• Login
    Search 
    •   Home
    • Academic Divisions
    • Physical Sciences & Engineering (PSE)
    • Materials Science and Engineering Program
    • Search
    •   Home
    • Academic Divisions
    • Physical Sciences & Engineering (PSE)
    • Materials Science and Engineering Program
    • Search
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Filter by Category

    AuthorSchwingenschlögl, Udo (427)Alshareef, Husam N. (280)Zhang, Xixiang (255)Bakr, Osman (182)Li, Lain-Jong (163)View MoreDepartmentMaterials Science and Engineering Program (2361)Physical Sciences and Engineering (PSE) Division (2352)KAUST Solar Center (KSC) (769)Chemical Science Program (267)KAUST Catalysis Center (KCC) (263)View MoreJournalApplied Physics Letters (122)Physical Review B (112)Advanced Materials (87)ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (70)Advanced Functional Materials (69)View MoreKAUST Acknowledged Support UnitOffice of Sponsored Research (OSR) (16)Baseline Research Funding (10)Competitive Research Funds (10)Supercomputing Laboratory (10)Center for Advanced Molecular Photovoltaics (CAMP) (9)View MoreKAUST Grant NumberKUS-11-009-21 (26)BAS/1/1664-01-01 (16)BAS/1/1614-01-01 (14)KUS-C1-015-21 (13)CRG_R2_13_BEAU_KAUST_1 (10)View MorePatent StatusPublished Application (17)Granted Patent (1)PublisherAmerican Chemical Society (ACS) (456)Wiley (381)Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) (248)Elsevier BV (244)Springer Nature (191)View MoreSubjectCell Parameters (47)Crystal Structure (47)Crystal System (47)Crystallography (47)Experimental 3D Coordinates (47)View MoreThesis/Dissertation AdvisorAlshareef, Husam N. (13)Schwingenschlögl, Udo (13)Amassian, Aram (10)Bakr, Osman (7)Di Fabrizio, Enzo M. (6)View MoreThesis/Dissertation ProgramMaterials Science and Engineering (82)TypeArticle (2134)Conference Paper (96)Dissertation (53)Dataset (48)Thesis (29)View MoreYear (Issue Date)2019 (257)2018 (326)2017 (391)2016 (360)2015 (308)View MoreItem AvailabilityOpen Access (1188)Metadata Only (1105)Embargoed (138)

    Browse

    All of KAUSTCommunitiesIssue DateSubmit DateThis CollectionIssue DateSubmit Date

    My Account

    Login

    Quick Links

    Open Access PolicyORCID LibguidePlumX LibguideSubmit an Item

    Statistics

    Display statistics
     

    Search

    Show Advanced FiltersHide Advanced Filters

    Filters

    Now showing items 1-10 of 2431

    • List view
    • Grid view
    • Sort Options:
    • Relevance
    • Title Asc
    • Title Desc
    • Issue Date Asc
    • Issue Date Desc
    • Submit Date Asc
    • Submit Date Desc
    • Results Per Page:
    • 5
    • 10
    • 20
    • 40
    • 60
    • 80
    • 100

    • 50CSV
    • 50RefMan
    • 50EndNote
    • 50BibTex
    • Selective Export
    • Select All
    • Help
    Thumbnail

    Coordination Polymer Modified Separator for Mitigating Polysulfide Shuttle Effect in Lithium-Sulfur Batteries

