91AV

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Joint Chemical Science RSC-CSJ symposium 2024: Materials for energy storage and conversion

31 October - 1 November 2024, London, United Kingdom


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Please be aware that the 91AV will never ask you to register for an event, or to book accommodation, by phone or email. Registrations for RSC events are handled via our usual online booking system. Whilst we do sometimes work with accommodation providers in order to facilitate hotel bookings, they would never approach you in the first instance. If we are working with accommodation providers for this event, their contact details will be in the ‘Accommodation’ section of this webpage. If you are unsure if an email regarding event registration or accommodation has come from us please contact us and do not provide any credit card details or personal information. All official RSC emails end with “@rsc.org” only.
Introduction

Welcome

Under the banner of our flagship diamond open access journal, Chemical Science, we’ll be shining a spotlight on cutting-edge chemistry research and giving it the sort of attention that drives scientific progress and makes a difference.

This meeting is the next iteration in the Chemical Science symposia series hosted by the 91AV.  This year we are excited to join together with the Chemical Society of Japan (CSJ) to make this a joint event. The Chemical Society of Japan (CSJ) and 91AV (RSC) have collaborated on many successful joint activities in the past. This symposium will be the eleventh time our two societies have come together to create a unique event for scientists to share ideas and experiences, this time in the field of energy materials.

We’re excited to welcome delegates to the home of the 91AV, and look forward to a conversation enriched by the online participation of our international community.

We warmly invite you to join us in London, or online, in October 2024, for the Joint RSC-CSJ Chemical Science symposium 2024, and look forward to welcoming you to the discussion.

About the symposium

Leading researchers and emerging investigators from a broad range of backgrounds will come together to explore and celebrate the theme of the 2024 symposium: Materials for energy storage and conversion

The scientific programme of invited talks will be added shortly. The invited speakers will also be complemented by flash talks and poster sessions to provide further networking opportunities and discussion for all attendees.

The invited speakers for this symposium will discuss research over a range of topics, including:
  • Batteries
  • Fuel cells
  • Gas capture, separation and storage
  • Solar fuels
  • Artificial photosynthesis
  • Carbon dioxide conversion and reduction
  • Water oxidation
  • Photocatalysis and photovoltaics
Speakers
Veronica Augustyn, North Carolina State University, United States

Veronica Augustyn is the Jake and Jennifer Hooks Distinguished Scholar in Materials Science and Engineering and Associate Professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at North Carolina State University. Her research focuses on the electrochemistry of materials for energy and environmental applications, including interfacial reactivity, ion-insertion coupled electron transfer mechanisms, and confinement phenomena. She is also the founder and faculty advisor of an award-winning international project, SciBridge, which develops renewable energy research and education collaborations between universities in Africa and the U.S.


Francesca Brunetti, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy

Prof. Francesca Brunetti, FRSC, received her PhD in Telecommunications and Microelectronics from the University of Rome Tor Vergata in 2005. In 2005, she was awarded of a Marie Curie Individual Fellowship spent in the Institute for Nanoelectronics of the Technical University of Munich, Germany. In 2006 she became researcher in the Department of Electronic Engineering of the University of Rome Tor Vergata, and since 2018, she is associated professor at the same Department.
Cofounder of the Centre for Hybrid and Organic Solar Energy at the University of Rome Tor Vergata (CHOSE, www.chose.it) her current research is focused on the analysis, design and manufacture of electronic and optoelectronic devices through the use of organic and perovskites semiconductors realized on rigid and flexible substrates. In particular, she is working third-generation organic solar cells on flexible substrates, flexible perovskite solar cells and large area modules. Recently, she started an activity on the realization of supercapacitors on flexible and recyclable substrates, among which paper and their integration with photovoltaic devices (photocopacitors). Coordinator of several national and international projects, she is fellow of the 91AV and Associated Editor of “Sustainable Energy and Fuels” a 91AV Journal focused on renewables. She is the current director of CHOSE.


Jillian L. Dempsey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States

Jillian L. Dempsey is a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and currently holds the Bowman and Gordon Gray Distinguished Term Professorship. She is the Deputy Director of the Center for Hybrid Approaches in Solar Energy to Liquid Fuels (CHASE). Her research group explores charge transfer processes associated with solar fuel production, including proton-coupled electron transfer reactions and electron transfer across interfaces. Her research bridges molecular and materials chemistry and relies heavily on methods of physical inorganic chemistry, including transient absorption spectroscopy and electrochemistry. She also dedicates time to advancing electrochemistry education for all chemists.


Marina Freitag, Newcastle University, United Kingdom

Prof. Marina Freitag, a Royal Society University Research Fellow and Professor of Energy at Newcastle University, is a pioneering researcher in sustainable energy materials. Her innovative approach combines chemistry, engineering, and artificial intelligence to develop highly efficient and robust photovoltaic technologies. With her invention of the "zombie" solar cell and her ground-breaking work on self-powered IoT devices, Prof. Freitag is driving the transition towards a sustainable and intelligent energy future. Her contributions to the field have been recognized with prestigious awards, including the Göran Gustafsson Young Researcher Award and the 91AV Harrison-Meldola Memorial Prize.


Elizabeth Gibson, Newcastle University, United Kingdom

Libby is a Professor of Energy Materials at Newcastle University. Research in her group focuses on developing materials and devices for sustainable power, fuel and feedstocks. This involves materials development, device assembly and characterization of the underpinning photophysics and electrochemistry. Her current roles include being the academic lead for the Northern Net Zero Accelerator PB-IAA, the EPSRC Northeast Transient Absorption Spectroscopy & Microscopy Facility, Institution Director of the EPSRC CDT Renewable Energy at Northeast Universities (ReNU), and she is the engagement lead for the UKRI Interdisciplinary Centre for Circular Chemical Economy.


Alexis Grimaud , Boston College, United States

Dr. Alexis Grimaud received his PhD from the University of Bordeaux in 2011 and is currently an associate professor in the chemistry department at Boston College. Prior to that position, he served as CNRS Researcher from 2014 to 2022 at the Collège de France, Paris, France. Dr. His research efforts focus on understanding complex interfacial processes at the heart of electrochemical systems, including water electrolyzers and Li-ion batteries, for which he is developing and studying novel liquid electrolytes with tailored reactivity that he is using to allow intercalation into novel classes of materials. Dr. Grimaud’s achievements were recognized by the French Young Researcher award as well as the Young Researcher award from the Energy Division of the French Chemical Society.


Laurence Hardwick, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom

Professor Laurence Hardwick is the Director of the Stephenson Institute of Renewable Energy within the Department of 91AV at the University of Liverpool, UK. Since 2011 he has led a group of 12-15 researchers that have focused on understanding real-time interface processes in batteries and electrochemical capacitors, a crucial step in improving energy materials to meet net-zero targets. His work has focused on developing cutting-edge technologies such advanced operando Raman and infrared spectroscopic techniques that can probe the functionality of electrode interfaces at the nanoscale. He presently targets integration of automation into electrochemical methods for accelerating interface design and characterisation.


Akari Hayashi, Kyushu University, Japan

Akari Hayashi received her PhD in 91AV from University of California, Davis, the USA. After she received her PhD, she worked at the industry and national laboratory. She started her academic career as an associate professor at Nagoya Institute of Technology, and joined Kyushu University as an associate professor in 2011. She is now a professor of Kyushu University Platform of Inter-/Transdisciplinary Energy (Q-PIT). She also belongs to Department of hydrogen energy systems. Her research focuses on hydrogen energy through producing, storing, and using hydrogen. She has started fuel cell research since 2006. She is also working on combining renewable energy and hydrogen energy.


Laura Herz, University of Oxford, United Kingdom

Laura Herz is a Professor of Physics at the University of Oxford and an EPSRC Open Fellow. She received her PhD in Physics from the University of Cambridge in 2002 and was a Research Fellow at St John's College Cambridge from 2001 - 2003. Her current research interests lie in the area of organic, inorganic and hybrid semiconductors, with a strong current focus on advanced materials for solar energy conversion. Her work has been recognized by several awards, including the Environment, Sustainability and Energy Division Mid-Career Award of the 91AV, the Nevill Mott Medal and Prize from the Institute of Physics and the Friedrich-Wilhelm-Bessel Award from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. She has been listed by Clarivate Analytics as a Highly Cited Researcher since 2018. Laura is a Fellow of the Royal Society, the 91AV, the Materials Research Society, and the Institute of Physics. 


Andreas Kafizas, Imperial College London, United Kingdom

Dr. Andreas Kafizas is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of 91AV at Imperial College London (ICL). His research is focused on developing sustainable synthetic routes to photocatalytic coatings for a range of practical applications, including renewable fuels production (e.g. hydrogen fuel from water and carbon-based fuels from carbon dioxide), air remediation (e.g. nitrogen oxides removal) and water remediation (e.g. arsenic removal). To date, Andreas has published over 100 peer-reviewed papers and has written 6 book chapters (>7,100 citations, h-index = 52).
 
Andreas completed his MSci in 91AV in 2007, and PhD in 91AV in 2011 at University College London. His PhD was focussed on the development of photocatalytic materials synthesised by chemical vapour deposition, and he was awarded the Ramsay Medal for best graduating doctor. In 2012, he was awarded the Ramsay Fellowship, where studied the charge carrier behaviour of photocatalytic materials for solar fuels at ICL. In 2016, he was awarded a Junior Research Fellowship at ICL to develop heterojunction photoelectrodes for solar water splitting. In 2018, he was awarded a Lectureship at ICL, and now leads the Solar Coatings Group (https://www.imperial.ac.uk/solar-coatings-lab/about-us/), is the theme lead in Sustainable Power and Renewable Fuels at the Energy Futures Lab, and is a board member at the London Centre for Nanotechnology.


