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Weixin Huang

Bio: Weixin Huang is an academic researcher from University of Science and Technology of China. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Adsorption. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 355 publications receiving 13131 citations. Previous affiliations of Weixin Huang include South China University of Technology & Stanford University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental and theoretical results demonstrate that lower a coordination number facilitates activation of CO2 to the CO2.- intermediate and hence enhances CO2 electroreduction activity.
Abstract: The design of active, selective, and stable CO2 reduction electrocatalysts is still challenging. A series of atomically dispersed Co catalysts with different nitrogen coordination numbers were prepared and their CO2 electroreduction catalytic performance was explored. The best catalyst, atomically dispersed Co with two-coordinate nitrogen atoms, achieves both high selectivity and superior activity with 94 % CO formation Faradaic efficiency and a current density of 18.1 mA cm-2 at an overpotential of 520 mV. The CO formation turnover frequency reaches a record value of 18 200 h-1 , surpassing most reported metal-based catalysts under comparable conditions. Our experimental and theoretical results demonstrate that lower a coordination number facilitates activation of CO2 to the CO2.- intermediate and hence enhances CO2 electroreduction activity.

834 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is indicated that the heterostructured combination of g-C3N4, Ag and TiO2 microspheres provides synergistic photocatalytic activity through an efficient electron transfer process.
Abstract: The visible-light photocatalytic performance of the heterostructured g-C3N4/Ag/TiO2 microspheres was investigated. As an electron-conduction bridge, Ag nanoparticles were photodeposited as the interlayer between g-C3N4 and the surface of TiO2 microspheres to increase visible-light absorption via the surface plasmon resonance. The interface between Ag/TiO2 and g-C3N4 facilitates the direct migration of photoinduced electrons from g-C3N4 to Ag/TiO2, which is conductive to retarding the recombination of electron–holes. The g-C3N4 (4%)/Ag/TiO2 microsphere sample shows significant photocatalytic activity, higher than the sum of g-C3N4 (1.2 mg) and Ag/TiO2 samples, or the sum of TiO2 and Ag/g-C3N4 (1.8 mg) samples. It indicates that the heterostructured combination of g-C3N4, Ag and TiO2 microspheres provides synergistic photocatalytic activity through an efficient electron transfer process.

572 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the geometric and electronic structures of the cerium oxide (CeO 2 )-titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ), mixed oxides were investigated by means of X-ray diffraction (XRD), high-resolution Xray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and Raman Spectroscopy excited by 325 and 514.5 millimeters.

318 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A doping strategy to induce a phase transition in cobalt selenide and boost H2-evolution performance is presented, with striking catalysis performance can be attributed to the favorable electronic structure and local coordination environment created by this doping-induced structural phase transition strategy.
Abstract: Transition metal dichalcogenide materials have been explored extensively as catalysts to negotiate the hydrogen evolution reaction, but they often run at a large excess thermodynamic cost. Although activating strategies, such as defects and composition engineering, have led to remarkable activity gains, there remains the requirement for better performance that aims for real device applications. We report here a phosphorus-doping-induced phase transition from cubic to orthorhombic phases in CoSe2. It has been found that the achieved orthorhombic CoSe2 with appropriate phosphorus dopant (8 wt%) needs the lowest overpotential of 104 mV at 10 mA cm−2 in 1 M KOH, with onset potential as small as −31 mV. This catalyst demonstrates negligible activity decay after 20 h of operation. The striking catalysis performance can be attributed to the favorable electronic structure and local coordination environment created by this doping-induced structural phase transition strategy. Transition metal dichalcogenides represent an exciting class of earth-abundant hydrogen-from-water electrocatalysts, although low efficiencies limit commercialization. Here, authors present a doping strategy to induce a phase transition in cobalt selenide and boost H2-evolution performance.

