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Dive into the research topics where Kirill Kovnir is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirill Kovnir.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

One-Step Synthesis of Self-Supported Nickel Phosphide Nanosheet Array Cathodes for Efficient Electrocatalytic Hydrogen Generation.

Xiaoguang Wang; Yury V. Kolen'ko; Xiao-Qing Bao; Kirill Kovnir; Lifeng Liu

Nickel phosphide is an emerging low-cost, earth-abundant catalyst that can efficiently reduce water to generate hydrogen. However, the synthesis of nickel phosphide catalysts usually involves multiple steps and is laborious. Herein, a convenient and straightforward approach to the synthesis of a three-dimensional (3D) self-supported biphasic Ni5 P4 -Ni2 P nanosheet (NS) array cathode is presented, which is obtained by direct phosphorization of commercially available nickel foam using phosphorus vapor. The synthesized 3D Ni5 P4 -Ni2 P-NS array cathode exhibits outstanding electrocatalytic activity and long-term durability toward the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) in acidic medium. The fabrication procedure reported here is scalable, showing substantial promise for use in water electrolysis. More importantly, the approach can be readily extended to synthesize other self-supported transition metal phosphide HER cathodes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Pd−Ga Intermetallic Compounds as Highly Selective Semihydrogenation Catalysts

Marc Armbrüster; Kirill Kovnir; Malte Behrens; Detre Teschner; Yuri Grin; Robert Schlögl

The intermetallic compounds Pd(3)Ga(7), PdGa, and Pd(2)Ga are found to be highly selective semihydrogenation catalysts for acetylene outperforming established systems. The stability of the crystal and electronic structure under reaction conditions allows the direct relation of structural and catalytic properties and a knowledge-based development of new intermetallic catalyst systems. In the crystal structure of PdGa palladium is exclusively surrounded by gallium atoms. The alteration of the Pd coordination in PdGa leads to a strong modification of the electronic structure around the Fermi level in comparison to elemental Pd. Electronic modification and isolation of active sites causes the excellent catalytic semihydrogenation properties.


Nature Materials | 2012

Al13Fe4 as a low-cost alternative for palladium in heterogeneous hydrogenation

Marc Armbrüster; Kirill Kovnir; Matthias Friedrich; Detre Teschner; Gregor Wowsnick; M. Hahne; Peter Gille; L. Szentmiklósi; M. Feuerbacher; Marc Heggen; Frank Girgsdies; Dirk Rosenthal; Robert Schlögl; Yuri Grin

Replacing noble metals in heterogeneous catalysts by low-cost substitutes has driven scientific and industrial research for more than 100 years. Cheap and ubiquitous iron is especially desirable, because it does not bear potential health risks like, for example, nickel. To purify the ethylene feed for the production of polyethylene, the semi-hydrogenation of acetylene is applied (80 × 10(6) tons per annum; refs 1-3). The presence of small and separated transition-metal atom ensembles (so-called site-isolation), and the suppression of hydride formation are beneficial for the catalytic performance. Iron catalysts necessitate at least 50 bar and 100 °C for the hydrogenation of unsaturated C-C bonds, showing only limited selectivity towards semi-hydrogenation. Recent innovation in catalytic semi-hydrogenation is based on computational screening of substitutional alloys to identify promising metal combinations using scaling functions and the experimental realization of the site-isolation concept employing structurally well-ordered and in situ stable intermetallic compounds of Ga with Pd (refs 15-19). The stability enables a knowledge-based development by assigning the observed catalytic properties to the crystal and electronic structures of the intermetallic compounds. Following this approach, we identified the low-cost and environmentally benign intermetallic compound Al(13)Fe(4) as an active and selective semi-hydrogenation catalyst. This knowledge-based development might prove applicable to a wide range of heterogeneously catalysed reactions.


Science and Technology of Advanced Materials | 2007

A new approach to well-defined, stable and site-isolated catalysts

Kirill Kovnir; Marc Armbrüster; Detre Teschner; Tzvetomir Venkov; Friederike C. Jentoft; Axel Knop-Gericke; Yuri Grin; Robert Schlögl

Abstract A new concept to circumvent some of the problems that are hindering a rational metallic catalyst development is introduced. Investigation of conventional metal catalysts — which consist of supported metals, metal mixtures or alloys — is handicapped by the presence of a variety of active sites, their possible agglomeration, metal–support interactions as well as segregation of the components. In order to avoid most of the drawbacks, we employ well-defined, ordered and in-situ stable unsupported intermetallic compounds. Knowledge of the chemical bonding in the compounds and the defined neighbourhood of the active sites allows a rational approach to catalysts with excellent selectivity as well as long-term stability. The concept is demonstrated for the intermetallic compound PdGa, which is applied as catalyst for the selective hydrogenation of acetylene to ethylene.


