Publications by authors named "Jian Wei Chai"

Temperature-dependent transport measurements are performed on the same set of chemical vapor deposition (CVD)-grown WS single- and bilayer devices before and after atomic layer deposition (ALD) of HfO . This isolates the influence of HfO deposition on low-temperature carrier transport and shows that carrier mobility is not charge impurity limited as commonly thought, but due to another important but commonly overlooked factor: interface roughness. This finding is corroborated by circular dichroic photoluminescence spectroscopy, X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, cross-sectional scanning transmission electron microscopy, carrier-transport modeling, and density functional modeling.

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Utilizing the size-dependent adsorption properties of ruthenium carbonyl clusters (Ru-carbon monoxide (CO)) onto graphene oxide (GO), a facile CO-release platform for in situ vasodilation as a treatment for stroke-related vascular diseases is developed. The rate and amount of formation of the CO-release-active Ru (CO) species can be modulated by a simple mixing procedure at room temperature. The subsequent thermally induced oxidation of Ru (CO) to RuO on the GO surface results in the release of CO.

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The miniaturization of future electronic devices requires the knowledge of interfacial properties between two-dimensional channel materials and high-κ dielectrics in the limit of one atomic layer thickness. In this report, by combining particle-swarm optimization method with first-principles calculations, we present a detailed study of structural, electronic, mechanical, and dielectric properties of Al2O3 monolayer. We predict that planar Al2O3 monolayer is globally stable with a direct band gap of 5.

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The maximum of the color-conferring charge-transfer (CT) band in Prussian Blue (PB) varies with the electrochemically introduced cation M(z+) incorporated (as "supernumerary") for charge neutrality, and the dependence on particular properties of the M(z+) has been sought. With alkali-metal ions, the CT-maximum shifts are in the same sequence as the PB mass changes on M+ insertion; the effect on the CT ground state of the intra-lattice interaction of an M+ with the ferrocyanide CN- moiety (competing with cation hydration), is then implicated in shifts of the maxima, as the ferrocyanide is the donor center in the optical CT. More definitely, for M2+ and Ag+, solubility-products of the insoluble M(z+) ferrocyanides (that provide direct indicators of the intra-lattice M(z+)-[Fe(II)(CN)(6)](4- interactions) show a strong correlation with the spectral shifts.

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It is currently important to achieve and understand adjustments of optical properties: "guest cation" induced CT spectral shifts in Prussian Blue are shown to be driven (via its specific effect on the Fe(CN)6 CT-donor entity) by the cation lattice-energy interaction, as inferred from microgravimetry of introduced alkali-metal ions, and from independent solubility correlations for other intercalated cations.

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