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Grigoriy Yablonsky (or Yablonskii) (russian: Григорий Семенович Яблонский) is an expert in the area of
chemical kinetics Chemical kinetics, also known as reaction kinetics, is the branch of physical chemistry that is concerned with understanding the rates of chemical reactions. It is to be contrasted with chemical thermodynamics, which deals with the direction in ...
and
chemical engineering Chemical engineering is an engineering field which deals with the study of operation and design of chemical plants as well as methods of improving production. Chemical engineers develop economical commercial processes to convert raw materials int ...
, particularly in catalytic technology of complete and selective oxidation, which is one of the main driving forces of sustainable development. His theory of complex steady-state and non-steady state catalytic reactions, is widely used by research teams in many countries of the world (USA, UK, Belgium, Germany, France, Norway and Thailand). Now, Grigoriy Yablonsky serves as an Associate Research Professor of Chemistry at Saint Louis University’s
Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology is a college within Saint Louis University. History de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver restored by Parks students in 1991 Founding Parks Air College was founded by Oliver Parks in the city o ...
and SLU’s College of Arts and Sciences. Since 2006, Yablonsky is an editor of the Russian-America
almanac "Middle West"


Some recent scientific achievements

Yablonsky – together with Lazman, developed the general form of steady-state kinetic description (‘kinetic polynomial’) which is a non-linear generalization of many theoretical expressions proposed previously (Langmuir – Hinshelwood and Hougen–Watson equations). Yablonsky also created a theory of precise catalyst characterization for the advanced worldwide experimental technique ( temporal analysis of products) developed by John T. Gleaves, Washington University in St. Louis. In 2008–2011, Yablonsky – together with Constales and Marin (
Ghent University Ghent University ( nl, Universiteit Gent, abbreviated as UGent) is a public research university located in Ghent, Belgium. Established before the state of Belgium itself, the university was founded by the Dutch King William I in 1817, when th ...
, Belgium) and Alexander Gorban (University of Leicester, UK) – obtained new results on coincidences and intersections in kinetic dependences, and found a new type of symmetry relations between the observable and initial kinetic data. Recently together with Alexander Gorban he developed the theory of
chemical thermodynamics Chemical thermodynamics is the study of the interrelation of heat and work with chemical reactions or with physical changes of state within the confines of the laws of thermodynamics. Chemical thermodynamics involves not only laboratory measurem ...
and
detailed balance The principle of detailed balance can be used in kinetic systems which are decomposed into elementary processes (collisions, or steps, or elementary reactions). It states that at equilibrium, each elementary process is in equilibrium with its reve ...
in the limit of irreversible reactions.A. N. Gorban and G. S. Yablonsky
"Extended detailed balance for systems with irreversible reactions"
''Chemical Engineering Science'', 66:5388–5399, 2011; ,
A.N. Gorban, E.M. Mirkes, G.S. Yablonsky
"Thermodynamics in the limit of irreversible reactions"
''Physica A'' 392 (2013) 1318–1335; ,


Catalytic trigger and catalytic oscillator

A simple scheme of the nonlinear kinetic oscillations in heterogeneous catalytic reactions has been proposed by Bykov, Yablonskii, and Kim in 1978. Authors have started from the catalytic trigger (1976), a simplest catalytic reaction without
autocatalysis A single chemical reaction is said to be autocatalytic if one of the reaction products is also a catalyst for the same or a coupled reaction.Steinfeld J.I., Francisco J.S. and Hase W.L. ''Chemical Kinetics and Dynamics'' (2nd ed., Prentice-Hall 199 ...
that allows multiplicity of steady states. Then they have supplemented this classical adsorption mechanism of catalytic oxidation by a "buffer" step Here, A2, B and AB are gases (for example, O2, CO and CO2), Z is the "adsorption place" on the surface of the solid catalyst (for example, Pt), AZ and BZ are the intermediates on the surface (adatoms, adsorbed molecules or radicals) and (BZ) is an intermediate that does not participate in the main reaction Let the concentration of the gaseous components be constant. Then the law of mass action gives for this reaction mechanism a system of three ordinary differential equations that describes kinetics on the surface where is the concentration of the free places of adsorption on the surface ("per one adsorption centre"), ''x'' and ''y'' are the concentrations of ''AZ'' and ''BZ'', correspondingly (also normalized "per one adsorption centre") and ''s'' is the concentration of the buffer component (''BZ''). This three-dimensional system includes seven parameters. The detailed analysis shows that there are 23 different phase portraits for this system, including oscillations, multiplicity of steady states and various types of bifurcations.


