Ioannis Zegkinoglou
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Ioannis Zegkinoglou.
Nature Communications | 2016
Hemma Mistry; Ana Sofia Varela; Cecile S. Bonifacio; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Ilya Sinev; Yong-Wook Choi; Kim Kisslinger; Eric A. Stach; Judith C. Yang; Peter Strasser; Beatriz Roldan Cuenya
There is an urgent need to develop technologies that use renewable energy to convert waste products such as carbon dioxide into hydrocarbon fuels. Carbon dioxide can be electrochemically reduced to hydrocarbons over copper catalysts, although higher efficiency is required. We have developed oxidized copper catalysts displaying lower overpotentials for carbon dioxide electroreduction and record selectivity towards ethylene (60%) through facile and tunable plasma treatments. Herein we provide insight into the improved performance of these catalysts by combining electrochemical measurements with microscopic and spectroscopic characterization techniques. Operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy and cross-sectional scanning transmission electron microscopy show that copper oxides are surprisingly resistant to reduction and copper+ species remain on the surface during the reaction. Our results demonstrate that the roughness of oxide-derived copper catalysts plays only a partial role in determining the catalytic performance, while the presence of copper+ is key for lowering the onset potential and enhancing ethylene selectivity.
Nature Communications | 2014
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.
ACS Nano | 2017
Dunfeng Gao; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Nuria J. Divins; Fabian Scholten; Ilya Sinev; Philipp Grosse; Beatriz Roldan Cuenya
Carbon dioxide electroreduction to chemicals and fuels powered by renewable energy sources is considered a promising path to address climate change and energy storage needs. We have developed highly active and selective copper (Cu) nanocube catalysts with tunable Cu(100) facet and oxygen/chlorine ion content by low-pressure plasma pretreatments. These catalysts display lower overpotentials and higher ethylene, ethanol, and n-propanol selectivity, resulting in a maximum Faradaic efficiency (FE) of ∼73% for C2 and C3 products. Scanning electron microscopy and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy in combination with quasi-in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy revealed that the catalyst shape, ion content, and ion stability under electrochemical reaction conditions can be systematically tuned through plasma treatments. Our results demonstrate that the presence of oxygen species in surface and subsurface regions of the nanocube catalysts is key for achieving high activity and hydrocarbon/alcohol selectivity, even more important than the presence of Cu(100) facets.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Hemma Mistry; Yong-Wook Choi; Alexander Bagger; Fabian Scholten; Cecile S. Bonifacio; Ilya Sinev; Nuria J. Divins; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Hyo Sang Jeon; Kim Kisslinger; Eric A. Stach; Judith C. Yang; Jan Rossmeisl; Beatriz Roldan Cuenya
Efficient, stable catalysts with high selectivity for a single product are essential if electroreduction of CO2 is to become a viable route to the synthesis of industrial feedstocks and fuels. A plasma oxidation pre-treatment of silver foil enhances the number of low-coordinated catalytically active sites, which dramatically lowers the overpotential and increases the activity of CO2 electroreduction to CO. At -0.6 V versus RHE more than 90 % Faradaic efficiency towards CO was achieved on a pre-oxidized silver foil. While transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy showed that oxygen species can survive in the bulk of the catalyst during the reaction, quasi in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy showed that the surface is metallic under reaction conditions. DFT calculations reveal that the defect-rich surface of the plasma-oxidized silver foils in the presence of local electric fields drastically decrease the overpotential of CO2 electroreduction.
Synchrotron Radiation News | 2014
Andrey Shavorskiy; Osman Karslıoğlu; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Hendrik Bluhm
Solid/vapor and liquid/vapor interfaces govern many processes in the environment and atmosphere, energy generation, and electrochemical devices as well as heterogeneous catalysis. Examples include catalytic converters in automobiles [1], solid oxide fuel cells [2], cloud droplet nucleation on atmospheric aerosol particles [3], as well as the interaction of trace gases with polar snow packs [4]. A fundamental understanding of the molecular processes at these interfaces requires experimental methods that allow the investigation of samples under as close to operating conditions as possible. This kind of investigation has become increasingly important over the last few decades, leading to the development of a number of surface-sensitive, in-situ spectroscopies and microscopies, including infrared spectroscopy (IR) [5, 6]; vibrational sum-frequency generation (VSFG) [7, 8]; X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) [9]; surface X-ray diffraction (SXRD) [10]; scanning force microscopy (SFM) in both contact [11] and non-contact [12] modes; scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) [13]; as well as transmission electron microscopy [14] and scanning electron microscopy [15].
