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Oleksandr Voznyy

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Electrochemical ammonia (NH3) synthesis from nitrate (NO3) offers a promising greener alternative to the fossil-fuel-based Haber-Bosch process to support the increasing demand for nitrogen fertilizers while removing environmental waste. Previous studies have mainly focused on designing catalysts to promote the direct conversion (NO3 → NH3) while suppressing the two-step pathway (NO3 → NO2 → NH3). We hypothesize that efficient nitrate reduction is possible on simple catalysts by instead promoting the two-step reaction and using chemical reactor principles in a membrane electrode assembly, despite NO2 intermediates. Here, we use an unmodified copper catalyst and control reactivity through current density, flow rate, and electrolyte recycling. Balancing the electrolyte flow rate with current density results in ideal residence times for NO2, allowing for 91% FENH3 in a 5 cm2 electrolyzer with a NO3 to NH3 partial current of 1.8 A. This work shows that traditional engineering principles can substantially boost the NO3 reduction reaction, even for simple catalysts. ...
Journal article (2015) - Michael M. Adachi, Fengjia Fan, Daniel P. Sellan, Sjoerd Hoogland, Oleksandr Voznyy, Arjan J. Houtepen, Kevin D. Parrish, Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos, Jonathan A. Malen, Edward H. Sargent
Colloidal quantum dots have grown in interest as materials for light amplification and lasing in view of their bright photoluminescence, convenient solution processing and size-controlled spectral tunability. To date, lasing in colloidal quantum dot solids has been limited to the nanosecond temporal regime, curtailing their application in systems that require more sustained emission. Here we find that the chief cause of nanosecond-only operation has been thermal runaway: the combination of rapid heat injection from the pump source, poor heat removal and a highly temperature-dependent threshold. We show microsecond-sustained lasing, achieved by placing ultra-compact colloidal quantum dot films on a thermally conductive substrate, the combination of which minimizes heat accumulation. Specifically, we employ inorganic-halide-capped quantum dots that exhibit high modal gain (1,200 cm-1) and an ultralow amplified spontaneous emission threshold (average peak power of ∼50 kW cm-2) and rely on an optical structure that dissipates heat while offering minimal modal loss. ...
Journal article (2015) - Brandon R. Sutherland, Sjoerd Hoogland, Edward H. Sargent, Michael M. Adachi, Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos, Chris T O Wong, Jeffrey J. McDowell, Jixian Xu, Oleksandr Voznyy, Zhijun Ning, Arjan J. Houtepen
(Graph Presented) A new method to deposit perovskite thin films that benefit from the thickness control and conformality of atomic layer deposition (ALD) is detailed. A seed layer of ALD PbS is place-exchanged with PbI2 and subsequently CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite. These films show promising optical properties, with gain coefficients of 3200 ± 830 cm-1. ...