Publications by authors named "K N Kovalenko"

The separation of light alkanes is one of the most important tasks for modern industry due to the widespread use of ethane and propane as chemical feedstocks. Their extraction from natural gas is a challenging task and is now carried out by cryogenic distillation at a limited number of plants around the world. The development of new materials for adsorption separation is therefore important.

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Three new three-dimensional (3D) metal-organic frameworks [M(ttdc)(dabco)] (M = Zn(II), 1-Zn; Cu(II), 1-Cu; and Zn/Cu, 1-ZnCu) based on thieno[3,2-]thiophene-2,5-dicarboxylate (ttdc) were synthesized and characterized by a combination of physicochemical methods (single crystal X-ray diffraction, powder X-ray diffraction, chemical and thermogravimetric analyses and IR spectroscopy). 1-Cu demonstrated permanent porosity ( = 0.790 cm g and = 1725 m g) and significant CO, CH, CH, CH and CH gas uptakes under ambient conditions.

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Article Synopsis
  • Heavy metal ions and antibiotic contamination are significant global environmental issues, requiring efficient methods for detecting them at very low concentrations.
  • The study focused on luminescent Ln-MOF materials, particularly NIIC-3-Tb, which showed a fast and selective response to detecting mercury and sulfadiazine at subnanomolar levels.
  • Advanced techniques revealed the mechanisms of interaction for both pollutants, demonstrating that NIIC-3-Ln materials can effectively sense contaminants while also providing insights into their sensing mechanisms at a molecular level.
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We study the synchronization properties of a generic networked dynamical system, and show that, under a suitable approximation, the transition to synchronization can be predicted with the only help of eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the graph Laplacian matrix. The transition comes out to be made of a well defined sequence of events, each of which corresponds to a specific clustered state. The network's nodes involved in each of the clusters can be identified, and the value of the coupling strength at which the events are taking place can be approximately ascertained.

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We hypothesize that aquatic ecosystem services are likely to be inequitably accessible and addressing this hypothesis requires systematic assessment at regional and national scales. We used existing data from large-scale aquatic monitoring programs (National Coastal Condition Assessment, National Lakes Assessment) to examine relationships between ecosystem condition, approximating a subset of cultural and provisioning services, and inequality (population below poverty level, minority population). We also assessed whether monitoring sites equitably represented the gradient of socioeconomic backgrounds.

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