Publications by authors named "Xingxu Lu"

To enhance the reaction kinetics without sacrificing activity in porous materials, one potential solution is to utilize the anisotropic distribution of pores and channels besides enriching active centers at the reactive surfaces. Herein, by designing a unique distribution of oriented pores and single crystalline array structures in the presence of abundant acid sites as demonstrated in the ZSM-5 nanorod arrays grown on monoliths, both enhanced dynamics and improved capacity are exhibited simultaneously in propene capture at low temperature within a short duration. Meanwhile, the ZSM-5 array also helps mitigate the long-chain HCs and coking formation due to the enhanced diffusion of reactants in and reaction products out of the array structures.

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Despite much technical progress achieved so far, the exact surface and shape evolution during wet chemical etching is less unraveled, especially in ionically bonded ceramics. Herein, by using liquid cell transmission electron microscopy, a repeated two-stage anisotropic and pulsating periodic etching dynamic is discovered during the pencil shape evolution of a single crystal ZnO nanorod in aqueous hydrochloric acid. Specifically, the nanopencil tip shrinks at a slower rate along [0001̅] than that along the ⟨101̅0⟩ directions, resulting in a sharper ZnO pencil tip.

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Heterojunctions are an important strategy for designing high performance electrical sensor materials and related devices. Herein, a new type of metal-semiconductor hybrid nanoparticle has been successfully used to remarkably sensitize the surface of ZnO nanowires for detecting NO with high responses over a broad temperature window ranging from room temperature to 600 °C. These hybrid nanoparticles are comprised of iron oxide nanowires with well dispersed single crystalline Au nanoparticles.

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Vibrio parahaemolyticus is a common foodborne pathogen in seafood and represents a major threat to human health worldwide. In this study, we identified that PhoR, a histidine kinase, is involved in the regulation of swarming and flagella assembly. RNA sequencing analysis showed that 1122 genes were differentially expressed in PhoR mutant, including 394 upregulated and 728 downregulated genes.

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Supported metal single atom catalysts (SACs) present an emerging class of low-temperature catalysts with high reactivity and selectivity, which, however, face challenges on both durability and practicality. Herein, we report a single-atom Pt catalyst that is strongly anchored on a robust nanowire forest of mesoporous rutile titania grown on the channeled walls of full-size cordierite honeycombs. This Pt SAC exhibits remarkable activity for oxidation of CO and hydrocarbons with 90% conversion at temperatures as low as ~160 C under simulated diesel exhaust conditions while using 5 times less Pt-group metals than a commercial oxidation catalyst.

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Stabilized Cu species have been widely considered as catalytic active sites in composite copper catalysts for catalytic reactions with industrial importance. However, few examples comprehensively explicated the origin of stabilized Cu in a low-cost and widely investigated CuO/TiO system. In this study, mass producible CuO/TiO catalysts with interface-stabilized Cu were prepared, which showed excellent low-temperature CO oxidation activity.

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Supported metal catalysts are one of the major classes of heterogeneous catalysts, which demand good stability in both the supports and catalysts. Herein, layered protonated titanate-derived TiO (LPT-TiO) nanowire arrays were synthesized to support platinum catalysts using different loading processes. The Pt ion-exchange loading on pristine LPTs followed by thermal annealing resulted in superior Pt catalysts supported on the LPT-TiO nanoarrays with excellent hydrothermal stability and catalytic performance toward CO and NO oxidations as compared to the Pt catalysts through wet-impregnation on the anatase TiO (ANT-TiO) nanoarrays resulted from thermal annealing of LPT nanoarrays.

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Layered protonated titanates (LPTs) are promising support materials for catalytic applications because their high surface area and cation exchange capacity provide the possibility of achieving a high metal dispersion. However, the reported LPT nanomaterials are mainly limited to free-standing nanoparticles (NPs) and usually require high temperature and pressure conditions with extended reaction time. In this work, a high-throughput microwave-assisted hydrothermal method was developed for the direct synthesis of conformal LPT nanoarray coatings onto the three-dimensional honeycomb monoliths as well as other substrate surfaces at low temperature (75-95 °C) and pressure (1 atm).

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Janus heteronanostructures (HNs), as an important class of anisotropic nanomaterials, could facilitate synergistic coupling of diverse functions inherited by their comprised nanocomponents. Nowadays, synthesizing deterministically targeted Janus HNs remains a challenge. Here, a general yet scalable technique is utilized to fabricate an array of programmable Janus HNs based on anodic aluminum oxide binary-pore templates.

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