Recently, wearable and flexible pressure sensors have sparked tremendous research interest, and considerable applications including human activity monitoring, biomedical research, and artificial intelligence interaction are reported. However, the large-scale preparation of low-cost, high-sensitivity piezoresistive sensors still face huge challenges. Inspired by the specific structures and excellent metal conductivity of a family of two-dimensional (2D) transition-metal carbides and nitrides (MXene) and the high-performance sensing effect of human skin including randomly distributed microstructural receptors, we fabricate a highly sensitive MXene-based piezoresistive sensor with bioinspired microspinous microstructures formed by a simple abrasive paper stencil printing process. The obtained piezoresistive sensor shows high sensitivity (151.4 kPa −1 ), relatively short response time (<130 ms), subtle pressure detection limit of 4.4 Pa, and excellent cycle stability over 10,000 cycles. The mechanism of the high sensitivity of the sensor is dynamically revealed from the structural perspective by means of in situ electron microscopy experiment and finite element simulation. Bioinspired microspinous microstructures can effectively improve the sensitivity of the pressure sensor and the limit of the detectable subtle pressure. In practice, the sensor shows great performance in monitoring human physiological signals, detecting quantitatively pressure distributions, and remote monitoring of intelligent robot motion in real time.
Alkaline polymer electrolyte fuel cells are a class of fuel cells that enable the use of non-precious metal catalysts, particularly for the oxygen reduction reaction at the cathode. While there have been alternative materials exhibiting Pt-comparable activity in alkaline solutions, to the best of our knowledge none have outperformed Pt in fuel-cell tests. Here we report a Mn-Co spinel cathode that can deliver greater power, at high current densities, than a Pt cathode. The power density of the cell employing the Mn-Co cathode reaches 1.1 W cm −2 at 2.5 A cm −2 at 60 o C. Moreover, this catalyst outperforms Pt at low humidity. In-depth characterization reveals that the remarkable performance originates from synergistic effects where the Mn sites bind O 2 and the Co sites activate H 2 O, so as to facilitate the proton-coupled electron transfer processes. Such an electrocatalytic synergy is pivotal to the high-rate oxygen reduction, particularly under water depletion/low humidity conditions.
We report for the first time the synthesis of nonplanar epitaxial tripod nanocrystals of II-VI compounds (ZnO, ZnS, ZnSe, ZnTe, CdS, CdSe, and CdTe) on muscovite mica substrate. With CdS as a case study, we conclude via Raman spectroscopy and electron microscopy studies that the tripods, which are found to be polytypic, followed a seeded growth mechanism. The epitaxy, manifested by the in-plane alignment of the legs of the tripods within a substrate, is attributed to the van der Waals interaction between the tripod bases and the mica surface, instead of to the covalent chemical bond which would require lattice matching between the epilayer and the substrate. The results demonstrated herein could have widespread immediate implications, including the potential of van der Waals epitaxy to be applicable in producing ordered arrays of more complex nanoarchitectures from various classes of compounds toward a broad range of technological applications.
This paper describes a facile method for synthesis of Au-AgCdSe hybrid nanorods with controlled morphologies and spatial distributions. The synthesis involved deposition of Ag tips at the ends of Au nanorod seeds, followed by selenization of the Ag tips and overgrowth of CdSe on these sites. By simply manipulating the pH value of the system, the AgCdSe could selectively grow at one end, at both the ends or on the side surface of a Au nanorod, generating a mike-like, dumbbell-like, or toothbrush-like hybrid nanorod, respectively. These three types of Au-AgCdSe hybrid nanorods displayed distinct localized surface plasmon resonance and photoluminescence properties, demonstrating an effective pathway for maneuvering the optical properties of nanocrystals.
Precisely tailoring the electronic structures of electrocatalysts to achieve an optimum hydroxide binding energy (OHBE) is vital to the alkaline hydrogen oxidation reaction (HOR). As a promising alternative to the Pt-group metals, considerable efforts have been devoted to exploring highly efficient Ni-based catalysts for alkaline HOR. However, their performances still lack practical competitiveness. Herein, based on insights from the molecular orbital theory and the Hammer–Nørskov d-band model, we propose an ingenious surface oxygen insertion strategy to precisely tailor the electronic structures of Ni electrocatalysts, simultaneously increasing the degree of energy-level alignment between the adsorbed hydroxide (*OH) states and surface Ni d-band and decreasing the degree of anti-bonding filling, which leads to an optimal OHBE. Through the pyrolysis procedure mediated by a metal–organic framework at a low temperature under a reducing atmosphere, the obtained oxygen-inserted two atomic-layer Ni shell-modified Ni metal core nanoparticle (Ni@Oi-Ni) exhibits a remarkable alkaline HOR performance with a record mass activity of 85.63 mA mg–1, which is 40-fold higher than that of the freshly synthesized Ni catalyst. Combining CO stripping experiments with ab initio calculations, we further reveal a linear relationship between the OHBE and the content of inserted oxygen, which thus results in a volcano-type correlation between the OH binding strength and alkaline HOR activity. This work indicates that the oxygen insertion into the top-surface layers is an efficient strategy to regulate the coordination environment and electronic structure of Ni catalysts and identifies the dominate role of OH binding strength in alkaline HOR.
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