    Wan, Yi (2017-11-19) [Thesis]
    Advisor: Li, Lain-Jong
    Committee members: Zhang, Xixiang; Huang, Kuo-Wei
    The development of the new cathode and anode materials of Lithium-Ion Batteries (LIBs) with high energy density and outstanding electrochemical performance is of substantial technological importance due to the ever-increasing demand for economic and efficient energy storage system. Because of the abundance of element sulfur and high theoretical energy density, Lithium-Sulfur (Li-S) batteries have become one of the most promising candidates for the next-generation energy storage system. However, the shuttling effect of electrolyte-soluble polysulfides severely impedes the cell performance and commercialization of Li-S batteries, and significant progress have been made to mitigate this shuttle effect in the past two decades. Coordination polymers (CPs) or Metal-organic Frameworks (MOFs) have been attracted much attention by virtue of their controllable porosity, nanometer cavity sizes and high surface areas, which supposed to be an available material in suppressing polysulfide migration. In this thesis, we investigate different mechanisms of mitigating polysulfide diffusion by applying a layer of MOFs (including Y-FTZB, ZIF-7, ZIF-8, and HKUST-1) on a separator. We also fabricate a new free-standing 2D coordination polymer Zn2(Benzimidazolate)2(OH)2 with rich hydroxyl (OH-) groups by using a simple, scalable and low cost method at air/water surface. Our results suggest that the chemical stability, the cluster morphology and the surface function groups of MOFs shows a greater impact on minimizing the shuttling effect in Li-S batteries, other than the internal cavity size in MOFs. Meanwhile, the new design of 2D coordination polymer efficiently mitigate the shuttling effect in Li-S battery resulting in a largely promotion of the battery capacity to 1407 mAh g-1 at 0.1 C and excellent cycling performance (capacity retention of 98% after 200 cycles at 0.25C). Such excellent cell performance is mainly owing to the fancying physical and chemical structure controllability of MOFs or CPs, which has substantial potential for future commercial utilizations.
    Thumbnail

    Aggregation of Organic Semiconductors and Its Influence on Carrier Transport and Solar Cell Performance

    Hu, Hanlin (2017-08-28) [Dissertation]
    Advisor: Amassian, Aram
    Committee members: Alshareef, Husam N.; McCulloch, Iain; Michels, Jasper J.
    Photovoltaic technology based on solution-processable organic solar cells (OSCs) provides a promising route towards a low-cost strategy to address the sharply increasing energy demands worldwide. However, up to date, the vast majority of solar cell reports have been based on spin-cast BHJ layers. Spin coating is not compatible with high speed and scalable coating processes, such as blade-coating and slot-die coating, which require the nanoscale morphology to be reproduced in scalable coating methods. And tolerance for thicker BHJ films would also facilitate high speed scalable coating. In the first part of this thesis, we investigate how pre-aggregating the conjugated polymer in solution impacts the charge transport in polymer films. We use P3HT in a wide range of molecular weights in different solvents of common use in organic electronics to investigate how they impact the aggregation behavior in the ink and in the solid state. By deliberately disentangling polymer chains via sonication of the solution in the presence of solvophobic driving forces, we show a remarkable ability to tune aggregation, which directly impacts charge transport, as measured in the context of field effect transistors. The second part of this thesis looks at the impact of the solution-coating method and the photovoltaic performance gap when applying modern BHJ inks developed for spin coating to scalable coating methods, namely blade coating. We ascribe this to significant differences in the drying kinetics between the processes. Emulating the drying kinetics of spin-coating was found to result in performance parity as well as morphological parity across several systems, resulting in demonstration of PTB7:PC71BM solar cells with efficiency of 9% and 6.5% PCEs on glass and flexible PET substrates, respectively. The last part of this thesis looks into going beyond performance parity by leveraging the differences of the scalable coating method to enable highly efficient thick solar cells which surpass the performance of spin-cast devices. High-speed wire-bar coating (up to 0.25 m/s) was used to produce OPV devices with power conversion efficiency (PCE) >10% and significantly outperforming devices prepared by spin-coating the BHJ layer for thicknesses >100 nm by maintaining a higher fill factor.
    Thumbnail

    Rashba effect and enriched spin-valley coupling in GaX / MX2 ( M = Mo, W; X = S, Se, Te) heterostructures

