Advanced multifunctional Reactors for green Mobility and Solar fuels
Green Mobility requires an integrated approach to the chain fuel/engine/emissions. The present project aims at ground breaking advances in the area of Green Mobility by (a) enabling the production of affordable, carbon-neutral, cl...
ver más
¿Tienes un proyecto y buscas un partner? Gracias a nuestro motor inteligente podemos recomendarte los mejores socios y ponerte en contacto con ellos. Te lo explicamos en este video
Proyectos interesantes
ENE2016-82025-REDT
NUEVOS DESAFIOS EN LA PRODUCCION DE COMBUSTIBLES SOLARES
19K€
Cerrado
ENE2014-52280-REDT
NUEVOS DESAFIOS EN LA PRODUCCION DE COMBUSTIBLES SOLARES
18K€
Cerrado
BES-2017-082749
FOTOCONVERSION DE CO2 A COMBUSTIBLES SOLARES UTILIZADO MATER...
93K€
Cerrado
GENESIS
High performance MOF and IPOSS enhanced membrane systems as...
10M€
Cerrado
PID2021-128496OB-I00
MOLECULAS Y MATERIALES ORGANICOS PARA REACCIONES CATALITICAS...
121K€
Cerrado
Fecha límite de participación
Sin fecha límite de participación.
Descripción del proyecto
Green Mobility requires an integrated approach to the chain fuel/engine/emissions. The present project aims at ground breaking advances in the area of Green Mobility by (a) enabling the production of affordable, carbon-neutral, clean, solar fuels using exclusively renewable/recyclable raw materials, namely solar energy, water and captured Carbon Dioxide from combustion power plants (b) developing a highly compact, multifunctional reactor, able to eliminate gaseous and particulate emissions from the exhaust of engines operated on such clean fuels.
The overall research approach will be based on material science, engineering and simulation technology developed by the PI over the past 20 years in the area of Diesel Emission Control Reactors, which will be further extended and cross-fertilized in the area of Solar Thermochemical Reactors, an emerging discipline of high importance for sustainable development, where the PI’s research group has already made significant contributions, and received the 2006 European Commission’s Descartes Prize for the development of the first ever solar reactor, holding the potential to produce on a large scale, pure renewable Hydrogen from the thermochemical splitting of water, also known as the HYDROSOL technology.