Publications by authors named "Ping Heng Tan"

Two-dimensional metal halide perovskites are highly versatile for light-driven applications due to their exceptional variety in material composition, which can be exploited for the tunability of mechanical and optoelectronic properties. The band-edge emission is defined by the structure and composition of both organic and inorganic layers, and electron-phonon coupling plays a crucial role in the recombination dynamics. However, the nature of the electron-phonon coupling and what kind of phonons are involved are still under debate.

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ConspectusLayered metal halide perovskites represent a natural quantum well system for charge carriers that provides rich physics, and the organic encapsulation of the inorganic metal halide layers not only increases their stability in devices but also provides an immense freedom to design their functionality. Intriguingly, these organic moieties strongly impact the optical, electrical, and mechanical properties, not only through their dielectric, elastic, and chemical properties but also because of induced mechanical distortions in the inorganic lattice. This tunability makes two-dimensional layered perovskites (2DLPs) highly attractive as light emitters.

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Stark effect, the electric-field analogue of magnetic Zeeman effect, is one of the celebrated phenomena in modern physics and appealing for emergent applications in electronics, optoelectronics, as well as quantum technologies. While in condensed matter it has prospered only for excitons, whether other collective excitations can display Stark effect remains elusive. Here, we report the observation of phonon Stark effect in a two-dimensional quantum system of bilayer 2H-MoS.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focused on measuring the specific heat capacity of PbSe nanocrystals, finding that it increases significantly with size, ranging from 0.2 to 0.6 J g °C for diameters between 5 to 23 nm.
  • - A model was proposed that breaks down specific heat capacity into four components: electron, inner, surface, and ligand, highlighting the size dependency of these contributions.
  • - The findings revealed that the surface specific heat capacity makes up 40-60% of the total for smaller nanocrystals, attributed to uncoordinated surface atoms and supported by additional evidence from Raman spectra and simulations.
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Two-dimensional materials are expected to play an important role in next-generation electronics and optoelectronic devices. Recently, twisted bilayer graphene and transition metal dichalcogenides have attracted significant attention due to their unique physical properties and potential applications. In this study, we describe the use of optical microscopy to collect the color space of chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of molybdenum disulfide (MoS) and the application of a semantic segmentation convolutional neural network (CNN) to accurately and rapidly identify thicknesses of MoS flakes.

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Raman scattering provides essential insights into phonons, electronic structures and electron-phonon coupling within solids through the intensity of Raman peaks, which cannot be easily quantified using the classical bond polarizability model. The interlayer bond polarizability model (IBPM) had been developed to understand the Raman intensity of layer-breathing modes (LBMs) in two-dimensional materials. However, the quantitative understanding of the LBM intensity of a van der Waals heterostructure (vdWH) remains challenging.

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Due to its inversion-broken triple helix structure and the nature of Weyl semiconductor, 2D Tellurene (2D Te) is promising to possess a strong nonlinear optical response in the infrared region, which is rarely reported in 2D materials. Here, a giant nonlinear infrared response induced by large Berry curvature dipole (BCD) is demonstrated in the Weyl semiconductor 2D Te. Ultrahigh second-harmonic generation response is acquired from 2D Te with a large second-order nonlinear optical susceptibility (χ ), which is up to 23.

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Organic-inorganic low-dimensional layered metal-halide perovskites are semiconductors in which the optoelectronic properties can be tuned by the material composition and the design of the layered architecture. While the electronic band structure is mainly determined by the inorganic octahedra lattice, the binding and conformation of the organic cations induces related lattice distortions that can break the symmetry and lead to the splitting of the exciton energy levels, and influence the dielectric confinement. Furthermore, organic-induced lattice deformations lead to offsets in -space (where is the wavevector) that go along with the exciton energy level splitting.

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Despite the acceptance of carotid ultrasound for predicting patients' fluid responsiveness in critical care and anesthesia, its efficacy for predicting hypotension and fluid responsiveness remains unclear in the perioperative setting. Electronic databases were searched from inception to May 2023 to identify observational studies focusing on the use of corrected blood flow time (FTc) and respirophasic variation in carotid artery blood flow peak velocity (ΔVpeak) for assessing the risks of hypotension and fluid responsiveness. Using FTc as a predictive tool (four studies), the analysis yielded a pooled sensitivity of 0.

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The characterization of interlayer coupling in two-dimensional van der Waals heterostructures (vdWHs) is essential to understand their quantum behaviors and structural functionalities. Interlayer shear and layer-breathing (LB) phonons carry rich information on interlayer interaction, but they are usually too weak to be detected via standard Raman spectroscopy due to the weak electron-phonon coupling (EPC). Here, we report a universal strategy to enhance LB modes of vdWHs based on twisted bilayer graphene (tBLG).

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Raman spectroscopy is a powerful technique to probe structural and doping behaviors of two-dimensional (2D) materials. In MoS, the always coexisting in-plane (E) and out-of-plane (A) vibrational modes are used as reliable fingerprints to distinguish the number of layers, strains, and doping levels. In this work, however, we report an abnormal Raman behavior, i.

