Mercouri G. Kanatzidis
· Professor of ChemistryVerifiedNorthwestern University · Physics
Active 1981–2026
About
Mercouri G. Kanatzidis is a Professor of Chemistry at Northwestern University with a background that includes a B.S. from Aristotle University of Thessaloniki obtained in 1979 and a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa completed in 1984. His research focuses on inorganic chemistry, solid state and coordination chemistry of chalcogenide compounds, with particular interest in the design of new materials, exploratory synthesis, thermoelectric materials, nanostructured materials, intermetallics, mesoporous semiconductors, phase-change materials, conducting polymers, and intercalation chemistry applications of new materials. Kanatzidis has made significant contributions to the understanding and development of high-performance semiconductors, thermoelectric materials, and novel chalcogenide phases, advancing the field through his innovative research and synthesis techniques.
Research topics
- Materials science
- Chemistry
- Optoelectronics
- Nanotechnology
- Crystallography
- Physics
- Inorganic chemistry
- Condensed matter physics
- Optics
- Thermodynamics
- Organic chemistry
- Chemical physics
- Composite material
- Chemical engineering
- Electrical engineering
- Physical chemistry
- Engineering
- Metallurgy
- Quantum mechanics
- Engineering physics
- Nuclear physics
- Business
- Mechanical engineering
- Medicine
Selected publications
Nature Energy · 2026-02-17 · 1 citations
articleChemistry of Materials · 2026-04-27
articleCorrespondingMetal halide perovskites (MHPs) are versatile semiconductors with high defect tolerance. Among emerging MHP architectures, the 3D “hollow” perovskites incorporating ethylenediammonium (en) dications represent a unique defect stabilization paradigm by retaining structural order, stability, and performance. However, the local chemical environments of defects that underpin bulk properties have remained unresolved, due to the inherently averaging nature of diffraction techniques. Here, we address this information gap by probing both crystallinity and defect-specific local structures in three representative hollow systems, enMAPbI3, enFAPbI3, and enFAPbBr3 (MA: methylammonium; FA: formamidinium), using powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), periodic density-functional theory (DFT), and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (ssNMR) spectroscopy. Specifically, ssNMR allows to identify two distinct vacancy regimes: a low-en (below 30%) regime with trans conformers that stabilize the framework by simultaneously generating Pb deficiency, and a new high-en (above 30%) regime with conformationally disordered en dications that lead to distortions in PbX6 octahedra and crystallinity features. Insights into defect sites and their local chemical environments are obtained by analyzing 1D 1H, 207Pb, and 2D 1H–1H and 1H–14N correlation NMR spectra. These findings help explain defect compensation mechanisms, reconciling correlated trends between bandgap evolution and stability across iodine- and bromine-based hollow perovskites, and are expected to provide a framework for rationalizing defect engineering strategies in hybrid perovskites and related metal halides.
Synthetic routes to advancing perovskite solar cells through interface design
Nature Synthesis · 2026-04-16
articleA stoichiometrically conserved homologous series with infinite structural diversity
Science · 2025-12-04 · 2 citations
articleSenior authorCorrespondingWe describe a compositionally guided structural evolution within a stoichiometrically conserved framework, BaSbQ 3 (Q = Te 1− x S x ), where each value of x gives rise to a distinct phase. The fundamental building blocks, A 1 (BaSbSTe 2 ) and B n (Ba n Sb n S n −1 Te 2 n +1 ), were composed of modular double rocksalt slabs stacked with functional polytelluride zigzag chains, with each phase differing only in the size and assembly of these blocks. Ten compounds were synthesized that maintained a coherent chemical identity that arose from this isovalent, isoelectronic substitution of Te and S. We envision that the phase formation at a molecular level unfolds in stages of extension, termination, and assembly and propose a design concept of “anionic disparity,” where phase homologies and polytelluride hierarchical networks can be controlled by leveraging differences in anion electron affinity and sizes.
Deterministic Control of Sn3+ Valence and Electronic Phase Evolution in AgSnSe2
Research Square · 2025-12-08
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingTheory of Excitonic States and their Fine Structure in Halide Perovskite Quantum Dots
2025-12-15
article2025-11-01
articleAs a lithium-based semiconducting material, Lithium Indium Phosphorus Selenide (LiInP2Se6) shows strong potential for neutron detection applications due to its high neutron sensitivity, fine spatial resolution, and compatibility with strip-based readout architectures. This work reports on the development of a full detection system based on a tiled array of double-sided strip (DSSD) LiInP2Se6 sensors, designed for single-crystal diffractometer (SCD) applications with a spatial resolution target below <tex xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">$500 \mu ~\mathrm{m}$</tex>. To support high-density, parallel signal acquisition, the sensor array is interfaced with custom-designed front-end electronics utilizing VATAGP7 ASICs for charge collection and signal processing. The goal of this work is to present thearchitecture of the complete detection system, covering sensor fabrication and integration, front-end and back-end electronic design, and system-level considerations for achieving modularity, scalability, and highthroughput operation in advanced neutron imaging environments.
Chemistry of Materials · 2025-12-03 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingTwo-dimensional halide perovskites exhibit rich structural diversity and tunable optoelectronic properties, making them promising materials for energy, sensing, and photonic applications. We report the structural mapping of four distinct polymorphs, γ (P21/c), β (P4/mbm), α (P4/mmm), and δ (Cmcm) in the two-dimensional iodoplumbate, iodostannate, and iodogermanate perovskite so-called Dion–Jacobson series (3AMP)MI4 (M = Sn, Pb, Ge), where 3AMP is 3-(aminomethyl)piperidinium. The phases exhibit systematic evolution in octahedral distortion, lattice symmetry, and metal–halide geometry, enabling structural control over optoelectronic properties. Notably, the α-phase of (3AMP)SnI4 represents a rare, ambient-stable, high-symmetry structure for Sn-based perovskites, without a phase transition down to 100 K. Variable-temperature single-crystal diffraction, powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), and calorimetry reveal metal- and temperature-dependent polymorph interconversions, including the emergence of long-range supercell reflections in Pb-rich compositions at low temperature. Optical spectroscopy and photoelectron yield spectroscopy confirm band gap tunability and band alignment trends, highlighting symmetry-dependent shifts and anomalous band gap bowing in mixed-metal systems, verified by electronic structure calculations. Calculations additionally indicate that the higher symmetry phases have reduced electron and hole effective masses compared to the lower symmetry phases.
Advanced Materials · 2025-10-16 · 3 citations
articleOpen accessAbstract Halide perovskites have emerged as promising materials for next‐generation radiation detectors, echoing their transformative impact on photovoltaics. Due to the long penetration depths of X‐rays and γ‐rays, thick single crystals are required to sufficiently attenuate the radiation, making bulk crystal quality critical for device performance. Photoluminescence properties, particularly long lifetimes and redshifted emission peaks, are commonly used as proxies for identifying high‐quality CsPbBr 3 crystals for high‐performance detectors, yet the physical origin of this correlation remains unclear. Here, complementary photoluminescence techniques with a full‐spectrum fit are combined to reveal the importance of vertical diffusion in governing photoluminescence response, ultimately shaping detector performance. High‐quality crystals exhibit larger vertical diffusion coefficients (up to 0.65 cm 2 s −1 ) and lower recombination rates (down to 1.1 × 10 6 s −1 ), leading to diffusion lengths up to 5 times greater than those in low‐quality crystals. Using one‐ and two‐photon photoluminescence microscopy, microscale defects are further visualized, with suppressed redshift and distributions throughout the bulk, in low‐quality crystals. Two‐photon diffusion mapping directly reveals how these defects hinder carrier transport. These findings establish a direct link between photoluminescence and carrier diffusion, providing a quantitative framework that connects crystal quality to charge transport and device performance in perovskite radiation detectors.
Inorganic Chemistry · 2025-10-15 · 1 citations
articleSenior authorCorrespondingMetal-chalcogenide systems remain a long-standing research topic because of their structural diversity and potential to host emergent phenomena. Here, we report a new compound, La3CuTe5, synthesized from the halide-flux method. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies indicate the structure to be unique among reported ones. The compound crystallizes in a novel structure type adopting the orthorhombic space group Pnma and a unit cell of a = 24.3947(14) Å, b = 4.4232(2) Å, and c = 10.2142(5) Å. The tetrahedral [CuTe4] building blocks form chains along [010] by corner sharing and link [LaTe7] and [LaTe8] polyhedra via edge sharing, resulting in a three-dimensional bulk structure. Thermal analysis results indicate that the material remains stable with a temperature up to 950 °C and decomposable at 1400 °C. First-principles calculations reveal an indirect electronic band gap and flat valence bands dominated by Te p and Cu d states. Optical absorption measurements yield a band gap of ∼0.65 eV, consistent with semiconducting behavior observed in transport measurements. Fittings to the temperature-dependent resistivity reveal two thermally activated regimes associated with Arrhenius-type conduction and three-dimensional variable range hopping, respectively.
Recent grants
Solid State Chemistry of Crystalline and Glassy Chalcogenides
NSF · $488k · 2008–2011
Solid State Chemistry of Crystalline and Glassy Chalcogenides
NSF · $234k · 2006–2008
Collaborative Research: FRG: Beyond Crystallography: Structure of Nanostructured Materials
NSF · $240k · 2007–2012
Synthesis and Properties of Complex Crystalline and Glassy Metal Chalcogenides
NSF · $495k · 2014–2017
Solid State Chemistry of Complex Chalcogenides
NSF · $500k · 2017–2020
Frequent coauthors
- 2994 shared
Michael R. Wasielewski
Northwestern University
- 2919 shared
Arthur J. Nozik
Northwestern University
- 2917 shared
Jenny Nelson
Imperial College London
- 2917 shared
Laura M. Herz
University of Oxford
- 2917 shared
Nathan S. Lewis
California Institute of Technology
- 2916 shared
Peng Wang
Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences
- 2916 shared
See Pooi
Griffith University
- 2916 shared
Linda F. Nazar
University of Waterloo
Labs
The Kanatzidis Research Group focuses on the synthesis and study of novel materials for energy conversion and storage applications.
Education
- 1979
B.S.
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
- 1984
Ph.D.
University of Iowa
Awards & honors
- Presidential Young Investigator Award (1989-1994)
- ACS Inorganic Chemistry Division Award: EXXON Faculty Fellow…
- Beckman Young Investigator (1992-1994)
- Alfred P. Sloan Fellow (1991-1993)
- Michigan State University Distinguished Faculty Award (1998)
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