Room: Seminar Room Host: HZB and FHI

Synthetic Materials Chemistry for a Green Hydrogen Future and Beyond

CatLab Lectures 2024/25
The transition to a sustainable energy future relies on developing efficient and scalable methods for green hydrogen production, a fundamental factor for decarbonizing energy and chemical industries. Electrocatalysis plays a pivotal role by enabling efficient cathodic hydrogen evolution and anodic oxygen evolution reaction. [more]

Bimetallic Catalyst for Hydrogenation Reactions

CatLab Lectures 2024/25
A series of independent lectures on fundamentals and latest developments in heterogeneous catalysis, thin film technology, physical chemistry, process engineering and materials design. [more]

How to Make Fuels and Chemicals with Sunlight: Artificial Photosynthesis

CatLab Lectures 2024/25
Artificial photosynthesis offers a transformative approach to sustainable fuel and chemical production by mimicking natural photosynthesis to convert sunlight, CO₂, and water into value-added products. This presentation highlights recent progress in developing advanced photoelectrodes and tailoring catalytic microenvironments to enhance reaction efficiency and selectivity. [more]

Catalysts of Change: Advanced Materials Steering Health and Energy Transition

CatLab Lectures 2024/25
Advanced materials are driving innovation across all fields of technology, ranging from construction and mechanical engineering, automotive and electromobility, to medical technology, energy storage and conversion technologies, and microelectronics. [more]

Deciphering the Structure of Single Active Sites Under In Situ and Operando Conditions Using X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy

CatLab Lectures 2024/25
Understanding the structure of catalysts under relevant reaction conditions is crucial, as their active sites often undergo dynamic changes. These transformations can significantly influence the catalytic performance, emphasizing the importance of employing operando techniques that enable real-time monitoring. This seminar will explore the application of X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) to identify spectral signatures and molecular structures of active sites under in situ and operando conditions. XAS is particularly advantageous for such studies due to its chemical selectivity and sensitivity to the local atomic environment, offering fundamental insights into the electronic and structural properties of the investigated materials. [more]
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