Reactions without interaction of different components

Let the reaction mechanism consist of reactions :\alpha_r A_ \to \sum_j \beta_A_j \, , where A_i are symbols of components, ''r'' is the number of the elementary reaction and \alpha_r, \beta_ \geq 0 are the stoichiometric coefficients (usually they are integer numbers). (We do not include the components that are present in excess and the components with almost constant concentrations) The Eley–Rideal mechanism of CO oxidation on Pt provides a simple example of such a reaction mechanism without interaction of different components on the surface: :2Pt(+O2) <=> 2Pt; \;\; + CO <=> + CO2\!\uparrow. Let the reaction mechanism have the conservation law :\alpha_r m_= \sum_j \beta_ m_j \text m_j>0 \text r , and let the reaction rate satisfy the mass action law: :W_r= k_r c_^, where c_i is the concentration of A_i. Then the dynamic of the kinetic system is very simple: the steady states are stable and all solutions \mathbf(t)=(c_i(t)) with the same value of the conservation law m(\mathbf)= \sum m_i c_i monotonically converge in the weighted l_1 norm: the distance between such solutions \mathbf^(t),\mathbf^(t), :\, \mathbf^-\mathbf^\, =\sum_i m_i , c^_i-^_i, , monotonically decreases in time. This ''quasithermodynamic property'' of the systems without interaction of different components is important for the analysis of dynamics of catalytic reactions: nonlinear steps with two (or more) different intermediate reagents are responsible for nontrivial dynamical effects like multiplicity of steady states, oscillations or bifurcations. Without interaction of different components the kinetic curves converge in a simple norm even for open systems.


The extended principle of detailed balance

Detailed mechanism of many real physico-chemical complex systems includes both reversible and irreversible reactions. Such mechanisms are typical in homogeneous combustion, heterogeneous catalytic oxidation and complex enzyme reactions. The classical thermodynamics of perfect systems is defined for reversible kinetics and has no limit for irreversible reactions. In contrary, the mass action law gives the possibility to write the chemical kinetic equations for any combination of reversible and irreversible reactions. Without additional restrictions this class of equations is extremely wide and can approximate any
dynamical system In mathematics, a dynamical system is a system in which a function describes the time dependence of a point in an ambient space. Examples include the mathematical models that describe the swinging of a clock pendulum, the flow of water in ...
with preservation of positivity of concentrations and the linear conservation laws. (This general approximation theorem has been proved in 1986.) The model of real systems should satisfy some restrictions. Under the standard
microscopic reversibility The principle of microscopic reversibility in physics and chemistry is twofold: * First, it states that the microscopic detailed dynamics of particles and fields is time-reversible because the microscopic equations of motion are symmetric with resp ...
requirement, these restrictions should be formulated as follows: A system with some irreversible reactions should be a limit of the systems with all reversible reactions and the detailed balance conditions. Such systems have been completely described in 2011. The ''extended principle of detailed balance'' is the characteristic property of all systems which obey the generalized mass action law and are the limits of the systems with detailed balance when some of the reaction rate constants tend to zero (the Gorban-Yablonsky theorem). The extended principle of detailed balance consists of two parts: * The ''algebraic condition'': The principle of detailed balance is valid for the reversible part. (This means that for the set of all reversible reactions there exists a positive equilibrium where all the elementary reactions are equilibrated by their reverse reactions.) * The ''structural condition'': The convex hull of the stoichiometric vectors of the irreversible reactions has empty intersection with the linear span of the stoichiometric vectors of the reversible reactions. (Physically, this means that the irreversible reactions cannot be included in oriented cyclic pathways.) The stoichiometric vector of the reaction \sum_i \alpha_ A_i \to \sum_j \beta_ A_j is the ''gain minus loss'' vector with coordinates \gamma_=\beta_i-\alpha_i. (It may be useful to recall the formal convention: the linear span of empty set is , the convex hull of empty set is empty.) The extended principle of detailed balance gives an ultimate and complete answer to the following problem: ''How to throw away some reverse reactions without violation of thermodynamics and microscopic reversibility?'' The answer is: the convex hull of the stoichiometric vectors of the irreversible reactions should not intersect with the linear span of the stoichiometric vectors of the reversible reactions and the reaction rate constants of the remained reversible reactions should satisfy the Wegscheider identities.


