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Peidong Yang

Researcher at University of California, Berkeley

Publications -  597
Citations -  159053

Peidong Yang is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanowire & Perovskite (structure). The author has an hindex of 183, co-authored 562 publications receiving 144351 citations. Previous affiliations of Peidong Yang include Max Planck Society & University of California, Santa Barbara.

Papers
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Address the “alkalinity problem” in CO2 electrolysis with catalyst design and translation

TL;DR: Chen et al. as discussed by the authors used active sites on nanomaterial catalysts for the electrocatalytic transformation of CO2, particularly to multi-carbon and multi-electron products.
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Microfabricated monolithic multinozzle emitters for nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry.

TL;DR: The first demonstration of monolithic integration of multinozzle electrospray emitters with a microfluidic channel via a novel silicon microfabrication process is reported, achieving sensitivity and stability in peptide and protein detection comparable to those of commercial silica-based capillary nanoelectrosprays tips.
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Atomic-level control of the thermoelectric properties in polytypoid nanowires

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple synthesis of M2O3(ZnO)n (M = In, Ga, Fe) nanowires with controllable polytypoid structures was reported, where the nanostructured features were tuned by adjusting the amount of metal precursor.
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Growth and Photoelectrochemical Energy Conversion of Wurtzite Indium Phosphide Nanowire Arrays

TL;DR: A study on the growth of wurtzite indium phosphide (InP) nanowire (NW) arrays on silicon substrates and their subsequent implementation as light-absorbing photocathodes in PEC cells to generate an unassisted solar water splitting efficiency of 0.5%.
Patent

Hierarchically ordered porous oxides

TL;DR: A low-cost, efficient method of preparing hierarchically ordered structures by combining, concurrently or sequentially, micromolding, latex templating, and cooperative self-assembly of hydrolyzed inorganic species and amphiphilic block copolymers was proposed in this paper.