Browsing by Author "Wang, Liang"
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Item Full-color fluorescent carbon quantum dots(AAAS, 2020) Wang, Liang; Li, Weitao; Yin, Luqiao; Liu, Yijian; Guo, Huazhang; Lai, Jiawei; Han, Yu; Li, Gao; Li, Ming; Zhang, Jianhua; Vajtai, Robert; Ajayan, Pulickel M.; Wu, MinghongQuantum dots have innate advantages as the key component of optoelectronic devices. For white light–emitting diodes (WLEDs), the modulation of the spectrum and color of the device often involves various quantum dots of different emission wavelengths. Here, we fabricate a series of carbon quantum dots (CQDs) through a scalable acid reagent engineering strategy. The growing electron-withdrawing groups on the surface of CQDs that originated from acid reagents boost their photoluminescence wavelength red shift and raise their particle sizes, elucidating the quantum size effect. These CQDs emit bright and remarkably stable full-color fluorescence ranging from blue to red light and even white light. Full-color emissive polymer films and all types of high–color rendering index WLEDs are synthesized by mixing multiple kinds of CQDs in appropriate ratios. The universal electron-donating/withdrawing group engineering approach for synthesizing tunable emissive CQDs will facilitate the progress of carbon-based luminescent materials for manufacturing forward-looking films and devices.Item Projecting the Ringstraße-Building(2015-04-09) Wang, Liang; Colopy, Andrew; Wittenberg, Gordon; Colman, Scott1. Architecture and urbanism works at a scale today like never before. We tend to make building out of certain scale, as we attempt to make building at larger scale, they separate and become independent buildings, and that structures the logics of how we understand the scale of spaces. Whether or not it is a single building, collection of buildings, a city, or urban landscape…Because of the continuous landownership and the aggregation of capitalism in the case of Foxconn, it makes the building at a large scale plausible. This thesis explores the possibility when a single building operates at the scale of a large part of the city, and the ramifications with respect to its effects to the city.Item Re-forming & Representing a Public Library(Rice University, 2012) Wang, Lianghow the library as a public institution could re-address the crucial relation in-between knowledge, media as well as people’s perception of publicness.Item Regulation of functional groups on graphene quantum dots directs selective CO2 to CH4 conversion(Springer Nature, 2021) Zhang, Tianyu; Li, Weitao; Huang, Kai; Guo, Huazhang; Li, Zhengyuan; Fang, Yanbo; Yadav, Ram Manohar; Shanov, Vesselin; Ajayan, Pulickel M.; Wang, Liang; Lian, Cheng; Wu, JingjieA catalyst system with dedicated selectivity toward a single hydrocarbon or oxygenate product is essential to enable the industrial application of electrochemical conversion of CO2 to high-value chemicals. Cu is the only known metal catalyst that can convert CO2 to high-order hydrocarbons and oxygenates. However, the Cu-based catalysts suffer from diverse selectivity. Here, we report that the functionalized graphene quantum dots can direct CO2 to CH4 conversion with simultaneous high selectivity and production rate. The electron-donating groups facilitate the yield of CH4 from CO2 electro-reduction while electron-withdrawing groups suppress CO2 electro-reduction. The yield of CH4 on electron-donating group functionalized graphene quantum dots is positively correlated to the electron-donating ability and content of electron-donating group. The graphene quantum dots functionalized by either –OH or –NH2 functional group could achieve Faradaic efficiency of 70.0% for CH4 at −200 mA cm−2 partial current density of CH4. The superior yield of CH4 on electron-donating group- over the electron-withdrawing group-functionalized graphene quantum dots possibly originates from the maintenance of higher charge density of potential active sites (neighboring C or N) and the interaction between the electron-donating group and key intermediates. This work provides insight into the design of active carbon catalysts at the molecular scale for the CO2 electro-reduction.