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Qiang Fu

Researcher at Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

Publications -  250
Citations -  16339

Qiang Fu is an academic researcher from Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Graphene. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 213 publications receiving 12457 citations. Previous affiliations of Qiang Fu include Chinese Academy of Sciences & Beijing Institute of Technology.

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Catalysis with two-dimensional materials and their heterostructures

TL;DR: Recent advances in the use of graphene and other 2D materials in catalytic applications are reviewed, focusing in particular on the catalytic activity of heterogeneous systems such as van der Waals heterostructures (stacks of several 2D crystals).
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Repeated growth and bubbling transfer of graphene with millimetre-size single-crystal grains using platinum.

TL;DR: A bubbling method is reported to transfer single graphene grains and graphene films joined from such grains on Pt by ambient-pressure chemical vapour deposition to arbitrary substrate, which is nondestructive not only to graphene, but also to the Pt substrates.
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Selective conversion of syngas to light olefins.

TL;DR: A composite catalyst circumvents conventional limitations on the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis of light olefins from syngas and achieves higher conversions and avoids deactivation through carbon buildup, by enabling a bifunctional catalyst affording two types of active sites with complementary properties.
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Toward N-Doped Graphene via Solvothermal Synthesis

TL;DR: In this paper, a method for one-pot direct synthesis of N-doped graphene via the reaction of tetrachloromethane with lithium nitride under mild conditions, which renders fabrication in gram scale.
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Interface-Confined Ferrous Centers for Catalytic Oxidation

TL;DR: The interface confinement effect can be used to stabilize the coordinately unsaturated ferrous sites by taking advantage of strong adhesion between ferrous oxides and metal substrates, and it is shown that the structural ensemble was highly efficient for carbon monoxide oxidation at low temperature under typical operating conditions of a proton-exchange membrane fuel cell.