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Weilin Jiang

Researcher at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Publications -  175
Citations -  3598

Weilin Jiang is an academic researcher from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Irradiation & Ion. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 175 publications receiving 3286 citations. Previous affiliations of Weilin Jiang include Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory.

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Flexible Pillared Graphene-Paper Electrodes for High-Performance Electrochemical Supercapacitors

TL;DR: Flexible graphene paper (GP) pillared by carbon black (CB) nanoparticles using a simple vacuum filtration method is developed as a high-performance electrode material for supercapacitors that exhibit excellent electrochemical performances and cyclic stabilities.
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Ethanol synthesis from syngas over Rh-based/SiO2 catalysts: A combined experimental and theoretical modeling study

TL;DR: In this article, the reaction kinetics of ethanol synthesis from CO hydrogenation over SiO2 -supported Rh/Mn alloy catalysts were investigated using first-princciples-based kinetic modeling.
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Grain Growth and Phase Stability of Nanocrystalline Cubic Zirconia under Ion Irradiation

TL;DR: Grain growth, oxygen stoichiometry, and phase stability of nanostructurally stabilized cubic zirconia (NSZ) were investigated under 2 MeV Au-ion bombardment at 160 and 400 K to doses up to 35 displacements per atom (dpa) as mentioned in this paper.
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Ion-induced damage accumulation and electron-beam-enhanced recrystallization in Sr Ti O 3

TL;DR: In this article, a disorder accumulation model has been fit to data from this study and from the literature, indicating that defect-stimulated amorphization is the primary amorphisation mechanism up to $1.
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Selective Plasmonic Gas Sensing: H2, NO2, and CO Spectral Discrimination by a Single Au-CeO2 Nanocomposite Film

TL;DR: Results indicate that the Au-CeO( 2) thin film is selective to O(2), H(2, CO, and NO(2) in separate exposures, which, combined with the observed stability over long exposure periods, shows the Au (Ceo) film has good potential as an optical sensing element for harsh environmental conditions.