Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin is establishing a Helmholtz Young Investigator Group for electrochemical conversion of carbon dioxide

Dr. Matthew Mayer

Dr. Matthew Mayer

Dr. Matthew T. Mayer from the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland, will be putting together a Helmholtz Young Investigator Group in the field of energy materials research at HZB. He will be researching into how carbon dioxide and water can be converted electrochemically into hydrocarbons such as methane and methanol using renewable energies. Matthew Mayer will receive 300,000 euros per year over a period of five years for establishing and running his Young Investigator Group.

Researchers are faced with the major challenge of developing new solutions for reducing the harmful emissions of carbon dioxide into our environment. One feasible solution is to use clean energy that will convert carbon dioxide and water electrochemically into hydrocarbons such as methane, methanol and ethylene, which are important raw materials for the chemical industry. The biggest hurdle will be improving the energy efficiency, reaction rates and yields from CO2 catalysis.

Research chemist Matthew T. Mayer is looking to produce novel electrocatalyst materials possessing heterogeneous bimetallic surfaces. Using synchrotron, X-ray and photoelectron spectroscopy, he will be observing these catalytic processes in situ and in operando in order to reveal detailed chemical information about the catalyst–molecule interactions in real time. In this way, Mayer wishes to deliver new insights into guided catalyst design, catalytic mechanisms and principles of cell design. These insights should help to reveal the potential of electrochemical CO2 reduction as a technology for producing valuable hydrocarbons.

“With Dr. Matthew Mayer, we are gaining a highly distinguished scientist whose field of research superbly complements our projects in energy materials research. His work will benefit from the many facilities for analysis and synthesis at HZB, and especially from their combination with the brilliant X-ray light from BESSY II,” says Prof. Dr. Anke Kaysser-Pyzalla, scientific director of HZB. 

Matthew T. Mayer is from the U.S., where he studied chemistry at Boise State University and earned his doctorate at Boston College. He currently heads the “Solar Fuels” group at the Laboratory of Photonics and Interfaces, led by Prof. Dr. Michael Graetzel at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. In this group, Matthew T. Mayer is investigating how sunlight can be converted directly into fuels. Prior to this, he conducted research for several years at Boston College in the USA. He holds two patents and has published numerous papers. He will be arriving at HZB to put together his Young Investigator Group in May 2017.

Two new Helmholtz Young Investigator Groups kick off in 2017

In 2016, HZB was especially successful in bidding for Helmholtz Young Investigator Groups. In a highly competitive process with 49 applications, thirteen new Young Investigator Groups in the Helmholtz Association were approved, two of which are from HZB. Alongside Matthew T. Mayer, HZB has acquired Dr. Antonio Abate, whose Helmholtz Young Investigator Group aims to improve the long-term stability of perovskite solar cells.

 About the Helmholtz Young Investigators Programme

The research programme fosters highly qualified young researchers who completed their doctorate three to six years ago. The heads of the Young Investigator Groups receive support through a tailored training and mentoring programme and are assured long-term prospects at HZB. One aim of the programme is to strengthen the networking of Helmholtz centres and universities. The costs – 300,000 euros per year per group over five years – are covered half by the Helmholtz President’s Initiative and Networking Fund, and half by the Helmholtz centres.

(sz)

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Green hydrogen: MXenes shows talent as catalyst for oxygen evolution
    Science Highlight
    09.09.2024
    Green hydrogen: MXenes shows talent as catalyst for oxygen evolution
    The MXene class of materials has many talents. An international team led by HZB chemist Michelle Browne has now demonstrated that MXenes, properly functionalised, are excellent catalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction in electrolytic water splitting. They are more stable and efficient than the best metal oxide catalysts currently available. The team is now extensively characterising these MXene catalysts for water splitting at the Berlin X-ray source BESSY II and Soleil Synchrotron in France.
  • SpinMagIC: 'EPR on a chip' ensures quality of olive oil and beer
    News
    04.09.2024
    SpinMagIC: 'EPR on a chip' ensures quality of olive oil and beer
    The first sign of spoilage in many food products is the formation of free radicals, which reduces the shelf-life and the overall quality of the food. Until now, the detection of these molecules has been very costly for the food companies. Researchers at HZB and the University of Stuttgart have developed a portable, small and inexpensive 'EPR on a chip' sensor that can detect free radicals even at very low concentrations. They are now working to set up a spin-off company, supported by the EXIST research transfer programme of the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Climate Protection. The EPRoC sensor will initially be used in the production of olive oil and beer to ensure the quality of these products.
  • "BESSY is of immense importance for Berlin"
    News
    02.09.2024
    "BESSY is of immense importance for Berlin"
    At the end of August, the Senator for Research, Health, and Long-Term Care, Dr Ina Czyborra, together with the State Secretary for Science, Dr Henry Marx, ended her summer tour with a visit to HZB in Adlershof. She publicly declared her political support for the new construction of BESSY III.