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Zhengwei You

Researcher at Donghua University

Publications -  127
Citations -  4110

Zhengwei You is an academic researcher from Donghua University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 101 publications receiving 2154 citations. Previous affiliations of Zhengwei You include University of Pittsburgh & Nanjing University of Science and Technology.

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A Highly Efficient Self-Healing Elastomer with Unprecedented Mechanical Properties.

TL;DR: Density functional theory calculations reveal that the coordination of Cu(II) plays a critical role in accelerating the reversible dissociation of dimethylglyoxime-urethane, which is important to the excellent performance of the self-healing elastomer.
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Mechanically and Electronically Robust Transparent Organohydrogel Fibers.

TL;DR: Strain sensors made from the organohydrogel fibers accurately capture high‐frequency and high‐speed motion and exhibit little drift for 1000 stretch–release cycles, and are powerful for detecting rapid cyclic motions such as engine valves and are difficult to reach by previously reported conductive fibers.
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Ionogel-based, highly stretchable, transparent, durable triboelectric nanogenerators for energy harvesting and motion sensing over a wide temperature range

TL;DR: In this paper, an ionogel-based triboelectric nanogenerator (I-TENG) is designed to significantly broaden the application temperature range and duration while retaining all the superior properties of H-Tengs.
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Highly efficient self-healable and dual responsive hydrogel-based deformable triboelectric nanogenerators for wearable electronics

TL;DR: In this paper, a soft hydrogel based self-healing triboelectric nanogenerator (HS-TENG), which is highly deformable, and both mechanically and electrically selfhealable, has been successfully fabricated from a poly(vinyl alcohol)/agarose hyrogel.
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Mechanically and biologically skin-like elastomers for bio-integrated electronics

TL;DR: This work prepares mechanically and biologically skin-like materials (PSeD-U elastomers) by designing a unique physical and covalent hybrid crosslinking structure and demonstrates the cytocompatibility and biodegradability to achieve better integration with tissues.