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New versatile nanostructured catalysts: From green preparation to | 29268
Organic Chemistry: Current Research

Organic Chemistry: Current Research
Open Access

ISSN: 2161-0401

+44 1478 350008

New versatile nanostructured catalysts: From green preparation to environmentally concerned challenges


2nd International Conference on Past and Present Research Systems of Green Chemistry

September 14-16, 2015 Orlando, USA

Capucine Sassoye1, Ara Kima2, Damien Debecker2 and Cl�?©ment Sanchez1

1Paris-Sorbonne University, France 2Universit�?© catholique de Louvain, Belgium

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Organic Chem Curr Res

Abstract :

Effective catalysts that could assess multiple environmental issues are nowadays needed, in a context of growing societal awareness and newly appeared environmental legislations. Challenges for these catalysts are numerous: Their production has to be as green as possible, fast and easy to handle; their use conditions have to be as soft as possible without compromising the requirements for high selectivity and high activity; they have to be nearly indefinitely reusable. These drastic requisites have oriented research toward soft preparation methods leading to nanostructured heterogeneous catalysts in which very active species are designed at the nanoscale. Our work aims at developing innovative nanostructured ruthenium based catalysts with, as chosen fields of investigation, the methanation of CO2 (valorisation of CO2), the total oxidation of volatile organic pollutants (treatment of gas effluents from incineration and biomass cogeneration units) as well as soft conditions ammoniac synthesis. In supported catalysis, although the primary role of the support is often thought to be limited to physical dispersant for intact metal active nanoparticles, it is now recognized that the metal-support interactions clearly influence the catalytic activities and/or selectivity. Moreover, supported RuO2 nanoparticles have clearly showed the ability to migrate over the support surface upon thermic treatment, this phenomenon being strongly support-dependent. This epitaxially-driven migration provokes decisive modifications in the catalyst and can be exploited to tune the catalyst active phase morphology, localization and thus activity.

Biography :

Capucine Sassoye is Maitre de Conférences at UPMC. She is currently working on hybrid and inorganic nanomaterial, coupling the sol-gel chemistry with advanced processing to tune both the macroscopic shape and the texture of the materials. One particular research deals with sustainability, concerning both material synthesis and its further applications. She has so far authored/co-authored 25 peer-reviewed journal articles and given 5 presentations in international meetings.

Email: capucine.sassoye@upmc.fr

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