316 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
18 May 2017-ACS Nano
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that functionalizing graphene using hydrophilic groups can greatly enhance the solar thermal steam generation efficiency and can be potentially integrated with the existing macroscopic heat isolation strategies to further improve the overall solar-to-vapor conversion efficiency.
Abstract: The ability to efficiently utilize solar thermal energy to enable liquid-to-vapor phase transition has great technological implications for a wide variety of applications, such as water treatment and chemical fractionation Here, we demonstrate that functionalizing graphene using hydrophilic groups can greatly enhance the solar thermal steam generation efficiency Our results show that specially functionalized graphene can improve the overall solar-to-vapor efficiency from 38% to 48% at one sun conditions compared to chemically reduced graphene oxide Our experiments show that such an improvement is a surface effect mainly attributed to the more hydrophilic feature of functionalized graphene, which influences the water meniscus profile at the vapor–liquid interface due to capillary effect This will lead to thinner water films close to the three-phase contact line, where the water surface temperature is higher since the resistance of thinner water film is smaller, leading to more efficient evaporation Th

307 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Approaches to Modifying the Electronic Band Structure for Visible-Light Harvesting and its Applications d0 Metal Oxide Photocatalysts 6518 4.4.1.
Abstract: 2.3. Evaluation of Photocatalytic Water Splitting 6507 2.3.1. Photocatalytic Activity 6507 2.3.2. Photocatalytic Stability 6507 3. UV-Active Photocatalysts for Water Splitting 6507 3.1. d0 Metal Oxide Photocatalyts 6507 3.1.1. Ti-, Zr-Based Oxides 6507 3.1.2. Nb-, Ta-Based Oxides 6514 3.1.3. W-, Mo-Based Oxides 6517 3.1.4. Other d0 Metal Oxides 6518 3.2. d10 Metal Oxide Photocatalyts 6518 3.3. f0 Metal Oxide Photocatalysts 6518 3.4. Nonoxide Photocatalysts 6518 4. Approaches to Modifying the Electronic Band Structure for Visible-Light Harvesting 6519

6,332 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is anticipated that this review can stimulate a new research doorway to facilitate the next generation of g-C3N4-based photocatalysts with ameliorated performances by harnessing the outstanding structural, electronic, and optical properties for the development of a sustainable future without environmental detriment.
Abstract: As a fascinating conjugated polymer, graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) has become a new research hotspot and drawn broad interdisciplinary attention as a metal-free and visible-light-responsive photocatalyst in the arena of solar energy conversion and environmental remediation. This is due to its appealing electronic band structure, high physicochemical stability, and “earth-abundant” nature. This critical review summarizes a panorama of the latest progress related to the design and construction of pristine g-C3N4 and g-C3N4-based nanocomposites, including (1) nanoarchitecture design of bare g-C3N4, such as hard and soft templating approaches, supramolecular preorganization assembly, exfoliation, and template-free synthesis routes, (2) functionalization of g-C3N4 at an atomic level (elemental doping) and molecular level (copolymerization), and (3) modification of g-C3N4 with well-matched energy levels of another semiconductor or a metal as a cocatalyst to form heterojunction nanostructures. The constructi...

5,054 citations

01 Jan 2012

3,692 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Review will compare the results obtained from different systems and try to give a picture on how different types of metal species work in different reactions and give perspectives on the future directions toward better understanding of the catalytic behavior of different metal entities in a unifying manner.
Abstract: Metal species with different size (single atoms, nanoclusters, and nanoparticles) show different catalytic behavior for various heterogeneous catalytic reactions. It has been shown in the literature that many factors including the particle size, shape, chemical composition, metal–support interaction, and metal–reactant/solvent interaction can have significant influences on the catalytic properties of metal catalysts. The recent developments of well-controlled synthesis methodologies and advanced characterization tools allow one to correlate the relationships at the molecular level. In this Review, the electronic and geometric structures of single atoms, nanoclusters, and nanoparticles will be discussed. Furthermore, we will summarize the catalytic applications of single atoms, nanoclusters, and nanoparticles for different types of reactions, including CO oxidation, selective oxidation, selective hydrogenation, organic reactions, electrocatalytic, and photocatalytic reactions. We will compare the results o...

2,700 citations