El Dr. Fernando Salazar Posadas es egresado del Instituto de Física “Manuel Sandoval Vallarta” de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí. Su trabajo de investigación doctoral lo desarrolló en el Instituto de Investigaciones en Materiales de la UNAM, posteriormente realizó una estancia posdoctoral en el Instituto de Física de la UNAM. Actualmente está adscrito a la Sección de Estudios de Posgrado e Investigación de la Escuela Superior de Ingeniería Mecánica y Eléctrica, unidad Culhuacán del Instituto Politécnico Nacional. Su trabajo de investigación lo desarrolla con el Grupo de Investigación en Nanociencias, en donde se investigan las propiedades físicas y químicas de nanomateriales con modelos y simulación computacional usando la Teoría del Funcional de la Densidad. Estas investigaciones, se aplican para mejorar diferentes sistemas energéticos como las celdas fotovoltaicas, detección de moléculas tóxicas, almacenamiento de hidrógeno, almacenamiento de energía en baterías recargables. En particular, el Dr. Salazar es responsable de desarrollar el modelado teórico, simulación computacional y diseño de electrodos nanoestructurados para su aplicación en baterías recargables. Pertenece al Sistema Nacional de Investigadores del CONACyT desde 2010, es miembro de la Sociedad Mexicana de Física y de la División de Estado Sólido desde 2014. Sus actividades como docente incluyen cursos de matemáticas y física en las carreras de ingeniería y en los programas de posgrado de la ESIME Culhuacán. Ha dirigido dos tesis de licenciatura y nueve en el programa Maestría en Ciencias de Ingeniería en Sistemas Energéticos. Actualmente dirige tres tesis de licenciatura, tres tesis de maestría y una tesis de doctorado en el programa de Doctorado en Energía. En su trayectoria de investigación tiene 29 publicaciones en revistas internacionales, donde se estudian las propiedades electrónicas, mecánicas, vibracionales y de transporte electrónico y térmico de materiales nanoestructurados y sus posibles aplicaciones para mejorar sistemas energéticos. El Dr. Fernando Salazar es actualmente el coordinador del programa Doctorado en Energía de la sede ESIME-Culhuacán, cargo que le fue asignado el 16 de septiembre de 2020.
Enlaces en plataformas académicas
Santana, José Eduardo; Sosa, Akari Narayama; Santiago, Francisco De; Miranda, Álvaro; Pérez, Luis Antonio; Trejo, Alejandro; Salazar, Fernando; Cruz-Irisson, Miguel
Highly sensitive amphetamine drug detection based on silicon nanowires: Theoretical investigation Artículo de revista
En: Surfaces and Interfaces, vol. 36, pp. 102584, 2023, ISSN: 2468-0230.
Resumen | Enlaces | BibTeX | Etiquetas: Amphetamine, DFT, Doping, Drug, Sensor, Silicon nanowires
@article{SANTANA2023102584,
title = {Highly sensitive amphetamine drug detection based on silicon nanowires: Theoretical investigation},
author = {Jos\'{e} Eduardo Santana and Akari Narayama Sosa and Francisco De Santiago and \'{A}lvaro Miranda and Luis Antonio P\'{e}rez and Alejandro Trejo and Fernando Salazar and Miguel Cruz-Irisson},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468023022008392},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.surfin.2022.102584},
issn = {2468-0230},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-01-01},
journal = {Surfaces and Interfaces},
volume = {36},
pages = {102584},
abstract = {Amphetamine (AA) is used in some therapeutic treatments, but it is also one of the most widely used illicit drugs. Therefore, a correct tracking of AA in various environments is crucial for its controlled distribution even inside the human body. However, current sensors are still too large to fit inside the human body and their biocompatibility is still deficient. Since the discovery of nanostructures, especially silicon nanowires (SiNWs), the possibilities of sensors inside the human body have increased due to their enhanced properties and biocompatibility. However, theoretical studies about the capabilities of SiNWs with surface modifications as sensing materials are still scarce. Using Density Functional Theory, we investigate the effects of amphetamine adsorption on the work function, and other electronic and structural properties, of pristine and modified SiNWs. Two types of modifications were studied, i.e., substitutional doping with B, Al, and Ga atoms and surface functionalization with the same species. The adsorption energies of the amphetamine molecule are larger for the doped nanowires, followed by the functionalized ones, and lastly, the undoped Si nanowire.This study shows that undoped, doped, and functionalized SiNWs are excellent candidates for AA sensing, with B being the best chemical species for improving AA adsorption for both doped and functionalized schemes.},
keywords = {Amphetamine, DFT, Doping, Drug, Sensor, Silicon nanowires},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Arellano, Lucia Guadalupe; Salazar, Fernando; Miranda, Álvaro; Trejo, Alejandro; Pérez, Luis Antonio; Nakamura, Jun; Cruz-Irisson, Miguel
Tunable electronic properties of silicon nanowires as sodium-battery anodes Artículo de revista
En: International Journal of Energy Research, vol. 46, no 12, pp. 17151-17162, 2022.
