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Dive into the research topics where Andrey Shavorskiy is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrey Shavorskiy.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Mechanistic Studies of Water Electrolysis and Hydrogen Electro-Oxidation on High Temperature Ceria-Based Solid Oxide Electrochemical Cells

Chunjuan Zhang; Yi Yu; Michael E. Grass; Catherine Dejoie; Wuchen Ding; Karen Gaskell; Naila Jabeen; Young Pyo Hong; Andrey Shavorskiy; Hendrik Bluhm; Wei-Xue Li; Gregory S. Jackson; Z. Hussain; Zhi Liu; Bryan W. Eichhorn

Through the use of ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS) and a single-sided solid oxide electrochemical cell (SOC), we have studied the mechanism of electrocatalytic splitting of water (H2O + 2e(-) → H2 + O(2-)) and electro-oxidation of hydrogen (H2 + O(2-) → H2O + 2e(-)) at ∼700 °C in 0.5 Torr of H2/H2O on ceria (CeO2-x) electrodes. The experiments reveal a transient build-up of surface intermediates (OH(-) and Ce(3+)) and show the separation of charge at the gas-solid interface exclusively in the electrochemically active region of the SOC. During water electrolysis on ceria, the increase in surface potentials of the adsorbed OH(-) and incorporated O(2-) differ by 0.25 eV in the active regions. For hydrogen electro-oxidation on ceria, the surface concentrations of OH(-) and O(2-) shift significantly from their equilibrium values. These data suggest that the same charge transfer step (H2O + Ce(3+) <-> Ce(4+) + OH(-) + H(•)) is rate limiting in both the forward (water electrolysis) and reverse (H2 electro-oxidation) reactions. This separation of potentials reflects an induced surface dipole layer on the ceria surface and represents the effective electrochemical double layer at a gas-solid interface. The in situ XPS data and DFT calculations show that the chemical origin of the OH(-)/O(2-) potential separation resides in the reduced polarization of the Ce-OH bond due to the increase of Ce(3+) on the electrode surface. These results provide a graphical illustration of the electrochemically driven surface charge transfer processes under relevant and nonultrahigh vacuum conditions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Atomic-scale perspective of ultrafast charge transfer at a dye-semiconductor interface

Katrin R. Siefermann; C. D. Pemmaraju; Stefan Neppl; Andrey Shavorskiy; Amy A. Cordones; Josh Vura-Weis; Daniel Slaughter; Felix Sturm; Fabian Weise; Hendrik Bluhm; Matthew L. Strader; Hana Cho; Ming Fu Lin; Camila Bacellar; Champak Khurmi; Jinghua Guo; G. Coslovich; Robert A. Kaindl; Robert W. Schoenlein; A. Belkacem; Daniel M. Neumark; Stephen R. Leone; Dennis Nordlund; Hirohito Ogasawara; O. Krupin; J. J. Turner; W. F. Schlotter; Michael R. Holmes; Marc Messerschmidt; Michael P. Minitti

Understanding interfacial charge-transfer processes on the atomic level is crucial to support the rational design of energy-challenge relevant systems such as solar cells, batteries, and photocatalysts. A femtosecond time-resolved core-level photoelectron spectroscopy study is performed that probes the electronic structure of the interface between ruthenium-based N3 dye molecules and ZnO nanocrystals within the first picosecond after photoexcitation and from the unique perspective of the Ru reporter atom at the center of the dye. A transient chemical shift of the Ru 3d inner-shell photolines by (2.3 ± 0.2) eV to higher binding energies is observed 500 fs after photoexcitation of the dye. The experimental results are interpreted with the aid of ab initio calculations using constrained density functional theory. Strong indications for the formation of an interfacial charge-transfer state are presented, providing direct insight into a transient electronic configuration that may limit the efficiency of photoinduced free charge-carrier generation.


Nature Communications | 2014

Concentration and chemical-state profiles at heterogeneous interfaces with sub-nm accuracy from standing-wave ambient-pressure photoemission

Slavomír Nemšák; Andrey Shavorskiy; Osman Karslıoğlu; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Arunothai Rattanachata; Catherine Conlon; Armela Keqi; Peter K. Greene; Edward C. Burks; Farhad Salmassi; Eric M. Gullikson; See-Hun Yang; Kai Liu; Hendrik Bluhm; C. S. Fadley

Heterogeneous processes at solid/gas, liquid/gas and solid/liquid interfaces are ubiquitous in modern devices and technologies but often difficult to study quantitatively. Full characterization requires measuring the depth profiles of chemical composition and state with enhanced sensitivity to narrow interfacial regions of a few to several nm in extent over those originating from the bulk phases on either side of the interface. We show for a model system of NaOH and CsOH in an ~1-nm thick hydrated layer on α-Fe2O3 (haematite) that combining ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and standing-wave photoemission spectroscopy provides the spatial arrangement of the bulk and interface chemical species, as well as local potential energy variations, along the direction perpendicular to the interface with sub-nm accuracy. Standing-wave ambient-pressure photoemission spectroscopy is thus a very promising technique for measuring such important interfaces, with relevance to energy research, heterogeneous catalysis, electrochemistry, and atmospheric and environmental science.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2008

Chemical composition and reactivity of water on hexagonal Pt-group metal surfaces.

