domino4chem: Semi-biological Domino Catalysis for Solar Chemical Synthesis

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Title
domino4chem: Semi-biological Domino Catalysis for Solar Chemical Synthesis

CoPED ID
fafd0baf-1b19-4de7-9845-5006ef678882

Status
Active


Value
£10,772,535

Start Date
March 31, 2023

End Date
March 31, 2028

Description

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Mitigating CO2 emissions and transitioning to a circular economy are urgent actions to safeguard our prosperous future. Carbon capture and utilisation is a carbon-neutral process to recycle CO2 for the synthesis of valuable molecules and materials powered by renewable energy. The synthesis of fuels from CO2 using sunlight has made significant advances, but major challenges remain: (i) Synthetic approaches using semiconductors are highly efficient in light utilisation but can only produce the simplest of products from CO2; (ii) biological approaches can generate more complex products but are slow in CO2 uptake and inefficient in their use of solar energy.

This proposal will pioneer the controlled synthesis of complex chemicals at high efficiency using sunlight by combining the strength of synthetic and biological technologies. An integrated platform will be developed that incorporates efficient light harvesting by semiconductors to drive a network of synthetic and biological catalysts to convert CO2 to bespoke complex chemical products. Specifically, photoelectrochemical tandem devices and photocatalyst powder sheets will be employed as the light harvesting component. These will drive a series of (bio)catalysts integrated in a bespoke porous architecture to catalyse compartmentalised reactions in sequence ('domino catalysis'). Synthetic catalysts will first reduce CO2 to vectors such as formate and CO with electrons being sourced from the oxidation of water to O2. The vectors will subsequently be used in the same device as feedstocks for microorganisms or enzyme/synthetic cascades to produce the target chemical. This vector-approach enables the efficient use of a wide range of catalysts, including engineered metabolic pathways, to synthesise desired products with a high degree of control.

The proposed direct photon-to-chemical conversion technology will provide a general biohybrid platform to synthesise high value chemicals sustainably from sunlight in the future.

Erwin Reisner PI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Emissions
  2. Carbon dioxide
  3. Catalysis
  4. Transition economy
  5. Well-being
  6. Energy efficiency
  7. Recycling
  8. Synthesis
  9. Synthetic biology

Extracted key phrases
  1. Biological Domino Catalysis
  2. Solar Chemical Synthesis
  3. Bespoke complex chemical product
  4. Co2 emission
  5. Biological approach
  6. Biological catalyst
  7. Biological technology
  8. Co2 uptake
  9. Efficient use
  10. Synthetic approach
  11. Synthetic catalyst
  12. High value chemical
  13. Chemical conversion technology
  14. Efficient light harvesting
  15. Complex product

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations