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Konstantin Bryliakov

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Konstantin P. Bryliakov
Born (1977-06-01) 1 June 1977 (age 47)
Alma materNovosibirsk State University
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions

Konstantin P. Bryliakov (born 1 June 1977; Russian: Константи́н Петро́вич Брыляко́в) is a Russian chemist and author of monographs[1][2] and over 170 research papers,[3][4] textbooks, and patents. He is a professor at Russian Academy of Sciences and Novosibirsk State University.

Biography

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Bryliakov was born in Yoshkar-Ola, USSR. He studied chemistry at Novosibirsk State University from 1994 to 1999, after which he joined the Boreskov Institute of Catalysis as a PhD student and Novosibirsk State University as a teaching assistant.

Academic career

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Bryliakov received a Cand. Chem. Sci. (PhD) degree in chemical physics from the Voevodsky Institute of Chemical Kinetics and Combustion, Novosibirsk, in 2001, and a Doctor of Chemical Sciences degree (Habilitation) in catalysis from the Boreskov Institute of Catalysis, Novosibirsk, in 2008. He is currently a head of Department of Mechanisms of Catslytic Reactions at the Boreskov Institute of Catalysis (since 2021) and a full professor at Novosibirsk State University (since 2018). In 2016, Konstantin Bryliakov was elected professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Bryliakov served as an invited editor of catalysis journals Topics in Catalysis[5] and Catalysis Today.[6] He was also a member of scientific committees of international catalysis conferences.[7][8][9] He has been member of the Advisory Board of Referees of ARKIVOC since 2004 and International Advisory Board member of ChemCatChem.[10]

Research

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Bryliakov's research interests include green enantioselective (stereoselective) synthesis (mainly oxidation), biomimetic chemistry, coordination polymerization of olefins, including mechanisms of these reactions. Konstantin Bryliakov pioneered the use of homochiral metal-organic frameworks as chiral stationary phases for chromatographic separation of enantiomers.[11] He discovered a new dynamic non-linear effect in asymmetric catalysis, named asymmetric autoamplification.[12][13]

International activities

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Bryliakov has worked at the University of Konstanz, University of East Anglia, Reims University, University of Castilla-La Mancha, Institute of Chemistry of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and managed several international research projects supported by RFBR.

Publications

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  • Bryliakov, Konstantin (2014). Environmentally Sustainable Catalytic Asymmetric Oxidations. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4665-8859-2.
  • Talsi, Evgenii; Bryliakov, Konstantin (2017). Applications of EPR and NMR Spectroscopy in Homogeneous Catalysis. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4987-4263-4.

References

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  1. ^ Bryliakov, Konstantin (2014). Environmentally Sustainable Catalytic Asymmetric Oxidations. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4665-8859-2.
  2. ^ Talsi, Evgenii; Bryliakov, Konstantin (2017). Applications of EPR and NMR Spectroscopy in Homogeneous Catalysis. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4987-4263-4.
  3. ^ "K. P. Bryliakov". ORCID.
  4. ^ "K. P. Bryliakov's profile". Sciact (in Russian).
  5. ^ Bryliakov, Konstantin P.; Kaichev, Vasily V.; Parmon, Valentin N., eds. (August 2013). "Topics in Catalysis Special Issue: Mechanisms of Catalytic Reactions". Topics in Catalysis. 56 (11). SpringerLink. ISSN 1572-9028.
  6. ^ Bryliakov, Konstantin P.; Lokteva, Ekaterina S., eds. (1 January 2017). "Catalysis Today Special Issue: EuropaCat XII: Catalysis for Chemical Synthesis". Catalysis Today. 279 (Part 1). ScienceDirect. ISSN 0920-5861.
  7. ^ "Boreskov Institute of Catalysis – IX International Conference Mechanisms of Catalytic Reactions – October 22–25, 2012, St. Petersburg, Russia". Conferences System – Institute of Computational Technologies of SB RAS. 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  8. ^ "Boreskov Institute of Catalysis – X International Conference Mechanisms of Catalytic Reactions – October 2–6, 2016, Svetlogorsk, Kaliningrad region, Russia". Conferences System – Institute of Computational Technologies of SB RAS. 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  9. ^ "European Congress on Catalysis EuropaCat XII". Boreskov Institute of Catalysis. 2015.
  10. ^ "ChemCatChem Editorial Board".
  11. ^ Nuzhdin, A. L.; Dybtsev, D. N.; Bryliakov, K. P.; Talsi, E. P.; Fedin, V. P. (2007). "Enantioselective Chromatographic Resolution and One-Pot Synthesis of Enantiomerically Pure Sulfoxides over a Homochiral Zn−Organic Framework". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 129 (43): 12958–59. doi:10.1021/ja076276p. ISSN 1520-5126. PMID 17924635.
  12. ^ Talsi, E. P.; Samsonenko, D. G.; Bryliakov, K. P. (7 July 2017). "Asymmetric Autoamplification in the Oxidative Kinetic Resolution of Secondary Benzylic Alcohols Catalyzed by Manganese Complexes". ChemCatChem. 9 (13). Wiley-VCH: 2599–2607. doi:10.1002/cctc.201700438. ISSN 1867-3899. S2CID 99108191.
  13. ^ Talsi, E. P.; Bryliakov, K. P. (21 June 2018). "Autoamplification‐Enhanced Oxidative Kinetic Resolution of sec-Alcohols and Alkyl Mandelates, and its Kinetic Model". ChemCatChem. 10 (12). Wiley-VCH: 2693–99. doi:10.1002/cctc.201800180. ISSN 1867-3899. S2CID 103402006.
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