Andrey Shavorskiy; M. J. Gladys; Georg Held

The dissociation behaviour and valence-electronic structure of water adsorbed on clean and oxygen-covered Ru{0001}, Rh{111}, Pd{111}, Ir{111} and Pt{111} surfaces has been studied by high-resolution X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy with the aim of identifying similarities and trends within the Pt-group metals. On average, we find higher reactivity for the 4d metals (Ru, Rh, Pd) as compared to 5d (Ir, Pt), which is correlated with characteristic shifts in the 1b(1) and 3a(1) molecular orbitals of water. Small amounts of oxygen (< 0.2 ML) induce dissociation of water on all five surfaces, for higher coverages (> 0.25 ML) only intact water is observed. Under UHV conditions these higher coverages can only be reached on the 4d metals, the 5d metals are, therefore, not passivated.


Langmuir | 2010

Global and local expression of chirality in serine on the Cu{110} surface

Tugce Eralp; Andrey Shavorskiy; Zhasmina V. Zheleva; Georg Held; Nataliya Kalashnyk; Yanxiao Ning; Trolle R. Linderoth

Establishing a molecular-level understanding of enantioselectivity and chiral resolution at the organic-inorganic interfaces is a key challenge in the field of heterogeneous catalysis. As a model system, we investigate the adsorption geometry of serine on Cu{110} using a combination of low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) spectroscopy. The chirality of enantiopure chemisorbed layers, where serine is in its deprotonated (anionic) state, is expressed at three levels: (i) the molecules form dimers whose orientation with respect to the substrate depends on the molecular chirality, (ii) dimers of L- and D-enantiomers aggregate into superstructures with chiral (-1 ∓2; 4 0) lattices, respectively, which are mirror images of each other, and (iii) small islands have elongated shapes with the dominant direction depending on the chirality of the molecules. Dimer and superlattice formation can be explained in terms of intra- and interdimer bonds involving carboxylate, amino, and β-OH groups. The stability of the layers increases with the size of ordered islands. In racemic mixtures, we observe chiral resolution into small ordered enantiopure islands, which appears to be driven by the formation of homochiral dimer subunits and the directionality of interdimer hydrogen bonds. These islands show the same enantiospecific elongated shapes those as in low-coverage enantiopure layers.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

Chemistry of NOx on TiO2 Surfaces Studied by Ambient Pressure XPS: Products, Effect of UV Irradiation, Water, and Coadsorbed K(.).

Olivier Rosseler; Mohamad Sleiman; V. Nahuel Montesinos; Andrey Shavorskiy; Valérie Keller; Nicolas Keller; Marta I. Litter; Hendrik Bluhm; Miquel Salmeron; Hugo Destaillats

Self-cleaning surfaces containing TiO2 nanoparticles have been postulated to efficiently remove NOx from the atmosphere. However, UV irradiation of NOx adsorbed on TiO2 also was shown to form harmful gas-phase byproducts such as HONO and N2O that may limit their depolluting potential. Ambient pressure XPS was used to study surface and gas-phase species formed during adsorption of NO2 on TiO2 and subsequent UV irradiation at λ = 365 nm. It is shown here that NO3(-), adsorbed on TiO2 as a byproduct of NO2 disproportionation, was quantitatively converted to surface NO2 and other reduced nitrogenated species under UV irradiation in the absence of moisture. When water vapor was present, a faster NO3(-) conversion occurred, leading to a net loss of surface-bound nitrogenated species. Strongly adsorbed NO3(-) in the vicinity of coadsorbed K(+) cations was stable under UV light, leading to an efficient capture of nitrogenated compounds.