Resumen | Enlaces | BibTeX | Etiquetas: DFT, Silicon nanowires, sodium-ion batteries
@article{https://doi.org/10.1002/er.8378,
title = {Tunable electronic properties of silicon nanowires as sodium-battery anodes},
author = {Lucia Guadalupe Arellano and Fernando Salazar and \'{A}lvaro Miranda and Alejandro Trejo and Luis Antonio P\'{e}rez and Jun Nakamura and Miguel Cruz-Irisson},
url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/er.8378},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1002/er.8378},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
journal = {International Journal of Energy Research},
volume = {46},
number = {12},
pages = {17151-17162},
abstract = {Summary Although materials for lithium-ion batteries have been extensively studied, alternatives such as sodium-ion batteries have acquired a renewed interest due to the abundance of Na compared to Li. However, the investigation of new materials for Na battery anodes is still in progress. In this work, a density functional study of the electronic properties of hydrogen passivated silicon nanowires (H-SiNWs) with interstitial Na atoms is presented. The studied H-SiNWs are grown along the [001] crystallographic direction and have a diameter close to 2.5 nm. Moreover, from 1 to 12 interstitial Na atoms per H-SiNW unit cell were considered. The results reveal that the former semiconducting nanowires become metallic for all the Na concentrations, even for the case of a single Na atom. The formation energy diminishes as a function of the concentration of Na atoms, revealing a loss of energetic stability since the size of the Na atoms strongly modify the Si-Si bonds. Moreover, when the Na atoms are removed from the metallic sodiated H-SiNW and relaxed again, for concentrations between 1 and 8 Na atoms, the resulting structure corresponds to the original H-SiNW one, indicating that the Na insertion/extraction process is a reversible one. In contrast, for concentrations between 10 and 12 Na atoms, the structure that results from removing of these Na atoms has a different atomic arrangement, in comparison with the initial H-SiNW, and also smaller band gap. These results open the possibility to consider the H-SiNWs as potential anodic materials in sodium rechargeable batteries.},
keywords = {DFT, Silicon nanowires, sodium-ion batteries},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Santiago, F. De; González, J. E.; Miranda, A.; Trejo, A.; Salazar, F.; Pérez, L. A.; Cruz-Irisson, M.
Lithiation effects on the structural and electronic properties of Si nanowires as a potential anode material Artículo de revista
En: Energy Storage Materials, vol. 20, pp. 438-445, 2019, ISSN: 2405-8297.
Resumen | Enlaces | BibTeX | Etiquetas: electronic properties, Li batteries, Silicon nanowires, Young's modulus
@article{DESANTIAGO2019438,
title = {Lithiation effects on the structural and electronic properties of Si nanowires as a potential anode material},
author = {F. De Santiago and J. E. Gonz\'{a}lez and A. Miranda and A. Trejo and F. Salazar and L. A. P\'{e}rez and M. Cruz-Irisson},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405829718313254},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ensm.2019.04.023},
issn = {2405-8297},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
journal = {Energy Storage Materials},
volume = {20},
pages = {438-445},
abstract = {The need for better energy-storage materials has attracted much attention to the development of Li-ion battery electrodes. Si nanowires have been considered as alternative electrodes, however the effects of Li on their electronic band gap and mechanical properties have been scarcely studied. In this work, a density functional study of the electronic and mechanical properties of hydrogen passivated silicon nanowires (H-SiNWs) grown along the [001] direction is presented. The Li atoms are gradually inserted at interstitial positions or replacing surface H atoms. The results show that, for surface-lithiated H-SiNWs, the semiconducting band gap decreases when the concentration of Li atoms increases; whereas the H-SiNWs become metallic even with the addition of only one interstitial Li atom. The formation energy diminishes with the concentration of Li atoms for surface-lithiated H-SiNWs, whereas the contrary behavior is found in the interstitial-lithiated H-SiNWs. Furthermore, for the surface-lithiation case, the Li binding energy reveals the existence of SiLi bonds, whereas for the interstitial-lithiation case, the Li binding energy increases when the Li grows up to a critical concentration, where some SiSi bonds break. Finally, for the case of surface-lithiation, the Young's modulus (Y) increases with the concentration of Li, whereas for the interstitial-lithiation case, Y suffers a sudden diminution at a certain Li concentration due to the large internal mechanical stresses within the nanowire structure. These results should be considered when regarding H-SiNWs as potential electrodes in Li-ion battery anodes.},
keywords = {electronic properties, Li batteries, Silicon nanowires, Young's modulus},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
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