    Zhang, Qingyun; Schwingenschlögl, Udo (Physical Review B, American Physical Society (APS), 2018-04-16) [Article]
    Using first-principles calculations, we investigate the electronic properties of the two-dimensional GaX/MX2 (M = Mo, W; X = S, Se, Te) heterostructures. Orbital hybridization between GaX and MX2 is found to result in Rashba splitting at the valence-band edge around the Γ point, which grows for increasing strength of the spin-orbit coupling in the p orbitals of the chalcogenide atoms. The location of the valence-band maximum in the Brillouin zone can be tuned by strain and application of an out-of-plane electric field. The coexistence of Rashba splitting (in-plane spin direction) and band splitting at the K and K′ valleys (out-of-plane spin direction) makes GaX/MX2 heterostructures interesting for spintronics and valleytronics. They are promising candidates for two-dimensional spin-field-effect transistors and spin-valley Hall effect devices. Our findings shed light on the spin-valley coupling in van der Waals heterostructures.
    Thumbnail

    The influence of metal interlayers on the structural and optical properties of nano-crystalline TiO 2 films

    Yang, Yong; Zhang, Qiang; Zhang, Bei; Mi, Wenbo; Chen, Long; Li, Lin; Zhao, Chao; Diallo, Elhadj; Zhang, Xixiang (Applied Surface Science, Elsevier BV, 2012-03) [Article]
    TiO 2-M-TiO 2 (M = W, Co and Ag) multilayer films have been deposited on glass substrates using reactive magnetron sputtering, then annealed in air for 2 h at 500°C. The structure, surface morphology and optical properties of the films have been studied using X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy and UV-vis spectroscopy. The TiO 2-W-TiO 2 and TiO 2-Co-TiO 2 films showed crystalline phases, whereas the TiO 2-Ag-TiO 2 films remained in the amorphous state. The crystallization temperature for the TiO 2-M-TiO 2 films decreased significantly compared with pure TiO 2 film deposited on quartz. Detailed analysis of the Raman spectra suggested that the crystallization of TiO 2-M-TiO 2 films was associated with the large structural deformation imposed by the oxidation of intermediate metal layers. Moreover, the optical band gap of the films narrowed due to the appearance of impurity levels as the metal ions migrated into the TiO 2 matrix. These results indicate that the insertion of intermediate metal layers provides a feasible access to improve the structural and optical properties of anatase TiO 2 films, leading to promising applications in the field of photocatalysis. © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
    Thumbnail

    Anomalous Hall effect in polycrystalline Ni films

    Guo, Zaibing; Mi, Wenbo; Zhang, Qiang; Zhang, Bei; Aboljadayel, Razan; Zhang, Xixiang (Solid State Communications, Elsevier BV, 2012-02) [Article]
    We systematically studied the anomalous Hall effect in a series of polycrystalline Ni films with thickness ranging from 4 to 200 nm. It is found that both the longitudinal and anomalous Hall resistivity increased greatly as film thickness decreased. This enhancement should be related to the surface scattering. In the ultrathin films (46 nm thick), weak localization corrections to anomalous Hall conductivity were studied. The granular model, taking into account the dominated intergranular tunneling, has been employed to explain this phenomenon, which can explain the weak dependence of anomalous Hall resistivity on longitudinal resistivity as well. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
    Thumbnail

    Low-Temperature Deposition of Layered SnSe2 for Heterojunction Diodes

    Serna, Martha I.; Hasan, Syed M. N.; Nam, S.; El Bouanani, Lidia; Moreno, Salvador; Choi, Hyunjoo; Alshareef, Husam N.; Minary-Jolandan, Majid; Quevedo-Lopez, Manuel A. (Advanced Materials Interfaces, Wiley, 2018-04-27) [Article]
    Tin diselenide (SnSe) has been recently investigated as an alternative layered metal dichalcogenide due to its unique electrical and optoelectronics properties. Although there are several reports on the deposition of layered crystalline SnSe films by chemical and physical methods, synthesis methods like pulsed laser deposition (PLD) are not reported. An attractive feature of PLD is that it can be used to grow 2D films over large areas. In this report, a deposition process to grow stoichiometric SnSe on different substrates such as single crystals (Sapphire) and amorphous oxides (SiO and HfO) is reported. A detailed process flow for the growth of 2D SnSe at temperatures of 300 °C is presented, which is substantially lower than temperatures used in chemical vapor deposition and molecular beam epitaxy. The 2D SnSe films exhibit a mobility of ≈4.0 cm V s, and are successfully used to demonstrate SnSe/p-Si heterojunction diodes. The diodes show I /I ratios of 10-10 with a turn on voltage of <0.5 V, and ideality factors of 1.2-1.4, depending on the SnSe film growth conditions.
    Thumbnail

