GLOBAL - Joining Forces in Sustainable Catalysis and Energy Based on Renewables

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Title
GLOBAL - Joining Forces in Sustainable Catalysis and Energy Based on Renewables

CoPED ID
545cf3c8-8b18-4a76-a0e8-dcc12952a0f3

Status
Closed

Funders

Value
£991,294

Start Date
March 31, 2012

End Date
March 31, 2013

Description

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The goal of a sustainable society requires the efficient use of renewable or sustainable materials and demands the development of selective new methodologies for the preparation of desirable products. In this context we require:
(i) a change from traditional stoichiometric, high energy methods that produce huge amounts of chemical waste to mild and clean catalytic processes and
(ii) a major step change in chemicals production with fossil fuels being replaced by renewable resources as chemical starter units.
In this proposal we have identified a series of collaborative projects that would benefit from the mutual exchange of scientific expertise between St Andrews Chemistry homogeneous catalysis grouping and the Dutch CatchBio (Catalysis for Sustainable Chemicals from Biomass) consortium. This collaboration will allow new links within the EU to be established in order to deliver research excellence. These collaborative areas, combined with a series of international workshops and conferences linked to this proposal, we believe will allow for greater internationalisation and possible commercialisation of our research portfolio.
The challenge to change our societies reliance for chemical production from fossil-fuel based to all-renewable resources is a challenge of enormous scale.This change must be broken down into smaller, manageable components capable of demonstrating the effectiveness of this strategy in order to showcase the transition necessary. In this proposal we will establish links with world leading experts to develop leading examples of this approach and have identified the following areas where we believe collaboration can impact. With added expertise from ourDutch partners we will:
1. Develop optimal catalysts for ether cleavage in 'real life samples' of lignin for maximising the potential of lignocellulose as a source of fuels and fine chemicals. The most successful catalyst systems developed will be immobilized and these heterogeneous systems fully explored and optimised through collaboration with the CatchBio consortium.
2. Develop novel catalytic methods to convert renewable waste feedstocks such as Tall oil to important products such as fuels, chemicals and polymers.
3. Harness the power of automated catalyst and library design to facilitate the preparation of catalyst libraries in both solution and solid state. The utility of this capability will be showcased through the use of CO2 as an abundant C1 building block in asymmetric chemical reduction processes.


More Information

Potential Impact:
"The UK's "upstream" chemicals industry and "downstream" chemistry-using sector contributed a combined total of £258 billion in value added in 2007 equivalent to 21% of UK GDP and supported over 6 million UK jobs" (taken from the EPSRC/RSC jointly commissioned independent report on the UK Chemical Industry in 2010).
The societal and economic impact of the chemical industry in the UK and more widely in the EU is clear. Nevertheless, the industryis facing immediate huge challenges considering feedstocks and environmental impact. With rapidly depleting fossil resources the future of chemical industry and society as a whole will become more and more dependent on renewable sources for chemicals, materials and energy. Inevitably, this poses the question where the carbon will come from in a post-fossil resources world. Whilst the current awareness of this reality in chemical industry is growing rapidly there are many barriers to overcome to solve these ultimate challenges. Annual worldwide production of biomass, estimated at 56.8 billion tonnes of elemental carbon, is sufficient for a sustainable supply of feedstocks for our chemical industries. However, if these vast resources encapsulated in biomass are going to be exploited without competing with food, a new "chemistry toolkit" must be invented. This toolkit will drive the transition from oil to biomass, make possible the production of "old molecules" from "new feedstocks"and the generation of products that meet an already defined need but that are made from a renewable resource.
The change to such a "new chemical industry" will require a multidisciplinary approach mobilising all the available knowledge, expertise and creativity, in crucial fields such as homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis, chemical engineering and biotechnology, but also in biology and agriculture. It is unlikely that important breakthroughs can be accomplished by individual research institutes or even on a national level. Therefore we need to approach these future demands at the international level. We contend that catalytic conversions of biomass offers the correct mixture of resource efficiency (low temperature, high selectivity), versatility and very importantly familiarity within the industry making them the technology of choice provided that sufficient investment is made to develop them. To tackle the many challenges inherent in this vision we want to assemble a unique team of academics, industrialists and agriculture experts by initiating new and intensify existing collaborations between the School of Chemistry at the University of St Andrews and the Dutch CatchBio consortium, a public-private partnership of 21 academic and industrial partners aiming at catalysis in the valorization of renewable feedstocks. Together, this team will have expertise across homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis, chemical engineering, computational chemistry, high-throughput technologies, the chemistry of carbon dioxide, energy, biotechnology and agriculture. The involvement of several global chemical and energy companies, fine-chemical producers and SMEs in catalyst development in this project will ensure that industrial issues are considered from this early stage. Outside of this the excellent connections of the project team with other fine chemical and pharmaceutical industries will complete this pathway to exploitation.
In summary - to ensure a sustainable chemical industry we need to develop a new "chemistry toolkit", which is a challenge that can only be addressed by combining best available forces on an international level. This is what our proposal is about and we believe the economic and societal impact it will have is huge.

Subjects by relevance
  1. Chemical industry
  2. Biomass (industry)
  3. Sustainable development
  4. Renewable energy sources
  5. Catalysis
  6. Chemicals
  7. Natural resources
  8. Environmental effects
  9. Chemistry
  10. Green chemistry
  11. Bioenergy
  12. Societal effects
  13. Biofuels
  14. Sustainable use
  15. Catalysts
  16. Industry

Extracted key phrases
  1. Global chemical
  2. Sustainable chemical industry
  3. Chemical production
  4. Fine chemical
  5. Asymmetric chemical reduction process
  6. Quot;new chemical industry&quot
  7. Chemical starter unit
  8. Chemical waste
  9. Chemical engineering
  10. Chemical producer
  11. Sustainable Catalysis
  12. Joining Forces
  13. Renewable resource
  14. St Andrews Chemistry homogeneous catalysis grouping
  15. Renewable waste feedstock

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations