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Zheng Chen

Researcher at University of California, San Diego

Publications -  122
Citations -  10598

Zheng Chen is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electrolyte & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 96 publications receiving 7165 citations. Previous affiliations of Zheng Chen include University of California, Los Angeles & Tianjin University.

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Self-healing chemistry enables the stable operation of silicon microparticle anodes for high-energy lithium-ion batteries

TL;DR: It is shown that anodes made from low-cost SiMPs, for which stable deep galvanostatic cycling was previously impossible, can now have an excellent cycle life when coated with a self-healing polymer and attain a cycle life ten times longer than state-of-art anodesmade from Si MPs and still retain a high capacity.
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High-performance supercapacitors based on intertwined CNT/V2O5 nanowire nanocomposites.

TL;DR: An ideal electrical energy storage device provides both high energy and power density and supercapacitors exhibit signifi cantly higher power densities compared to batteries and would be excellent candidates for numerous electronic devices and industrial applications if their energy density could be improved.
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High-performance sodium-ion pseudocapacitors based on hierarchically porous nanowire composites

TL;DR: Using a simple hydrothermal process, interpenetrating porous networks consisting of layer-structured V(2)O(5) nanowires and carbon nanotubes and CNTs are synthesized, enabling the fabrication of high-performance Na-ion pseudocapacitors with an organic electrolyte.
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Design and Synthesis of Hierarchical Nanowire Composites for Electrochemical Energy Storage

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors synthesize interpenetrating carbon nanotubes and vanadium pentoxide (V 2 O 5 ) nanowires networks via a simple in situ hydrothermal process.
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Hierarchical N-Doped Carbon as CO2 Adsorbent with High CO2 Selectivity from Rationally Designed Polypyrrole Precursor.

TL;DR: The controlled synthesis of a novel N-doped hierarchical carbon that exhibits record-high Henry's law CO2/N2 selectivity among physisorptive carbons while having a high CO2 adsorption capacity is reported.