Huan Jing Ke Xue
May 2023
Nitrogen deposition has serious consequences to global change. Excessive nitrogen deposition leads to nitrogen saturation in forests, resulting in soil acidification, nitrate leaching, an increase in nitrous oxide emissions, and a decrease in plant species diversity and vegetation productivity. Under the reduction of atmospheric nitrogen deposition in Europe, North America, and China, summarizing the response of forests to decreasing nitrogen deposition can not only improve the knowledge framework of the impact of nitrogen deposition on forests, but also evaluate the effects of emission abatement actions, as well as provide scientific basis for future air pollution control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGraphene has been attracting great interest because of its distinctive band structure and physical properties. Today, graphene is limited to small sizes because it is produced mostly by exfoliating graphite. We grew large-area graphene films of the order of centimeters on copper substrates by chemical vapor deposition using methane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe detailed chemical structure of graphite oxide (GO), a layered material prepared from graphite almost 150 years ago and a precursor to chemically modified graphenes, has not been previously resolved because of the pseudo-random chemical functionalization of each layer, as well as variations in exact composition. Carbon-13 (13C) solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (SSNMR) spectra of GO for natural abundance 13C have poor signal-to-noise ratios. Approximately 100% 13C-labeled graphite was made and converted to 13C-labeled GO, and 13C SSNMR was used to reveal details of the chemical bonding network, including the chemical groups and their connections.
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