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of this project is to enhance the efficiency, sustainability, and environmental compatibility of CO2 reduction to methanol through the development of advanced catalytic materials chosen among intermetallic
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responsible for understanding the impact of the object nanostructuring on electronic dynamics in order to better control them within nanostructures optimized for the recycling of CO2 into methane. The PhD
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particles). The inhibitors considered will be mixtures of chemical (sodium and potassium bicarbonates - NaHCO3 and KHCO3) and thermal agents (CO2/N2) in the form of propellant gases. The ultimate aim
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several universities and industrial partners, the research will focus on developing new catalytic materials and processes for the synthesis of sustainable fuels from CO and CO2 via the Fischer-Tropsch
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Versailles (ILV) is a laboratory internationally recognised for its expertise in http://www.ilv.uvsq.fr/ (MOFs). It is a CNRS/UVSQ joint research unit (UMR) established in 2006, bringing together all
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associated composites, for applications in the fields of energy and the environment (CO2 capture, capture of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), detection, catalysis (H2 production, etc.), heat exchange
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PROJET-PEPR : MOF composites for the overall CO₂ reduction through panchromatic photocatalysis (M/F)
Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description Develop new photocatalysts for CO2 reduction in aqueous media, by combining
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of internal reports, articles, patents, and communications. Where to apply Website https://emploi.cnrs.fr/Candidat/Offre/UMR5635-DAMVOI-021/Candidater.aspx Requirements Research FieldChemistryEducation LevelPhD
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of oxygenates from CO and/or CO2, and mechanistic studies including operando spectroscopy and possibly numerical simulations (microkinetics, DFT). The objective is to discover new eco-efficient catalytic phases
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for the conversion of CO2 into hydrocarbons. The reaction mechanisms will be studied using in situ surface techniques, particularly IR spectroscopy. The catalysts will then be characterized after use by advanced