Hai Wang

Hai Wang

Stanford University

H-index: 84

North America-United States

About Hai Wang

Hai Wang, With an exceptional h-index of 84 and a recent h-index of 51 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Stanford University, specializes in the field of Combustion, energy conversion, propulsion, batteries.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Modeling of high-speed, methane–air, turbulent combustion, Part I: One-dimensional turbulence modeling with comparison to DNS

Phonons drive high temperature electron tunneling in graphite and bilayer graphene

Foundational Fuel Chemistry Model 2–iso-Butene chemistry and application in modeling alcohol-to-jet fuel combustion

Modeling of high-speed, methane-air, turbulent combustion, Part II: Reduced methane oxidation chemistry

High-Performance Lithium–Sulfur Batteries via Molecular Complexation

Unveiling the complexity of nanodiamond structures

Neural network approach to response surface development for reaction model optimization and uncertainty minimization

Three-dimensional detonation structure and its response to confinement

Hai Wang Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

29436

Citations(since 2020)

10920

Cited By

22679

hIndex(all)

84

hIndex(since 2020)

51

i10Index(all)

203

i10Index(since 2020)

156

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Hai Wang Skills & Research Interests

Combustion

energy conversion

propulsion

batteries

Top articles of Hai Wang

Modeling of high-speed, methane–air, turbulent combustion, Part I: One-dimensional turbulence modeling with comparison to DNS

Combustion and Flame

2024/5/1

Phonons drive high temperature electron tunneling in graphite and bilayer graphene

Bulletin of the American Physical Society

2024/3/4

Foundational Fuel Chemistry Model 2–iso-Butene chemistry and application in modeling alcohol-to-jet fuel combustion

Combustion and Flame

2024/1/1

Modeling of high-speed, methane-air, turbulent combustion, Part II: Reduced methane oxidation chemistry

Combustion and Flame

2024/5/1

High-Performance Lithium–Sulfur Batteries via Molecular Complexation

Journal of the American Chemical Society

2023/8/17

Unveiling the complexity of nanodiamond structures

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2023/6/6

Neural network approach to response surface development for reaction model optimization and uncertainty minimization

Combustion and Flame

2023/5/1

Three-dimensional detonation structure and its response to confinement

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

2023

HOMO-LUMO gaps of large polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and their implication on the quantum confinement behavior of flame-formed carbon nanoparticles

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

2023/1/1

Isolating gasdynamic and chemical effects on the detonation cellular structure: A combined experimental and computational study

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

2023

HOMO-LUMO energy gaps of complexes of transition metals with single and multi-ring aromatics

Combustion and Flame

2023/11/1

Morphology and electronic properties of incipient soot by scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy

Combustion and Flame

2022/9/1

Natural gas versus methane: Ignition kinetics and detonation limit behavior in small tubes

Combustion and Flame

2022/3/1

Synthesis of freestanding few-layer graphene in microwave plasma: The role of oxygen

Carbon

2022/1/1

Stable sodium-sulfur electrochemistry enabled by phosphorus-based complexation

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

2021/12/7

A physics-based approach to modeling real-fuel combustion chemistry–VII. Relationship between speciation measurement and reaction model accuracy

Combustion and Flame

2020/2/1

Impact of vitiation on flow reactor studies of jet fuel combustion chemistry

Combustion and Flame

2021/2/1

Thermochemistry of organosilane compounds and organosilyl radicals

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

2021/1/1

Detonation and its limit in small tubes with ozone sensitization

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

2021/1/1

Geometric modeling and analysis of detonation cellular stability

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

2021/1/1

See List of Professors in Hai Wang University(Stanford University)

Co-Authors

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