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Shuit-Tong Lee

Researcher at Soochow University (Suzhou)

Publications -  1129
Citations -  84313

Shuit-Tong Lee is an academic researcher from Soochow University (Suzhou). The author has contributed to research in topics: Silicon & Nanowire. The author has an hindex of 138, co-authored 1121 publications receiving 77112 citations. Previous affiliations of Shuit-Tong Lee include University of British Columbia & Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

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Copper Nanoparticles Grafted on a Silicon Wafer and Their Excellent Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering

TL;DR: Copper nanoparticles grafted on a silicon wafer are fabricated by reducing copper ions with silicon-hydrogen bonds and assembling them in situ on the Si wafer, and they are used as substrates for surface-enhanced Raman scattering as discussed by the authors.
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Flexible organic light-emitting device based on magnetron sputtered indium-tin-oxide on plastic substrate

TL;DR: In this article, a radiofrequency sputtering deposition method was applied to prepare indium tin oxide (ITO) on a plastic substrate, polyethylene terephthalate (PET).
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Highly Fluorescent, Photostable, and Ultrasmall Silicon Drug Nanocarriers for Long-Term Tumor Cell Tracking and In-Vivo Cancer Therapy

TL;DR: In vivo experiments show that tumor-bearing mice treated with SiNP nanocarriers survive over 20 d without observable tumor growth, demonstrating the high-efficacy chemotherapy of the Si nanoccarriers.
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Electronic structures of organic/organic heterojunctions: From vacuum level alignment to Fermi level pinning

TL;DR: In this article, the authors showed that vacuum level alignment is only valid for certain O/O heterojunctions rather than a general rule for organic junctions, and that the mode of energy level alignment depends on the Fermi level position in the organic energy gap.
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Silicon nanowire sensors for Hg2+ and Cd2+ ions

TL;DR: In this article, high-sensitivity detection of toxic heavy metal cations such as Hg2+ and Cd2+ ions was demonstrated using single silicon nanowire field effect transistors (SiNW-FETs).