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Kai S. Exner

Researcher at University of Duisburg-Essen

Publications -  80
Citations -  2051

Kai S. Exner is an academic researcher from University of Duisburg-Essen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Catalysis. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 55 publications receiving 1166 citations. Previous affiliations of Kai S. Exner include University of Giessen & University of Ulm.

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Controlling Selectivity in the Chlorine Evolution Reaction over RuO2-Based Catalysts

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that one monolayer of TiO2(110) supported on RuO2 (110) enhances the selectivity towards the CER by several orders of magnitudes, while preserving the high activity for the C ER.
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A Universal Approach To Determine the Free Energy Diagram of an Electrocatalytic Reaction

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a free energy diagram for three prototypical electrocatalyzed reactions, namely the chlorine evolution reaction (CER), oxygen evolution reaction over RuO2(110) as well as hydrogen evolution reaction on Pt(111).
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Kinetics of Electrocatalytic Reactions from First-Principles: A Critical Comparison with the Ab Initio Thermodynamics Approach.

TL;DR: It is shown that ab initio thermodynamics leads to erroneous conclusions about kinetic and mechanistic aspects for the CER over RuO2(110), while the kinetics of the OER overRuO2 (110) and ORR over Pt(111) are reasonably well described.
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Full Kinetics from First Principles of the Chlorine Evolution Reaction over a RuO2(110) Model Electrode

TL;DR: Full kinetics from first-principles allows the rate-determining step in the CER to be identified and the experimentally observed change in the Tafel slope to be explained.
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The Sabatier Principle in Electrocatalysis: Basics, Limitations, and Extensions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the fundamental concepts of the Sabatier principle with a highlight on the limitations and challenges in its current thermodynamic context, and move beyond its current temperature-optimal framework is expected to promote the identification of next-generation electrocatalysts.