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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
Anthony Cheetham

Anthony Cheetham

Verified

University of California, Santa Barbara · Chemistry and Biochemistry

Active 1970–2024

h-index133
Citations71.9k
Papers1.0k156 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Physics
  • Materials science
  • Chemistry
  • Electrical engineering
  • Engineering
  • Engineering physics
  • Process engineering
  • Nanotechnology
  • Optics
  • Composite material
  • Organic chemistry
  • Optoelectronics
  • Crystallography
  • Inorganic chemistry

Selected publications

  • Design Principles for Enhancing Photoluminescence Quantum Yield in Hybrid Manganese Bromides

    Journal of the American Chemical Society · 2020 · 377 citations

    • Chemistry
    • Crystallography
    • Inorganic chemistry

    , where a PLQY of 70.8% for a powder sample and 98% for a large single crystal sample is achieved. Our study reveals a generalized method for improving PLQYs in hybrid manganese bromides and is readily extended to designing all varieties of highly emissive hybrid materials.

  • Titanium Niobium Oxide: From Discovery to Application in Fast-Charging Lithium-Ion Batteries

    Chemistry of Materials · 2020 · 174 citations

    • Nanotechnology
    • Materials science
    • Engineering physics

    Lithium-ion batteries are essential for portable technology and are now poised to disrupt a century of combustion-based transportation. The electrification revolution could eliminate our reliance on fossil fuels and enable a clean energy future; advanced batteries would facilitate this transition. However, owing to the demanding performance, cost, and safety requirements, it is challenging to translate new materials from laboratory prototypes to industrial-scale products. This Perspective describes that journey for a new lithium-ion battery anode material, TiNb2O7 (TNO). TNO is intended as an alternative to graphite or Li4Ti5O12 with better rate and safety characteristics than the former and higher energy density than the latter. The high capacity of TNO stems from the multielectron redox of Nb5+ to Nb3+, its operating voltage window well above the Li+/Li reduction potential prevents lithium dendrite formation, and its open crystal structure leads to high-power performance. Nevertheless, the creation of a practical TNO anode was nonlinear and nontrivial. Its history is built on 30 years of fundamental science that preceded its application as a battery anode, and its battery development included a nearly 30-year gap. The insights and lessons contained in this Perspective, many of them acquired firsthand, serve two purposes: (i) to unite the disparate studies of TiNb2O7 into a coherent modern understanding relevant to its application as a battery material and (ii) to highlight briefly some of the challenges faced when scaling up a new material that affect TiNb2O7 as well as new electrode candidates more generally.

Frequent coauthors

  • Ram Seshadri

    University of California, Santa Barbara

    182 shared
  • Zeyu Deng

    National University of Singapore

    181 shared
  • Jean‐Noël Chotard

    162 shared
  • Christian Masquelier

    Réseau sur le Stockage Electrochimique de l'énergie

    152 shared
  • Gopalakrishnan Sai Gautam

    Indian Institute of Science Bangalore

    130 shared
  • C. N. R. Rao

    Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research

    126 shared
  • Sebastian Henke

    TU Dortmund University

    114 shared
  • Paul M. Forster

    University of Nevada, Las Vegas

    104 shared
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