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Xiaobo Chen

Researcher at University of Missouri–Kansas City

Publications -  255
Citations -  56890

Xiaobo Chen is an academic researcher from University of Missouri–Kansas City. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Photocatalysis. The author has an hindex of 69, co-authored 199 publications receiving 48131 citations. Previous affiliations of Xiaobo Chen include University of California, Berkeley & Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics.

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Interfacial Solar Vapor Generation: Introducing Students to Experimental Procedures and Analysis for Efficiently Harvesting Energy and Generating Vapor at the Air-Water Interface.

TL;DR: In this paper, the basic experimental procedures and analysis for interfacial solar vapor generation were introduced and analyzed for different types of solar-to-vapor generation, and the experimental results were presented.
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Highly Efficient Formation of Visible Light Tunable TiO2‐xNx Photocatalysts and Their Transformation at the Nanoscale.

TL;DR: In this article, a simple nanoscale exclusive synthesis route was used to obtain catalytically active TiO2-xNx anatase structured particles whose absorption onset extends well into the visible region at λ ∼ 550 nm.
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Decorating tungsten oxide on g-C3N4 nanosheet as Z-scheme heterogeneous photocatalyst for efficient hydrogen evolution

TL;DR: In this article, a facile hydrothermal method was developed to prepare heterogeneous photocatalyst constructed by decorating nanorod-assembled orbicular WO3·0.5H2O on the surface of porous carbon nitride nanosheets.
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Photocatalytic behaviour of anodised titanium using different cathodes

TL;DR: In the last decades, titanium dioxide (TiO2) has been widely researched because of its applications in photocatalytic environmental pollution removal and in hydrogen generation as mentioned in this paper, and this work de...
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The room-temperature, ambient-pressure conversion of CO2 into value-added pharmaceutical products quinazoline-2,4(1H,3H)-diones.

TL;DR: In this article, a high-efficiency conversion of CO2 to important industrial raw materials for pharmaceutical compounds, quinazoline-2,4(1H,3H)-diones, via reactions with 2-aminobenzonitriles at room temperature and under ambient pressure, with high conversion yields (91.5-99.3%).