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Creators/Authors contains: "Ou, Zihao"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 23, 2026
  2. Redox-active colloids (RACs) represent a novel class of energy carriers that exchange electrical energy upon contact. Understanding contact-mediated electron transfer dynamics in RACs offers insights into physical contact events in colloidal suspensions and enables quantification of electrical energy transport in nonconjugated polymers. Redox-based electron transport was directly observed in monolayers of micron-sized RACs containing ethyl-viologen side groups via fluorescence microscopy through an unexpected nonlinear electrofluorochromism that is quantitatively coupled to the redox state of the colloid. Via imaging studies, using this electrofluorochromism, the apparent charge transfer diffusion coefficientDCTof the RAC was easily determined. The visualization of energy transport within suspensions of redox-active colloids was also demonstrated. Our work elucidates fundamental mechanisms of energy transport in colloidal systems, informs the development of next-generation redox flow batteries, and may inspire new designs of smart active soft matter including conductive polymers for applications ranging from electrochemical sensors and organic electronics to colloidal robotics. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 5, 2026
  3. Abstract Radio frequency ablation and microwave hyperthermia are powerful tools for destroying dysfunctional biological tissues. However, wireless application of these techniques is hindered by their inability to focus the electromagnetic energy to small targets. The use of locally injected radio frequency- or microwave-absorbing nanomaterials can help to overcome this challenge by confining heat production to the injected region. Previous theoretical work suggests that high-aspect-ratio conducting nanomaterials, such as carbon nanotubes, offer powerful radio frequency and microwave absorption. While carbon nanotubes have been demonstrated as radiothermal agents, common solubilization methods may reduce their absorption efficiency, yielding undesirable nonspecific heating in the biological tissue background. In this manuscript, we hypothesize that pristine carbon nanotubes can act as efficient absorbers at radio frequencies, thus providing differential heating over the tissue background. Specifically, we use a sonication-free preparation technique to preserve both the high aspect ratio and local concentration of pristine carbon nanotubes. We validate the differential heating of these samples by 4.5-fold at 2 GHz compared to the heating of saline at a physiological concentration using infrared thermography. In addition, we successfully achieved local heating of pristine carbon nanotubes within a three-dimensional biological tissue phantom. Numerical simulations further aid in producing a temperature map within the phantom and confirming localized heating. Due to their significant differential and local heating, we believe that pristine carbon nanotubes may facilitate region-specific radio frequency ablation and microwave hyperthermia while keeping nonspecific heating to a low level in the normal tissue background. 
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  4. A bioinspired approach produces bright afterglow colloids that can excite endogenous fluorescent proteins for brain imaging. 
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