Publications by authors named "Rui Wen Shao"

Conventional wireless communication schemes indiscriminately transmit information into the whole space and pose inherent security risks. Recently, directional information modulation (DIM) has attracted enormous attention as a promising technology. DIM generates correct constellation symbols in the desired directions and distorts them in undesired directions, thus ensuring the security of the transmitted information.

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A digital coding metasurface is a platform connecting the digital space and electromagnetic wave space, and has therefore gained much attention due to its intriguing value in reshaping wireless channels and realizing new communication architectures. Correspondingly, there is an urgent need for electromagnetic information theory that reveals the upper limit of communication capacity and supports the accurate design of metasurface-based communication systems. To this end, we propose a macroscopic model and a statistical model of the digital coding metasurface.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explores how a GeP/C composite electrode stores sodium, showing that metallic germanium (Ge) formed during discharge improves the electrode's electronic conductivity.
  • - Sodium phosphide (NaP) helps prevent the clustering and expansion of Ge throughout the alloying process.
  • - After recharging, the GeP phase is restored alongside elemental Ge and phosphorus (P), indicating that the phase transition of GeP is reversible during battery cycles.
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Metasurfaces are artificially engineered ultrathin structures that can finely tailor and control electromagnetic wavefronts. There is currently a strong interest in exploring their capability to lift some fundamental limitations dictated by Lorentz reciprocity, which have strong implications in communication, heat management, and energy harvesting. Time-varying approaches have emerged as attractive alternatives to conventional schemes relying on magnetic or nonlinear materials, but experimental evidence is currently limited to devices such as circulators and antennas.

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By understanding the growth mechanism of nanomaterials, the morphological features of nanostructures can be rationally controlled, thereby achieving the desired physical properties for specific applications. Herein, the growth habits of aluminum nitride (AlN) nanostructures and single crystals synthesized by an ultrahigh-temperature, catalyst-free, physical vapor transport process were investigated by transmission electron microscopy. The detailed structural characterizations strongly suggested that the growth of AlN nanostructures including AlN nanowires and nanohelixes follow a sequential and periodic rotation in the growth direction, which is independent of the size and shape of the material.

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Bandgap engineering is a common practice for tuning semiconductors for desired physical properties. Although possible strain effects in semiconductors have been investigated for over a half-century, a profound understanding of their influence on energy bands, especially for large elastic strain remains unclear. In this study, a systematic investigation of the transport properties of n-type [0001] ZnO nanowires was performed at room temperature using the in situ scanning tunnelling microscope-transmission electron microscope technique which shows that the transport properties vary with the applied external uniaxial strain.

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