Career

From 1997 to 2007, Yablonsky was in the Department of Energy, Environmental and Chemical Engineering at
Washington University in St. Louis Washington University in St. Louis (WashU or WUSTL) is a private research university with its main campus in St. Louis County, and Clayton, Missouri. Founded in 1853, the university is named after George Washington. Washington University is r ...
as a Research Associate Professor. Since 2007, Yablonsky became an associate professor at Saint Louis University's Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology, as well as the Department of Chemistry. During his career, G. Yablonsky has organised many conferences and workshops at national and international levels. He is always in the centre of interdisciplinary dialogue between mathematicians, chemists, physicists and chemical engineers. Yablonsky was selected in 2013 for the James B. Eads Award, which recognizes a distinguished individual for outstanding achievement in engineering or technology.


Honors and awards

* Lifetime Achievement Award, in recognition of outstanding contributions to the research field of chemical kinetics, Mathematics in Chemical Kinetics and Engineering, MaCKiE, 2013 * James B. Eads Award, Academy of Science of St. Louis Outstanding Scientist Award (2013) * Honorary Doctor Degree from the University of Ghent, Belgium (2010) * Chevron Chair Professorship at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Madras (2011) * Honorary Fellow of the Australian Institute of High Energetic Materials, Gladstone, Australia (2011)


Professional memberships and associations

Yablonsky has numerous international designations as Honorary Professor, Fellow, Doctor and Member of prestigious science academies and universities in Belgium, India, China, Russia and Ukraine. * 1996 – present: American Institute of Chemical Engineers * 2011 – present:
American Chemical Society The American Chemical Society (ACS) is a scientific society based in the United States that supports scientific inquiry in the field of chemistry. Founded in 1876 at New York University, the ACS currently has more than 155,000 members at all ...
* 2011 – present: Member of the Scientific Council on Catalysis at the
Russian Academy of Sciences The Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS; russian: Росси́йская акаде́мия нау́к (РАН) ''Rossíyskaya akadémiya naúk'') consists of the national academy of Russia; a network of scientific research institutes from across ...
* 2013 – present: Fellow, Academy of Science of St. Louis


Notable publications

Yablonsky is the author of seven books, most recently of "Kinetics of Chemical Reactions: Decoding Complexity" Wiley-VCH (2011) (together with Guy B. Marin), and more than 200 papers. * * * * * * *


See also

* Temporal analysis of products * Chemical Reaction Network Theory *
Detailed Balance The principle of detailed balance can be used in kinetic systems which are decomposed into elementary processes (collisions, or steps, or elementary reactions). It states that at equilibrium, each elementary process is in equilibrium with its reve ...


References


External links


Yablonsky's faculty profile at Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and TechnologyYablonsky's account on Google Scholar
{{DEFAULTSORT:Yablonsky, Grigoriy Living people American chemical engineers 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians Saint Louis University mathematicians Saint Louis University faculty Jewish scientists 1940 births Soviet chemists 20th-century chemists Soviet mathematicians