Langmuir | 2010

Hydrogen Bond-Induced Pair Formation of Glycine on the Chiral Cu{531} Surface

Tugce Eralp; Andrey Shavorskiy; Zhasmina V. Zheleva; V.R. Dhanak; Georg Held

Enantio-specific interactions on intrinsically chiral or chirally modified surfaces can be identified experimentally via comparison of the adsorption geometries of similar nonchiral and chiral molecules. Information about the effects of substrate-related and intermolecular interactions on the adsorption geometry of glycine, the only natural nonchiral amino acid, is therefore important for identifying enantio-specific interactions of larger chiral amino acids. We have studied the long- and short-range adsorption geometry and bonding properties of glycine on the intrinsically chiral Cu{531} surface with low-energy electron diffraction, near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and temperature-programmed desorption. For coverages between 0.15 and 0.33 ML (saturated chemisorbed layer) and temperatures between 300 and 430 K, glycine molecules adsorb in two different azimuthal orientations, which are associated with adsorption sites on the {110} and {311} microfacets of Cu{531}. Both types of adsorption sites allow a triangular footprint with surface bonds through the two oxygen atoms and the nitrogen atom. The occupation of the two adsorption sites is equal for all coverages, which can be explained by pair formation due to similar site-specific adsorption energies and the possibility of forming hydrogen bonds between molecules on adjacent {110} and {311} sites. This is not the case for alanine and points toward higher site specificity in the case of alanine, which is eventually responsible for the enantiomeric differences observed for the alanine system.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

The Importance of Attractive Three-Point Interaction in Enantioselective Surface Chemistry: Stereospecific Adsorption of Serine on the Intrinsically Chiral Cu{531} Surface

Tugce Eralp; Alex Ievins; Andrey Shavorskiy; Stephen J. Jenkins; Georg Held

Both enantiomers of serine adsorb on the intrinsically chiral Cu{531} surface in two different adsorption geometries, depending on the coverage. At saturation, substrate bonds are formed through the two oxygen atoms of the carboxylate group and the amino group (μ3 coordination), whereas at lower coverage, an additional bond is formed through the deprotonated β-OH group (μ4 coordination). The latter adsorption geometry involves substrate bonds through three side groups of the chiral center, respectively, which leads to significantly larger enantiomeric differences in adsorption geometries and energies compared to the μ3 coordination, which involves only two side groups. This relatively simple model system demonstrates, in direct comparison, that attractive interactions of three side groups with the substrate are much more effective in inducing strong enantiomeric differences in heterogeneous chiral catalyst systems than hydrogen bonds or repulsive interactions.


Small | 2015

Synthesis and Structural Evolution of Nickel–Cobalt Nanoparticles Under H2 and CO2

Sophie Carenco; Chenghao Wu; Andrey Shavorskiy; Selim Alayoglu; Gabor A. Somorjai; Hendrik Bluhm; Miquel Salmeron

Bimetallic nanoparticle (NP) catalysts are interesting for the development of selective catalysts in reactions such as the reduction of CO2 by H2 to form hydrocarbons. Here the synthesis of Ni-Co NPs is studied, and the morphological and structural changes resulting from their activation (via oxidation/reduction cycles), and from their operation under reaction conditions, are presented. Using ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and transmission electron microscopy, it is found that the initial core-shell structure evolves to form a surface alloy due to nickel migration from the core. Interestingly, the core consists of a Ni-rich single crystal and a void with sharp interfaces. Residual phosphorous species, coming from the ligands used for synthesis, are found initially concentrated in the NP core, which later diffuse to the surface.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

A Step toward the Wet Surface Chemistry of Glycine and Alanine on Cu{110}: Destabilization and Decomposition in the Presence of Near-Ambient Water Vapor

Andrey Shavorskiy; Funda Aksoy; Michael E. Grass; Zhi Liu; Hendrik Bluhm; Georg Held

The coadsorption of water with organic molecules under near-ambient pressure and temperature conditions opens up new reaction pathways on model catalyst surfaces that are not accessible in conventional ultrahigh-vacuum surface-science experiments. The surface chemistry of glycine and alanine at the water-exposed Cu{110} interface was studied in situ using ambient-pressure photoemission and X-ray absorption spectroscopy techniques. At water pressures above 10(-5) Torr a significant pressure-dependent decrease in the temperature for dissociative desorption was observed for both amino acids, accompanied by the appearance of a new CN intermediate, which is not observed for lower pressures. The most likely reaction mechanisms involve dehydrogenation induced by O and/or OH surface species resulting from the dissociative adsorption of water. The linear relationship between the inverse decomposition temperature and the logarithm of water pressure enables determination of the activation energy for the surface reaction, between 213 and 232 kJ/mol, and a prediction of the decomposition temperature at the solid-liquid interface by extrapolating toward the equilibrium vapor pressure. Such experiments near the equilibrium vapor pressure provide important information about elementary surface processes at the solid-liquid interface, which can be retrieved neither under ultrahigh vacuum conditions nor from interfaces immersed in a solution.

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Ioannis Zegkinoglou

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Oliver Gessner

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Daniel Slaughter

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jinghua Guo

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Stefan Neppl

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Zhi Liu

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Fabian Weise

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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