Organic Letters | 2010

A Chiral 6-Membered N-Heterocyclic Carbene Copper(I) Complex That Induces High Stereoselectivity

Jin Kyoon Park; Hershel H. Lackey; Matthew D. Rexford; Kirill Kovnir; Michael Shatruk; D. Tyler McQuade

A chiral 6-membered annulated N-heterocyclic (6-NHC) copper complex that catalyzes β-borylations with high yield and enantioselectivity was developed. The chiral 6-NHC copper complex is easy to prepare on the gram scale and is very active, showing 10,000 turnovers at 0.01 mol % of catalyst without significant decrease of enantioselectivity and with useful reaction rates.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Clathrate Ba8Au16P30: the "gold standard" for lattice thermal conductivity.

James Fulmer; Oleg I. Lebedev; Vladimir V. Roddatis; Derrick C. Kaseman; Sabyasachi Sen; Juli-Anna Dolyniuk; Kathleen Lee; Andrei V. Olenev; Kirill Kovnir

A novel clathrate phase, Ba8Au16P30, was synthesized from its elements. High-resolution powder X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy were used to establish the crystal structure of the new compound. Ba8Au16P30 crystallizes in an orthorhombic superstructure of clathrate-I featuring a complete separation of gold and phosphorus atoms over different crystallographic positions, similar to the Cu-containing analogue, Ba8Cu16P30. Barium cations are trapped inside the large polyhedral cages of the gold-phosphorus tetrahedral framework. X-ray diffraction indicated that one out of 15 crystallographically independent phosphorus atoms appears to be three-coordinate. Probing the local structure and chemical bonding of phosphorus atoms with (31)P solid-state NMR spectroscopy confirmed the three-coordinate nature of one of the phosphorus atomic positions. High-resolution high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy indicated that the clathrate Ba8Au16P30 is well-ordered on the atomic scale, although numerous twinning and intergrowth defects as well as antiphase boundaries were detected. The presence of such defects results in the pseudo-body-centered-cubic diffraction patterns observed in single-crystal X-ray diffraction experiments. NMR and resistivity characterization of Ba8Au16P30 indicated paramagnetic metallic properties with a room-temperature resistivity of 1.7 mΩ cm. Ba8Au16P30 exhibits a low total thermal conductivity (0.62 W m(-1) K(-1)) and an unprecedentedly low lattice thermal conductivity (0.18 W m(-1) K(-1)) at room temperature. The values of the thermal conductivity for Ba8Au16P30 are significantly lower than the typical values reported for solid crystalline compounds. We attribute such low thermal conductivity values to the presence of a large number of heavy atoms (Au) in the framework and the formation of multiple twinning interfaces and antiphase defects, which are effective scatterers of heat-carrying phonons.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2009

Cationic Clathrate I Si46-xPxTey (6.6(1) <= y <= 7.5(1), x <= 2y): Crystal Structure, Homogeneity Range, and Physical Properties

Julia V. Zaikina; Kirill Kovnir; Ulrich Burkhardt; Walter Schnelle; Frank Haarmann; Ulrich Schwarz; Yu. Grin; Andrei V. Shevelkov

A new cationic clathrate I Si(46-x)P(x)Te(y) (6.6(1) < or = y < or = 7.5(1), x < or = 2y at 1375 K) was synthesized from the elements and characterized by X-ray powder diffraction, thermal analysis, scanning electron microscopy, wavelength dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (WDXS), neutron powder diffraction, and (31)P NMR spectroscopy. The thermal behaviors of the magnetic susceptibility and resistivity were investigated as well. Si(46-x)P(x)Te(y) reveals a wide homogeneity range due to the presence of vacancies in the tellurium guest positions inside the smaller cage of the clathrate I structure. The vacancy ordering in the structure of Si(46-x)P(x)Te(y) causes the change of space group from Pm3n (ideal clathrate I) to Pm3 accompanied by the redistribution of P and Si atoms over different framework positions. Neutron powder diffraction confirmed that P atoms preferably form a cage around the vacancy-containing tellurium guest position. Additionally, (31)P NMR spin-spin relaxation experiments revealed the presence of sites with different coordination of phosphorus atoms. Precise determination of the composition of Si(46-x)P(x)Te(y) by WDXS showed slight but noticeable deviation (x < or = 2y) of phosphorus content from the Zintl counting scheme (x = 2y). The compound is diamagnetic while resistivity measurements show activated behavior or that of heavily doped semiconductors. Thermal analysis revealed high stability of the investigated clathrate: Si(46-x)P(x)Te(y) melts incongruently at approximately 1460 K in vacuum and is stable in air against oxidation up to 1295 K.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Introducing a Magnetic Guest to a Tetrel-Free Clathrate: Synthesis, Structure, and Properties of EuxBa8–xCu16P30 (0 ≤ x ≤ 1.5)

