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P

P. Liu

Researcher at Sun Yat-sen University

Publications -  32
Citations -  2718

P. Liu is an academic researcher from Sun Yat-sen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser ablation & Amorphous solid. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 32 publications receiving 2317 citations.

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Amorphous nickel hydroxide nanospheres with ultrahigh capacitance and energy density as electrochemical pseudocapacitor materials

TL;DR: The integrated electrochemical performance of the amorphous nickel hydroxide is commensurate with crystalline materials in supercapacitors, and these findings promote the application ofAmorphous nanostructures as advanced electrochemical pseudocapacitor materials.
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External field-assisted laser ablation in liquid: An efficient strategy for nanocrystal synthesis and nanostructure assembly

TL;DR: Laser ablation in liquid (LAL) has received considerable attention over the last decade, and is gradually becoming an irreplaceable technique to synthesize nanocrystals and fabricate functional nanostructures because it can offer effective solutions to some challenges in the field of nanotechnology as discussed by the authors.
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Amorphous Cobalt Hydroxide with Superior Pseudocapacitive Performance

TL;DR: The united pseudo-capacitive performances of the amorphous Co( OH)2 nanostructures in electrochemical capacitors are totally comparable to those of the crystalline Co(OH)2nanomaterials.
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From nanocrystal synthesis to functional nanostructure fabrication: laser ablation in liquid

TL;DR: This review introduces recent developments in laser ablation in liquid (LAL) for the synthesis and fabrication of novel nanostructures with metastable phases and shapes and develops a new technique to fabricate functional nanopatterns on the basis of the pulsed-laser deposition in liquid.
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Reversible nanodiamond-carbon onion phase transformations.

TL;DR: Results give a clue to the root of meteoritic nanodiamonds that are commonly found in primitive meteorites but their origin is puzzling and offers one suitable approach for breaking controllable pathways between diamond and carbon allotropes.