    Thermal History Devices, Systems For Thermal History Detection, And Methods For Thermal History Detection

    Caraveo Frescas, Jesus Alfonso; Alshareef, Husam N. (2015-05-28) [Patent]
    Embodiments of the present disclosure include nanowire field-effect transistors, systems for temperature history detection, methods for thermal history detection, a matrix of field effect transistors, and the like.
    Thumbnail

    Micro-and/or nano-scale patterned porous membranes, methods of making membranes, and methods of using membranes

    Wang, Xianbin; Chen, Wei; Wang, Zhihong; Zhang, Xixiang; Yue, Weisheng; Lai, Zhiping (2015-01-22) [Patent]
    Embodiments of the present disclosure provide for materials that include a pre-designed patterned, porous membrane (e.g., micro- and/or nano-scale patterned), structures or devices that include a pre-designed patterned, porous membrane, methods of making pre-designed patterned, porous membranes, methods of separation, and the like.
    Thumbnail

    The effect of cerium valence states at cerium oxide nanoparticle surfaces on cell proliferation

    Naganuma, Tamaki; Traversa, Enrico (Biomaterials, Elsevier BV, 2014-05) [Article]
    Understanding and controlling cell proliferation on biomaterial surfaces is critical for scaffold/artificial-niche design in tissue engineering. The mechanism by which underlying integrin ligates with functionalized biomaterials to induce cell proliferation is still not completely understood. In this study, poly-l-lactide (PL) scaffold surfaces were functionalized using layers of cerium oxide nanoparticles (CNPs), which have recently attracted attention for use in therapeutic application due to their catalytic ability of Ce4+ and Ce3+ sites. To isolate the influence of Ce valance states of CNPs on cell proliferation, human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) and osteoblast-like cells (MG63) were cultured on the PL/CNP surfaces with dominant Ce4+ and Ce3+ regions. Despite cell type (hMSCs and MG63 cells), different surface features of Ce4+ and Ce3+ regions clearly promoted and inhibited cell spreading, migration and adhesion behavior, resulting in rapid and slow cell proliferation, respectively. Cell proliferation results of various modified CNPs with different surface charge and hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity, indicate that Ce valence states closely correlated with the specific cell morphologies and cell-material interactions that trigger cell proliferation. This finding suggests that the cell-material interactions, which influence cell proliferation, may be controlled by introduction of metal elements with different valence states onto the biomaterial surface. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
    Thumbnail

    Membrane for distillation including nanostructures, methods of making membranes, and methods of desalination and separation

    Lai, Zhiping; Huang, Kuo-Wei; Chen, Wei (2016-01-21) [Patent]
    In accordance with the purpose(s) of the present disclosure, as embodied and broadly described herein, embodiments of the present disclosure provide membranes, methods of making the membrane, systems including the membrane, methods of separation, methods of desalination, and the like.
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • . . .
    • 244
    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2019  DuraSpace
    Quick Guide | Contact Us | Send Feedback
    Open Repository is a service hosted by 
    Atmire NV
     

    Export search results

    The export option will allow you to export the current search results of the entered query to a file. Different formats are available for download. To export the items, click on the button corresponding with the preferred download format.

    By default, clicking on the export buttons will result in a download of the allowed maximum amount of items. For anonymous users the allowed maximum amount is 50 search results.

    To select a subset of the search results, click "Selective Export" button and make a selection of the items you want to export. The amount of items that can be exported at once is similarly restricted as the full export.

    After making a selection, click one of the export format buttons. The amount of items that will be exported is indicated in the bubble next to export format.