Kirill Kovnir; Ulrike Stockert; Sergij Budnyk; Yurii Prots; Michael Baitinger; S. Paschen; Andrei V. Shevelkov; Yuri Grin

The europium-containing clathrate-I Eu(x)Ba(8-x)Cu(16)P(30) was synthesized from the elements. Powder X-ray diffraction in combination with energy dispersive X-ray absorption spectroscopy (EDXS) and metallographic studies showed the homogeneity range with x ≤ 1.5. Determination of the crystal structure confirmed the presence of an orthorhombic superstructure of clathrate-I and revealed that Eu atoms exclusively resided in small pentagonal-dodecahedral cages. Magnetic measurements together with X-ray absorption spectroscopy are consistent with a 4f(7) (Eu(2+)) ground state for Eu(x)Ba(8-x)Cu(16)P(30). Below 3 K the Eu moments order antiferromagnetically. Resistivity measurements revealed metallic behavior of the investigated clathrate, in line with the composition deviating from the Zintl counting scheme. Local vibrations of the guest atoms inside the cages are analyzed with the help of specific heat investigations.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

The First Silicon‐Based Cationic Clathrate III with High Thermal Stability: Si172−xPxTey (x=2y, y>20)

Julia V. Zaikina; Kirill Kovnir; Frank Haarmann; Walter Schnelle; Ulrich Burkhardt; Horst Borrmann; Ulrich Schwarz; Yuri Grin; Andrei V. Shevelkov

A new representative of a very rare clathrate III family, Si130P42Te21, has been synthesized from the elements. It crystallizes in the tetragonal space group P4(2)/mnm (no. 136) with the unit cell parameters a=19.2632(3) angstroms, c=10.0706(2) angstroms. Single crystal X-ray diffraction and solid state 31P NMR revealed a non-random distribution of phosphorus atoms over the framework positions. The crystal structure features a peculiar packing of large polyhedra Te@(Si/P)(n) never observed before for cationic clathrates. Despite the structural complexity, the composition of the novel clathrate Is in accordance with the Zintl rule, which was confirmed by a combination of optical metallography, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and wavelength dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (WDXS), as well as by diamagnetic and semiconducting behavior of the synthesized phase. Clathrate Si130P42Te21 exhibits the highest reported thermal stability for this class of materials, it decomposes at 1510 K. This opens new perspectives for the creation of clathrate-based materials for high-temperature applications.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010

Bulk and Surface Structure and High-Temperature Thermoelectric Properties of Inverse Clathrate-III in the Si-P-Te System

Julia V. Zaikina; Takao Mori; Kirill Kovnir; Detre Teschner; Anatoliy Senyshyn; Ulrich Schwarz; Yuri Grin; Andrei V. Shevelkov

The creation of thermoelectric materials for waste heat recovery and direct solar energy conversion is a challenge that forces the development of compounds that combine appreciable thermoelectric figure-of-merit with high thermal and chemical stability. Here we propose a new candidate for high-temperature thermoelectric materials, the type-III Si(172-x)P(x)Te(y) cationic clathrate, in which the framework is composed of partially ordered silicon and phosphorus atoms, whereas tellurium atoms occupy guest positions. We show that the utmost stability of this clathrate (up to 1500 K) in air is ensured by the formation of a nanosized layer of phosphorus-doped silica on the surface, which prevents further oxidation and degradation. As-cast (non-optimized) Si-P-Te clathrates display rather high values of the thermoelectric figure-of-merit (ZT=0.24-0.36) in the temperature range of 700-1100 K. These ZT values are comparable to the best values achieved for the properly doped transition-metal-oxide materials. The methods of the thermoelectric efficiency optimization are discussed.

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Jian Wang

United States Department of Energy

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Yuri Grin

Moscow State University

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Kathleen Lee

University of California

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Marc Armbrüster

Chemnitz University of Technology

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