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Xin Min

Researcher at Shanghai Jiao Tong University

Publications -  18
Citations -  244

Xin Min is an academic researcher from Shanghai Jiao Tong University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications receiving 49 citations.

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Synthesis of MnO2 derived from spent lithium-ion batteries via advanced oxidation and its application in VOCs oxidation

TL;DR: The TD/GC-MS result indicates that toluene may be oxidized in the sequence of toLUene - benzyl alcohol - benzaldehyde-benzoic acid - acetic acid, 2-cyclohexen-1-one, 4-hydroxy-, cyclopent-4-ene-1,3-dione - carbon dioxide, and this method provides a route for the resource utilization of spent LIBs and the synthesis of MnO2.
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Promotional removal of oxygenated VOC over manganese-based multi oxides from spent lithium-ions manganate batteries: Modification with Fe, Bi and Ce dopants.

TL;DR: In-situ DRIFTS results imply that main oxygen-containing functional groups can be observed during VOC oxidation and by comparison, it can be found that gas-phase O2 plays a crucial role in facilitating the further oxidation of by-products into CO2.
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Sustainably recycling spent lithium-ion batteries to prepare magnetically separable cobalt ferrite for catalytic degradation of bisphenol A via peroxymonosulfate activation

TL;DR: In this paper, a selective separation-recovery process based on tuning organic acid was proposed to the resource recycling of spent lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) for the first time.
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Constructing magnetically separable manganese-based spinel ferrite from spent ternary lithium-ion batteries for efficient degradation of bisphenol A via peroxymonosulfate activation

TL;DR: A magnetically separable manganese-based spinel ferrite (MFO-LIBs) was synthesized using spent ternary lithium-ion batteries for the first time in this article .
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Recovery of cathode materials from spent lithium-ion batteries and their application in preparing multi-metal oxides for the removal of oxygenated VOCs: Effect of synthetic methods

TL;DR: Evaluation results indicate that MnOx(SY)(HT) sample prepared via hydrothermal method and CoOx(GS)(CP) synthesized via co-precipitation method had better performance, because they have higher specific surface area, higher concentration of active oxygen species and high-valence metal ion, as well as better low-temperature reducibility compared to the other multi-metal oxides used in the study.