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Qingnan Wu

Researcher at Tongji University

Publications -  11
Citations -  260

Qingnan Wu is an academic researcher from Tongji University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dehydrogenation & Catalysis. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 11 publications receiving 210 citations. Previous affiliations of Qingnan Wu include Henan Agricultural University.

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Highly active NiCo alloy hexagonal nanoplates with crystal plane selective dehydrogenation and visible-light photocatalysis

TL;DR: In this article, a uniform NiCo alloy hexagonal nanoplates were synthesized through a formaldehyde molecule controlled growth process and investigated as a crystal plane selective dehydrogenation catalyst for potential hydrogen energy applications and visible-light synergistic catalysts for nano-ZnO.
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Sea-Sponge-like Structure of Nano-Fe3O4 on Skeleton-C with Long Cycle Life under High Rate for Li-Ion Batteries

TL;DR: A novel C/Fe3O4 sea-sponge-like structure was synthesized by ultrasonic spray pyrolysis following thermal decomposition process to deliver high electrochemical performance with long cycle life under high rate for lithium-ion batteries.
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A Tubular Sandwich-Structured CNT@Ni@Ni2(CO3)(OH)2 with High Stability and Superior Capacity as Hybrid Supercapacitor

TL;DR: In this article, a tubular sandwich-structured carbon nanotubes (CNT@Ni@Ni2(CO3)(OH)2) was synthesized via a scalable, dynamic, controlled in situ reduction-chemical deposition process.
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Construction of NiCo–Pt nanopolyhedron inlay-structures and their highly efficient catalysis hydrolytic dehydrogenation toward ammonia borane

TL;DR: In this paper, NiCo-Pt inlay structures with an average diameter of ∼450nm were synthesized through replacement deposition Co or Ni by reductive replacement with a Pt submonolayer on NiCo hexagonal nanoplates and nanoicosahedrons.
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Lamellar-crossing-structured Ni(OH)2/CNTs/Ni(OH)2 nanocomposite for electrochemical supercapacitor materials

TL;DR: In this paper, a two-phase interface reaction process followed by the CNTs crossed among the lamellar-nanostructured Ni(OH) 2, which can offer large active surface areas and short diffusion paths for electrons and ions, is investigated as a potential pseudocapacitor electrode material for electrochemical energy storage applications.