scispace - formally typeset
Z

Zhongxin Chen

Researcher at National University of Singapore

Publications -  150
Citations -  8150

Zhongxin Chen is an academic researcher from National University of Singapore. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 130 publications receiving 5250 citations. Previous affiliations of Zhongxin Chen include Fudan University & Food and Agriculture Organization.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Hierarchically Porous Carbon Plates Derived from Wood as Bifunctional ORR/OER Electrodes.

TL;DR: As-fabricated cellulose-digested, carbonized wood plates are mechanically strong, have high conductivity, and contain a crosslinked network and natural ion-transport channels and can be employed directly as metal-free electrodes without carbon paper, polymer binders, or carbon black.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regional yield estimation for winter wheat with MODIS-NDVI data in Shandong, China

TL;DR: MODIS-NDVI data, with a 250 m resolution, was used to estimate the winter wheat yield in one of the main winter-wheat-growing regions and the method suggested was good for predicting regional winter wheat production and yield estimation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Direct Synthesis of Large-Area 2D Mo 2 C on In Situ Grown Graphene.

TL;DR: The one-step direct synthesis of 2D Mo2 C-on-graphene film by molten copper-catalyzed chemical vapor deposition (CVD) is reported, showing a much lower onset voltage for hydrogen evolution reactions as compared to Mo 2 C-only electrodes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Value of ecosystem services in China

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimated the ecosystem function and services in China by employing the classification and economic parameters from Costanza et al. The type and area of terrestrial ecosystems were extracted from Vegetation Map of China (1:4 000 000), and then the distribution map of ecosystem services of China was drawn.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecularly thin two-dimensional hybrid perovskites with tunable optoelectronic properties due to reversible surface relaxation.

TL;DR: The results suggest that, thanks to their dynamic structure, atomically thin perovskites enable an additional degree of control for the bandgap engineering of these materials.