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Cardiff University receive £7m to develop green industries

Cardiff University says a £7m investment in research will help their scientists play a key role in developing cleaner, greener industrial processes through catalysis.

Catalysis is the study of materials which speed up chemical reactions, and the university’s research will focus on ways of tackling environmental issues facing the planet, from plastics and pollution to water purity.

Catalysts are best known for their use in vehicle exhaust systems, where they help break down the toxic gases produced by car engines before they are released into the atmosphere.

They also have many commercial applications and can help scale up chemical processes from the lab to sizes and speeds which can be used in industry.

The funding is part of a £16m investment in Oxfordshire’s UK Catalysis Hub by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).

The backing will help Cardiff, partner universities and industry develop joint research projects at the Hub, which is based alongside other major scientific facilities in the Research Complex at Harwell.

‘Catalysis is at the heart of the green agenda,’ said Professor Richard Catlow, one of the Hub’s principal investigators.

‘This latest round of funding will allow us to work directly with industry to develop cleaner car engine emissions, discover catalysts that can help reduce global plastic waste in the “circular economy”, develop catalysts for water purification, and find ways of utilising carbon dioxide in new products and processes,’ he added.

‘The UK Catalysis Hub has proved a real success because it provides a neutral, off-campus collaborative space with no single university “lead,” whilst providing the very best catalytic research equipment. It has allowed early career researchers to go directly into industry, and provided a platform for shared insights, expertise and future collaborations.’

Professor Lynn Gladden EPSRC’s executive chair, said: ‘Catalysis is important for UK and global industry, generating £50bn a year for the UK economy, as well as intellectual property for big and small UK companies and universities.

‘This further funding for catalysis research will help our research communities and industries develop new products and processes that will bring economic and social benefit to the UK. We have to maintain our research capability to keep our nation productive and resilient.’

Read more about their research here.

Thomas Barrett
Senior journalist - NewStart Follow him on Twitter

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