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Nathan S. Lewis

Researcher at California Institute of Technology

Publications -  730
Citations -  72550

Nathan S. Lewis is an academic researcher from California Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Semiconductor & Silicon. The author has an hindex of 112, co-authored 720 publications receiving 64808 citations. Previous affiliations of Nathan S. Lewis include Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Low-Temperature STM Images of Methyl-Terminated Si(111) Surfaces

TL;DR: Low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy has been used to image CH(3)-terminated Si(111) surfaces that were prepared through a chlorination/alkylation procedure, revealing a well-ordered structure commensurate with the atop sites of an unreconstructed 1 x 1 overlayer on the silicon (111) surface.
Patent

Techniques and systems for analyte detection

TL;DR: In this article, a plurality of sensors are formed on a single integrated circuit and the sensors may have diverse compositions, and the electrical signals may be preprocessed by filtering and amplification.
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A Stabilized, Intrinsically Safe, 10% Efficient, Solar-Driven Water-Splitting Cell Incorporating Earth-Abundant Electrocatalysts with Steady-State pH Gradients and Product Separation Enabled by a Bipolar Membrane

TL;DR: In this article, an efficient, stable, and intrinsically safe solar water-splitting device is demonstrated using a III-V tandem junction photoanode, an acid-stable, earth-abundant hydrogen evolution catalyst, and a bipolar membrane.
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Highly branched cobalt phosphide nanostructures for hydrogen-evolution electrocatalysis

TL;DR: In this article, the branched CoP nanostructures were synthesized by reacting cobalt(II) acetylacetonate with trio-ctylphosphine in the presence of trio-cyclophosphine oxide.
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Proton exchange membrane electrolysis sustained by water vapor

TL;DR: In this article, the current-voltage characteristics of a PEM electrolyzer with an IrRuOx water oxidation catalyst and a Pt black water reduction catalyst, under operation with water vapor from a humidified carrier gas, were investigated as a function of the gas flow rate, the relative humidity, and the presence of oxygen.