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Graphene is an ideal platform to study the coherence of quantum interference pathways by tuning doping or laser excitation energy. The latter produces a Raman excitation profile that provides direct insight into the lifetimes of intermediate electronic excitations and, therefore, on quantum interference, which has so far remained elusive. Here, we control the Raman scattering pathways by tuning the laser excitation energy in graphene doped up to 1.

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Carbon structures with covalent bonds connecting C molecules have been reported, but their production methods typically result in very small amounts of sample, which restrict the detailed characterization and exploration necessary for potential applications. We report the gram-scale preparation of a new type of carbon, long-range ordered porous carbon (LOPC), from C powder catalysed by α-LiN at ambient pressure. LOPC consists of connected broken C cages that maintain long-range periodicity, and has been characterized by X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, magic-angle spinning solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy and neutron scattering.

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Article Synopsis
  • Fano resonance is a quantum phenomenon that results from the interference between discrete and continuum states, allowing researchers to explore complex interacting physics.
  • This study reports on a Fano resonance observed in few-layer WS, involving dark excitons and high-momentum acoustic phonons, investigated using resonant Raman techniques.
  • The findings highlight various behaviors of Fano resonances including constructive and destructive interference patterns, contributing to a better understanding of exciton-phonon interactions in two-dimensional semiconductors and their impact on various physical properties.
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Interferons (IFNs) are pleiotropic cytokines originally identified for their antiviral activity. IFN-α and IFN-β are both type I IFNs that have been used to treat neurological diseases such as multiple sclerosis. Microglia, astrocytes, as well as neurons in the central and peripheral nervous systems, including spinal cord neurons and dorsal root ganglion neurons, express type I IFN receptors (IFNARs).

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The lead halide perovskite has become a promising candidate for the study of exciton polaritons due to their excellent optical properties. Here, both experimental and simulated results confirm the existence of two kinds of Fabry-Pérot microcavities in a single CsPbBr microwire with an isosceles right triangle cross section, and we experimentally demonstrate that confined photons in a straight and a folded Fabry-Pérot microcavity are strongly coupled with excitons to form exciton polaritons. Furthermore, we reveal the polarization characteristic and double-cavity modulation of exciton polaritons emission by polarization-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy.

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In high-performance flexible and stretchable electronic devices, conventional inorganic semiconductors made of rigid and brittle materials typically need to be configured into geometrically deformable formats and integrated with elastomeric substrates, which leads to challenges in scaling down device dimensions and complexities in device fabrication and integration. Here we report the extraordinary mechanical properties of the newly discovered inorganic double helical semiconductor tin indium phosphate. This spiral-shape double helical crystal shows the lowest Young's modulus (13.

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Rare earth chalcogenides (RECs) with novel luminescence and magnetic properties offer fascinating opportunities for fundamental research and applications. However, controllable synthesis of RECs down to the two-dimensional (2D) limit still has a great challenge. Herein, 2D wedge-shaped ferromagnetic EuS single crystals are successfully synthesized via a facile molten-salt-assisted chemical vapor deposition method on sapphire.

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The emergence of superconductivity in two-dimensional (2D) materials has attracted tremendous research efforts because the origins and mechanisms behind the unexpected and fascinating superconducting phenomena remain unclear. In particular, the superconductivity can survive in 2D systems even with weakened disorder and broken spatial inversion symmetry. Here, structural and superconducting transitions of 2D van der Waals (vdW) hydrogenated germanene (GeH) are observed under compression and decompression processes.

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The production of large-area twisted bilayer graphene (TBG) with controllable angles is a prerequisite for proceeding with its massive applications. However, most of the prevailing strategies to fabricate twisted bilayers face great challenges, where the transfer methods are easily stuck by interfacial contamination, and direct growth methods lack the flexibility in twist-angle design. Here we develop an effective strategy to grow centimetre-scale TBG with arbitrary twist angles (accuracy, <1.

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Laser cooling atoms and molecules to ultralow temperatures has produced plenty of opportunities in fundamental physics, precision metrology, and quantum science. Although theoretically proposed over 40 years, the laser cooling of certain lattice vibrations (i.e.

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The multiphonon process plays an essential role in understanding electron-phonon coupling, which significantly influences the optical and transport properties of solids. Multiphonon processes have been observed in many materials, but how to distinguish them directly by their spectral characteristics remains controversial. Here, we report high-order Raman scattering up to 10 orders and hot luminescence involving 11 orders of phonons in Mn-doped ZnO nanowires by selecting the excitation energy.

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Background: Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is defined as an idiopathic cardiomyopathy occurring in the last month of pregnancy or the first 6 months postpartum without an identifiable cause. PPCM is suspected to be triggered by the generation of a cardiotoxic fragment of prolactin and the secretion of a potent antiangiogenic protein from the placental, but no single factor has been identified or defined as the underlying cause of the disease. Influenza virus can cause PPCM through immune-mediated response induced by proinflammatory cytokines from host immunity and endothelial cell dysfunction.

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