Sustainable microwave manufacturing of functional inorganic materials (SuMMa)
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Delivery of bespoke, tailored functional materials for specific applications often requires multistep and/or custom manufacturing processes which may not always be transferable. This programme of research brings together experts from
across the UK with the goal of designing, developing and deploying sustainable microwave manufacturing processes that deliver bespoke inorganic functional materials not accessible at scale by current manufacturing methods. Microwave
processing affords unique control and heating characteristics which, when coupled with judicious reactant choice, can shorten reaction times (from days to minutes), avoid unwanted side-reactions which can lead to unwanted additional
products and improve short-range crystallinity by alleviating defect formation. These benefits represent considerable advantanges over traditional methods, where processing can lead to defects which plague performance.
Synthesis of state-of-the-art, tailored functional materials currently requires additional resource demands, be they multistep processes or more energy-intensive treatments. Solving the production of such materials represents a key challenge in delivering materials with demanding performance criteria, e.g. nanostructured cathodes for high power density applications or textured electrodes for long cycle life. The unique properties of microwaves offer a greener, faster, and more targeted manufacturing route to achieving high value functional materials.
Here, we target the scaled-up (kg/day) synthesis of nanostructured and faceted cathode particles, with the key delivery of (i) a microwave flow reactor producing high quality Li-ion battery cathode materials with primary particle morphologies and performances not accessible by traditional synthetic routes and (ii) a sustainable route to the reduction of manufacturing resource use, to just the amount required, through delivery of resource efficiency, multi-level optimization and circular economy principles. Realising this sustainable microwave manufacturing route to high value energy storage cathodes of immediate interest for next-generation electric vehicle applications has the opportunity to contribute in a significant way to a UK economic chemical industry opportunity worth a potential £2.7B per year.
University of Sheffield | LEAD_ORG |
Centre for Process Innovation Limited | PP_ORG |
STFC - Laboratories | PP_ORG |
University of Warwick | PP_ORG |
Britishvolt | PP_ORG |
Johnson Matthey Plc | PP_ORG |
Advanced Microwave Technologies Ltd | PP_ORG |
Microwave Technologies Cousulting | PP_ORG |
Serena Cussen | PI_PER |
Georgios Dimitrakis | COI_PER |
Kyra Campbell | COI_PER |
Jonathan Lees | COI_PER |
Edmund Cussen | COI_PER |
Daniel Coca | COI_PER |
John Robinson | COI_PER |
Joan Cordiner | COI_PER |
Daniel Slocombe | COI_PER |
Solomon Brown | COI_PER |
Jonathan Howse | COI_PER |
Rachael Rothman | COI_PER |
Adrian Porch | COI_PER |
Siddharth Patwardhan | COI_PER |
Rebecca Boston | COI_PER |
Subjects by relevance
- Nanostructures
- Microwaves
- Sustainable development
- Functional materials
- Production technology
- Nanomaterials
- Materials (matter)
- Processes
- Manufacturing
Extracted key phrases
- Sustainable microwave manufacturing route
- Bespoke inorganic functional material
- High value functional material
- Functional inorganic material
- Sustainable route
- Custom manufacturing process
- Targeted manufacturing route
- Ion battery cathode material
- Current manufacturing method
- Microwave flow reactor
- High value energy storage cathode
- High power density application
- Traditional synthetic route
- Additional resource demand
- Multistep process