Nanoengineered Materials for Clean Catalytic Technologies

Lead Research Organisation: Cardiff University
Department Name: Chemistry

Abstract

Catalysis lies at the heart of life on earth, powers our homes and puts food on our tables. However to a large degree our ability to transform individual atoms and molecules into new pharmaceutical medicines, fuels, and fertilisers has depended upon an equal combination of brilliant science and serendipitous discoveries. This reflects the complex interactions between reacting molecules and products, their surrounding environment, and of course the catalyst itself, which ideally remains unchanged over thousands of reaction cycles. Recent advances in chemical synthesis and analysis now offer an unprecedented opportunity to sculpt the atomic structure of solid catalysts and to peer inside their microscopic workings.Over the next five years, I propose to integrate these new experimental and theoretical breakthroughs with my own expertise in catalyst design and testing, to develop a new generation of nanoengineered materials for the clean production of valuable chemical feedstocks and sustainable biofuels. New collaborations, forged with world leaders in the areas of inorganic solid-state chemistry, nanoscale imaging and computer modelling, will help me to develop the multidisciplinary skillsets needed to achieve my vision of solid catalysts, tailored 'on demand', for efficient clean technologies that will benefit society over the coming decade.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description See EP/G007594/4
Exploitation Route Yes
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Chemicals,Energy,Environment,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology

 
Description Selective catalytic transformations for agrochemicals 
Organisation Syngenta International AG
Country Switzerland 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Two part-sponsored PhD studentships have undertake fundamental research into the mechanism of palladium catalysed transformations and identified key factors controlling the catalytic performance and stability of nanoparticles.
Collaborator Contribution Access to laboratories, intellectual guidance, provision of catalysts
Impact One PhD graduated to date, and 2 peer-reviewed publications.
Start Year 2009
 
Description Synchtrotron studies of nanostructured materials 
Organisation Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste
Country Italy 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution New research areas in catalysis and materials science developed resulting in numerous jointly authored publications over 17 years.
Collaborator Contribution Access to synchtrotron facilities and training of 8 PhD students and PDRAs
Impact Joint publications, contributions to annual highlights, invited seminar and Fonda-Fasella 2004 award