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Ali Zendegani; Ilya Sinev; Sebastian Kunze; Hemma Mistry; Hyo Sang Jeon; Jiyong Zhao; Michael Y. Hu; E. Ercan Alp; Stefan Piontek; Mathias Smialkowski; Ulf Peter Apfel; Fritz Körmann; Jörg Neugebauer; Tilmann Hickel; Beatriz Roldan Cuenya
Synthetic pentlandite (Fe4.5Ni4.5S8) is a promising electrocatalyst for hydrogen evolution, demonstrating high current densities, low overpotential, and remarkable stability in bulk form. The depletion of sulfur from the surface of this catalyst during the electrochemical reaction has been proposed to be beneficial for its catalytic performance, but the role of sulfur vacancies and the mechanism determining the reaction kinetics are still unknown. We have performed electrochemical operando studies of the vibrational dynamics of pentlandite under hydrogen evolution reaction conditions using 57Fe nuclear resonant inelastic X-ray scattering. Comparing the measured Fe partial vibrational density of states with density functional theory calculations, we have demonstrated that hydrogen atoms preferentially occupy substitutional positions replacing pre-existing sulfur vacancies. Once all vacancies are filled, the protonation proceeds interstitially, which slows down the reaction. Our results highlight the beneficial role of sulfur vacancies in the electrocatalytic performance of pentlandite and give insights into the hydrogen adsorption mechanism during the reaction.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014
Andrey Shavorskiy; Stefan Neppl; Daniel Slaughter; James P. Cryan; Katrin R. Siefermann; Fabian Weise; Ming-Fu Lin; Camila Bacellar; Michael P. Ziemkiewicz; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Matthew Fraund; Champak Khurmi; Marcus P. Hertlein; Travis Wright; Nils Huse; Robert W. Schoenlein; Tolek Tyliszczak; G. Coslovich; Robert A. Kaindl; Bruce S. Rude; Andreas Ölsner; Sven Mähl; Hendrik Bluhm; Oliver Gessner
An apparatus for sub-nanosecond time-resolved ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies with pulsed and constant wave X-ray light sources is presented. A differentially pumped hemispherical electron analyzer is equipped with a delay-line detector that simultaneously records the position and arrival time of every single electron at the exit aperture of the hemisphere with ~0.1 mm spatial resolution and ~150 ps temporal accuracy. The kinetic energies of the photoelectrons are encoded in the hit positions along the dispersive axis of the two-dimensional detector. Pump-probe time-delays are provided by the electron arrival times relative to the pump pulse timing. An average time-resolution of (780 ± 20) ps (FWHM) is demonstrated for a hemisphere pass energy E(p) = 150 eV and an electron kinetic energy range KE = 503-508 eV. The time-resolution of the setup is limited by the electron time-of-flight (TOF) spread related to the electron trajectory distribution within the analyzer hemisphere and within the electrostatic lens system that images the interaction volume onto the hemisphere entrance slit. The TOF spread for electrons with KE = 430 eV varies between ~9 ns at a pass energy of 50 eV and ~1 ns at pass energies between 200 eV and 400 eV. The correlation between the retarding ratio and the TOF spread is evaluated by means of both analytical descriptions of the electron trajectories within the analyzer hemisphere and computer simulations of the entire trajectories including the electrostatic lens system. In agreement with previous studies, we find that the by far dominant contribution to the TOF spread is acquired within the hemisphere. However, both experiment and computer simulations show that the lens system indirectly affects the time resolution of the setup to a significant extent by inducing a strong dependence of the angular spread of electron trajectories entering the hemisphere on the retarding ratio. The scaling of the angular spread with the retarding ratio can be well approximated by applying Liouvilles theorem of constant emittance to the electron trajectories inside the lens system. The performance of the setup is demonstrated by characterizing the laser fluence-dependent transient surface photovoltage response of a laser-excited Si(100) sample.
Nature Communications | 2016
Hemma Mistry; Ana Sofia Varela; Cecile S. Bonifacio; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Ilya Sinev; Yong-Wook Choi; Kim Kisslinger; Eric A. Stach; Judith C. Yang; Peter Strasser; Beatriz Roldan Cuenya
Nature Communications 7 Article number: 12123 (2016); Published 30 June 2016; Updated 12 September 2016 An incorrect version of the Supplementary Information was inadvertently published with this Article in which the image for Supplementary Fig. 7 was missing. The Article has now been updated to include the correct version of the Supplementary Information.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Hyo Sang Jeon; Ilya Sinev; Fabian Scholten; Nuria J. Divins; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Lukas Pielsticker; Beatriz Roldan Cuenya
We explored the size-dependent activity and selectivity of Zn nanoparticles (NPs) for the electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR). Zn NPs ranging from 3 to 5 nm showed high activity and selectivity (∼70%) for CO production, whereas those above 5 nm exhibited bulk-like catalytic properties. In addition, a drastic increase in hydrogen production was observed for the Zn NPs below 3 nm, which is associated with the enhanced content of low-coordinated sites on small NPs. The presence of residual cationic Zn species in the catalysts was also revealed during CO2RR via operando X-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy measurements. Such species are expected to play a role in the selectivity trends obtained. Our findings can serve as guidance for the development of highly active and CO-selective Zn-based catalysts for CO2RR.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Andrey Shavorskiy; Xiaofei Ye; Osman Karslıoğlu; Andrey Poletayev; Matthias Hartl; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Lena Trotochaud; Slavomír Nemšák; Claus M. Schneider; Ethan J. Crumlin; Stephanus Axnanda; Zhi Liu; Philip N. Ross; William C. Chueh; Hendrik Bluhm
Photoelectrochemical water splitting is a promising pathway for the direct conversion of renewable solar energy to easy to store and use chemical energy. The performance of a photoelectrochemical device is determined in large part by the heterogeneous interface between the photoanode and the electrolyte, which we here characterize directly under operating conditions using interface-specific probes. Utilizing X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy as a noncontact probe of local electrical potentials, we demonstrate direct measurements of the band alignment at the semiconductor/electrolyte interface of an operating hematite/KOH photoelectrochemical cell as a function of solar illumination, applied potential, and doping. We provide evidence for the absence of in-gap states in this system, which is contrary to previous measurements using indirect methods, and give a comprehensive description of shifts in the band positions and limiting processes during the photoelectrochemical reaction.