Publications by authors named "Yuntao Yu"

The ultrafast frequency response supercapacitor is a promising candidate for alternating current line filtering. We report the fabrication of a special structured ionic liquid-based supercapacitor with an ultrafast response of only 1.5 ms.

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The detection and delineation of the lymphoma volume are a critical step for its treatment and its outcome prediction. Positron Emission Tomography (PET) is widely used for lymphoma detection. Two common types of approaches can be distinguished for lymphoma detection and segmentation in PET.

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We report the fabrication of one-dimensional highly electroconductive mesoporous graphene nanofibers (GNFs) by a chemical vapor deposition method using MgCO3·3H2O fibers as the template. The growth of such a unique structure underwent the first in situ decomposition of MgCO3·3H2O fibers to porous MgO fibers, followed by the deposition of carbon on the MgO surface, the removal of MgO by acidic washing, and the final self-assembly of wet graphene from single to double layer in drying process. GNFs exhibited good structural stability, high surface area, mesopores in large amount, and electrical conductivity 3 times that of carbon nanotube aggregates.

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Addition of a single walled carbon nanotube in ionic liquids of EMIBF4 produced a nanofluid with increased ionic conductivity. It, as the electrolyte, allowed the increase of the capacitance, energy density and cycling stability of a supercapacitor operated at 4 V.

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Developing flexible and deformable supercapacitor electrodes based on porous materials is of high interest in energy related fields. Here, we show that carbon nanotube sponges, consisting of highly porous conductive networks, can serve as compressible and deformation-tolerant supercapacitor electrodes in aqueous or organic electrolytes. In aqueous electrolytes, the sponges maintain a similar specific capacitance (>90% of the original value) under a predefined compressive strain of 50% (corresponding to a volume reduction of 50%), and retain more than 70% of the original capacitance under 80% strain while the volume normalized capacitance increases by 3-fold.

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