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Institution

Boston College

EducationBoston, Massachusetts, United States
About: Boston College is a education organization based out in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 9749 authors who have published 25406 publications receiving 1105145 citations. The organization is also known as: BC.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Hematite was chosen as a prototypical system for these proof-of-concept demonstrations because it is an earth-abundant material with great promise for high-efficiency, low-cost water splitting and the fundamental reason for the observed limited photovoltage generation by hematite lies in the relatively positive positions of its valenceand conduction-band edges.
Abstract: Sunlight-driven photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting offers promise as a method for effective solar-energy harvesting and storage. To transform the reaction into economically competitive technology, we need materials that can absorb sunlight broadly, transfer the energy to excited charges at high efficiencies, and catalyze specific reduction and oxidation reactions. Furthermore, the materials should be inexpensive and stable against photocorrosion. To date, an ideal material that satisfies all of these considerations remains elusive. This challenge can, in principle, be addressed by combining various material components, each purposedesigned to offer desired properties with respect to photovoltage generation, charge transport, and catalytic activity. For example, it has recently been shown that the performance of hematite (a-Fe2O3)-based water splitting can indeed be improved by introducing dedicated charge collectors, buried homoand heterojunctions, and oxygen-evolution catalysts. Hematite was chosen as a prototypical system for these proof-of-concept demonstrations because it is an earth-abundant material with great promise for high-efficiency, low-cost water splitting. To realize the potential of hematite, however, we still need to address a key issue concerning its low photovoltage (Vph, typically 0.4 V), which is unreasonably low given that the bandgap of hematite is 2.0 eV. For successful integration with a small-bandgap photocathode, the photovoltage generated at the photoanode needs to be significantly higher so that a total (combined) photovoltage of 1.61 V (or greater, with a minimum overpotential of 0.38 V) is produced. Herein we show that this issue may be addressed by modifying the hematite surface. When decorated with an amorphous NiFeOx layer (Figure 1), hematite produces photovoltages as high as 0.61 V, which enable the observation of turn-on voltages (Von) as low as 0.62 V (versus the reversible hydrogen electrode, RHE) without the need for a second absorber (unless otherwise noted, all electrochemical potentials reported herein are relative to RHE). When a second absorber, Si, was added, a record-low turn-on voltage of 0.32 V was measured. The basis for our approach is illustrated schematically in Figure 2. The fundamental reason for the observed limited photovoltage generation by hematite lies in the relatively positive positions of its valenceand conduction-band edges. However, even within these limits, the Vph value of 0.6–0.8 V calculated for reported flat-band potentials (Vfb) of 0.4–0.6 V has not been reached.We understand the cause of this discrepancy to be a partial Fermi level pinning effect. That is, owing to the existence of surface states, a nonnegligible potential drop takes place within the Helmholtz layer (hH, Figure 2a). [22] The effect is manifested as a more positive Von value, since a significant portion of the applied potential is used to overcome the overpotential hH (Figure 2c). Appropriate surface modification enables the hH to be minimized or eliminated (Figure 2b) and a less positive Von value to be measured (Figure 2d). The effect of the NiFeOx overlayer was profound: it led to a Von shift from approximately 1.0 V to approximately 0.6 V (Figure 1b). Although the apparent effect of the cathodic Von shift is similar to the effect of reducing the kinetic over[*] C. Du, Dr. X. Yang, Dr. M. T. Mayer, H. Hoyt, J. Xie, Dr. G. McMahon, G. Bischoping, Prof. Dr. D. Wang Department of Chemistry Merkert Chemistry Center, Boston College 2609 Beacon Street, Chestnut Hill, MA, 20467 (USA) E-mail: dunwei.wang@bc.edu Homepage: http://www2.bc.edu/dunwei-wang [] These authors contributed equally to this work.

414 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors test whether rents fostered by regulation were shared with labor, and whether firms were discriminating by sharing these rents disproportionately with male workers, and find that average compensation and average wages for banking employees fell after states deregulated.
Abstract: Until the middle of the 1970s, regulations constrained banks' ability to enter new markets. Over the subsequent 25 years, states gradually lifted these restrictions. This paper tests whether rents fostered by regulation were shared with labor, and whether firms were discriminating by sharing these rents disproportionately with male workers. We find that average compensation and average wages for banking employees fell after states deregulated. Male wages fell by about 12 percent after deregulation, whereas women's wages fell by only 3 percent, suggesting that rents were shared mainly with men. Women's share of employment in managerial positions also increased following deregulation.

413 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Maya Tamir1
TL;DR: For example, the authors describes an instrumental account of emotion regulation, review empirical evidence relevant to it, and discuss its implications for promoting adaptive emotional experiences, and discusses its implications in promoting emotional experiences.
Abstract: It is typically assumed that people always want to feel good. Recent evidence, however, demonstrates that people want to feel unpleasant emotions, such as anger or fear, when these emotions promote the attainment of their long-term goals. If emotions are regulated for instrumental reasons, people should want to feel pleasant emotions when immediate benefits outweigh future benefits, but when future benefits outweigh immediate benefits, people may prefer to feel useful emotions, even if they are unpleasant. In this article, I describe an instrumental account of emotion regulation, review empirical evidence relevant to it, and discuss its implications for promoting adaptive emotional experiences.

412 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the counterintuitive finding in prior literature that disclosure triggers litigation could be driven by the endogeneity between disclosure and litigation, and they find no evidence that disclosure potentially deters certain types of litigation.

410 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Men are a unique population to work with in psychotherapy, but what does research indicate about how masculinity relates to therapeutic issues? as mentioned in this paper summarizes research on masculinity's relationship to a range of presenting issues, and discusses the findings according to masculinity "scripts" that clinicians are likely to recognize when working with male clients.
Abstract: Men are a unique population to work with in psychotherapy, but what does research indicate about how masculinity relates to therapeutic issues? Summarizing research on masculinity's relationship to a range of presenting issues, this article organizes and discusses the findings according to masculinity "scripts" that clinicians are likely to recognize when working with male clients. The article then addresses how masculinity is also associated with less help seeking and with negative attitudes toward psychological help seeking. This irony, that traditional masculinity scripts contribute to men's presenting concerns and act as barriers to help seeking, is then addressed through recommendations for training and practice that incorporate a sociocultural context into working with men.

410 citations


Authors

Showing all 9922 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Eric J. Topol1931373151025
Gang Chen1673372149819
Wei Li1581855124748
Daniel L. Schacter14959290148
Asli Demirguc-Kunt13742978166
Stephen G. Ellis12765565073
James A. Russell124102487929
Zhifeng Ren12269571212
Jeffrey J. Popma12170272455
Mike Clarke1131037164328
Kendall N. Houk11299754877
James M. Poterba10748744868
Gregory C. Fu10638132248
Myles Brown10534852423
Richard R. Schrock10372443919
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202398
2022250
20211,282
20201,275
20191,082
20181,058