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Zhi-Min Liao

Researcher at Peking University

Publications -  206
Citations -  8010

Zhi-Min Liao is an academic researcher from Peking University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Graphene & Nanowire. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 181 publications receiving 6723 citations. Previous affiliations of Zhi-Min Liao include Trinity College, Dublin & Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

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Giant negative magnetoresistance induced by the chiral anomaly in individual Cd3As2 nanowires.

TL;DR: A large negative magnetoresistance with magnitude of −63% at 60 K and −11% at 300’K in individual Cd3As2 nanowires is shown to give evidence of the chiral anomaly effect and are valuable for understanding the Weyl fermions in Dirac semimetals.
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Self-powered, ultrafast, visible-blind UV detection and optical logical operation based on ZnO/GaN nanoscale p-n junctions.

TL;DR: Ultrafast-response (20 μs) UV detectors, which are visible-blind and self-powered, in devices where an n-type ZnO nanowire partially lies on a p-type GaN film, are demonstrated.
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Ultrafast growth of single-crystal graphene assisted by a continuous oxygen supply

TL;DR: It is shown that single-crystal graphene can be grown on copper foils with a growth rate of 60 μm-1, and single- Crystal graphene domains with a lateral size of 0.3 mm are able to be grown with just 5 s.
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Strong Second-Harmonic Generation in Atomic Layered GaSe.

TL;DR: The first observation of strong optical second-harmonic generation (SHG) in monolayer GaSe under nonresonant excitation and emission condition is reported and provides a route toward exploring the structural information and the possibility to observe other nonlinear effects in GaSe atomic layers.
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Strain dependent resistance in chemical vapor deposition grown graphene

TL;DR: In this article, the strain dependence of conductance of monolayer graphene has been studied experimentally and the results illustrate the notable transitions: the slight increase, the dramatic decrease, and the sudden dropping of the conductance by gradually increasing the uniaxial strain.