations. Previous affiliations of Nasser A.M. Barakat include South Valley University & Chonbuk National University.

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Silver Nanofibres by a Novel Electrospinning Process: Nanofibres with Plasmon Resonance in the IR Region and Thermal Hysteresis Electrical Conductivity Features

TL;DR: In this article, the electrospinning of a colloidal solution rather than the conventional sol-gel process was introduced as a novel strategy to produce silver nanofibres, and the results showed that the resulting colloid is a colloid with a potential of -2 mV and average particle diameter of 373 ± 1 nm.
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Cu0/S-doped TiO2 nanoparticles-decorated carbon nanofibers as novel and efficient photocatalyst for hydrogen generation from ammonia borane

TL;DR: In this paper, a new photocatalyst for the hydrolysis of ammonia borane under visible light was introduced, which was obtained by electrospinning of a solution composed of titanium isopropoxide, polyvinylpyrroliodine, copper acetate tetrahydrate, and ammonium sulfide.
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Preparation of zero-valent Co/N-CNFs as an immobilized thin film onto graphite disc for methanol electrooxidation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed new method to prepare one-pot current collector/electrode plate to be utilized in the fuel cell technology, which was achieved by electrospinning technique, followed by calcination at 1100 oC in argon atmosphere.
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Influence of the operating conditions on the morphology of CaCO3 nanoparticles prepared by modified co-precipitation with pulse mode feeding

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of the agitation speed and temperature on particle size and morphology were investigated, and the results indicated that increasing the mixer rotation speed from 3425 to 15,900rpm facilitates decreasing the average particle size to 64± 7nm.