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Song Jiang

Researcher at University of Science and Technology of China

Publications -  26
Citations -  2619

Song Jiang is an academic researcher from University of Science and Technology of China. The author has contributed to research in topics: Raman spectroscopy & Scanning tunneling microscope. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 26 publications receiving 1952 citations. Previous affiliations of Song Jiang include Northwestern University & University of Strasbourg.

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Chemical mapping of a single molecule by plasmon-enhanced Raman scattering

TL;DR: Raman spectral imaging with spatial resolution below one nanometre is demonstrated, resolving the inner structure and surface configuration of a single molecule by spectrally matching the resonance of the nanocavity plasmon to the molecular vibronic transitions, particularly the downward transition responsible for the emission of Raman photons.
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Distinguishing adjacent molecules on a surface using plasmon-enhanced Raman scattering

TL;DR: Two different adjacent molecules that are within van der Waals contact and of very similar chemical structure on a silver surface can be distinguished in real space using a nonlinear scanning tunnelling microscope-controlled TERS set-up.
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Water‐Induced Growth of a Highly Oriented Mesoporous Graphitic Carbon Nanospring for Fast Potassium‐Ion Adsorption/Intercalation Storage

TL;DR: It is confirmed that OGCS undergoes K-adsorption in mesopores at first and then K-intercalation in graphite layer to form KC 8 with low voltage, and the synthesized OGCS electrode shows a much better K-storage performance than that of unoriented graphitic carbon.
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Operando Characterization of Iron Phthalocyanine Deactivation during Oxygen Reduction Reaction Using Electrochemical Tip-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy

TL;DR: The observation affirms that FePc demetallation during ORR proceeds via a direct loss of Fe2+ and that carbon corrosion is not the operative mechanism, and establishes EC-TERS as a promising technique for the operando characterization of electrocatalytic reactions at the molecular scale.