Projects / Programmes
Nuclear radiation catalyzed chemistry
Code |
Science |
Field |
Subfield |
2.03.00 |
Engineering sciences and technologies |
Energy engineering |
|
Code |
Science |
Field |
2.02 |
Engineering and Technology |
Electrical engineering, Electronic engineering, Information engineering |
Nuclear radiation, carbon capture, plastic pollution, radiolysis, co-generation
Organisations (2)
, Researchers (21)
0106 Jožef Stefan Institute
no. |
Code |
Name and surname |
Research area |
Role |
Period |
No. of publicationsNo. of publications |
1. |
38278 |
PhD Klemen Ambrožič |
Energy engineering |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
131 |
2. |
57945 |
PhD Fabian Allen Burkhardt |
Materials science and technology |
Researcher |
2023 - 2025 |
19 |
3. |
31776 |
PhD Dušan Čalič |
Energy engineering |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
96 |
4. |
03937 |
PhD Miran Čeh |
Materials science and technology |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
681 |
5. |
15654 |
PhD Matej Andrej Komelj |
Materials science and technology |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
189 |
6. |
53531 |
Domen Kotnik |
Materials science and technology |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
59 |
7. |
19167 |
PhD Igor Lengar |
Materials science and technology |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
1,367 |
8. |
52060 |
PhD Anže Pungerčič |
Energy engineering |
Young researcher |
2022 |
77 |
9. |
32163 |
PhD Vladimir Radulović |
Energy engineering |
Head |
2022 - 2025 |
395 |
10. |
51451 |
PhD Sorour Semsari Parapari |
Materials science and technology |
Researcher |
2022 - 2023 |
99 |
11. |
55800 |
Vinko Sršan |
Materials science and technology |
Young researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
11 |
12. |
19030 |
PhD Sašo Šturm |
Materials science and technology |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
714 |
13. |
15742 |
Bojan Žefran |
|
Technical associate |
2022 - 2025 |
157 |
14. |
29546 |
PhD Gašper Žerovnik |
Computer intensive methods and applications |
Researcher |
2022 - 2023 |
239 |
15. |
18824 |
PhD Kristina Žužek |
Materials science and technology |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
387 |
0104 National Institute of Chemistry
no. |
Code |
Name and surname |
Research area |
Role |
Period |
No. of publicationsNo. of publications |
1. |
34522 |
PhD Miha Grilc |
Chemical engineering |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
468 |
2. |
34342 |
PhD Matej Huš |
Chemical engineering |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
836 |
3. |
53419 |
Dimitrij Ješić |
|
Technical associate |
2023 - 2025 |
9 |
4. |
25446 |
PhD Blaž Likozar |
Chemical engineering |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
1,517 |
5. |
33161 |
PhD Uroš Novak |
Biotechnology |
Researcher |
2022 - 2025 |
284 |
6. |
39350 |
PhD Anže Prašnikar |
Chemical engineering |
Technical associate |
2022 - 2025 |
83 |
Abstract
In this project we want to investigate nuclear radiation catalyzed chemical processes towards efficient carbon capture and the synthesis of high value chemicals. The project is motivated by the context of serious environmental challenges we are facing, in particular the need for reducing the carbon impact of our energy generation by carbon capture technologies and mitigation of environmental pollution with plastic material, in conjunction with the commitment to continue exploitation of nuclear energy to reduce our impact on climate.
The objective of our project is investigating nuclear radiation as an exploitable energy source to catalyze chemical processes, as a basis for efficient carbon capture technologies and as a means of conversion or synthesis of high value chemicals starting from abundant and low value materials, as glycol, plastic, etc.
In the project we will perform irradiations of different encapsulated target material samples (e.g. CO2, plastics, biomass, hydrocarbons, etc.) in the Jožef Stefan Institute TRIGA research reactor with neutron and gamma radiation and in a transmission electron microscope (TEM) using a variable high-energy electron beam. Post-irradiation analyses (reactor irradiated samples) and in-situ analyses (TEM irradiated samples) will be performed in order to observe and quantify radiation-induced catalysis effects. The experimental results will be correlated to predictions obtained on the basis of Monte Carlo and microkinetic modelling.
Relations will be established between our observations at a small scale and larger-scale scenarios involving nuclear power plants, spent nuclear fuel facilities, and future fusion nuclear reactors, valorizing nuclear radiation as a useful energy source for power/chemical co-generation applications of the future.