Emilio Palomares, Institut Català d'Investigació Química (ICIQ-CERCA), Spain

Emilio Palomares, born in Valencia in 1974, earned his Biology degree from UVEG in 1997, followed by a PhD at UPV/ITQ-CSIC in 2001. He received a Marie Slowdowska-Curie Fellowship at ICL, London, in 2001, delving into molecular devices for energy conversion. Joining ICMol-UVEG in 2004, he later moved to ICIQ-CERCA in 2006. Notable accolades include an ERC starting grant (2009), ERC PoC (2015), and ICREA Professorship (2009). Palomares received the Young Chemist Award (2006), INNOVA 2010 Award, and the E2S International Chair (2019). Elected ICIQ Director in 2020, he secured an ERC Advanced Grant in 2023. Palomares has co-authored 280+ peer-reviewed papers, focusing on materials for energy devices. His group specializes in interfacial charge transfer reactions, particularly in solar cells for electrochemical fuel cell applications.


Sebastian C. Peter, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, India

Prof. Sebastian C. Peter received his PhD in chemistry from the University of Münster, Germany (2006) and was post-doctoral fellow at Max Plank Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids, Dresden, Germany (2006-07) and Northwestern University, USA (2007-10). Dr. Peter joined as a faculty at New 91AV Unit, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bangalore in 2010. His broad research interests include the development of solid-state inorganic materials for fuel cell, CO2reduction and hydrogen production. He is the founder and director of the start-up “Breathe Applied Sciences Pvt Ltd” to translate the fundamental works on CO2 utilization. He is featured in the “75 under 50: Scientists Shaping Today's India” by the DST and the convenor of the first ever CoE on CCU in India. He is commissioning first ever CO2 to methanol plant in India. He received the National Technology Award, National Prize and National Start-up Award for his technology transition.


Atsushi Wakamiya, Kyoto University, Japan

Atsushi Wakamiya is a full professor of Kyoto University. He received his Ph.D. from Kyoto University in 2003. He began his academic career at Nagoya University as Assistant Professor in 2003. In 2010, he moved to Kyoto University and was promoted to Professor in 2018. He received many awards: The Chemical Society of Japan Award for Creative Work (2020), Commendation for Science and Technology by MEXT Japan: Award for Science and Technology Research Category (2022), etc. He is a project leader of the Green Innovation Program (NEDO) and JST-Mirai Project. He is a co-founder and a director (as Chief Scientific Officer, CSO) of “EneCoat Technologies, Co. Ltd.”, a startup company for perovskite solar modules.


Yuki Yamada, SANKEN, Osaka University, Japan

Yuki Yamada is currently a full professor at SANKEN, Osaka University in Japan. He majored electrochemistry and received his PhD from Kyoto University in 2010. In the same year, he moved to the University of Tokyo as an assistant professor and was promoted to a lecturer in 2018 and an associate professor in 2020. In 2021, he moved to SANKEN, Osaka University as a full professor. His current research interests focus on the development of liquid electrolyte (concentrated electrolytes, hydrate-melt electrolytes, new solvents, etc.) and its underlying design principles for various electrochemical applications such as batteries and conversion reactions.


Miho Yamauchi, Kyushu University, Japan

Miho Yamauchi received her Ph. D degree from University of Tsukuba, Japan, and joined Kyushu University as an assistant professor and CRC (ICAT, now) Hokkaido University as an associate professor. She became a PI and a professor at WPI-I2CNER and moved to IMCE at Kyushu University and is currently a cross-appointed professor at Tohoku University. Her research interests include nanomaterials science with respect to hydrogen science, catalysis and efficient energy conversion. Recently, she is a group leader of GteX project for water electrolysis (JST) and a unit leader for CO2 electrolysis for Moonshoot project (NEDO) and is focusing on the construction of CO2 conversion systems using CO2 captured directly from the air.



Abstract submission

Poster abstracts - in-person only

Abstract submission is now closed.
Posters are displayed throughout the meeting and there will be a dedicated poster session.

Poster presenters who are attending the symposium will need to print and display their poster physically. Presenters will be provided with a poster board on-site - posters should be printed portrait.

Additional information

All poster abstracts will be reviewed and authors will be notified of the outcome of the review process within about 4 weeks of the submission deadline. The abstracts should be no longer than one A4 page in portrait layout. Please ensure you provide the details of the presenting author. 
Registration

Planning your trip

We encourage delegates who are planning to attend events in person to arrange suitable travel and accommodation insurance, which should include cover for the postponement or cancellation of travel caused by regulations and guidelines relating to Covid-19. We also recommend considering flexible travel and accommodation booking options where possible. 

In-person registration includes:
  • Attendance at all scientific sessions
  • Attendance at the poster session
  • Refreshments throughout the meeting
  • Access to recordings of all scientific sessions post-event
Please note accommodation is not included in the in-person registration fee.
 
Early bird Standard
RSC Member £200+VAT £220+VAT
Non-member £230+VAT £250+VAT
Student RSC member £120+VAT £140+VAT
Student non-member £140+VAT £160+VAT


Virtual registration includes:​
  • ​Live access to all scientific sessions
  • Access to recordings of all scientific sessions post-event
Standard
RSC member £40+VAT
Non-member £50+VAT
Student RSC member £20+VAT
Student non-member £30+VAT

RSC members and student RSC members

If you are a 91AV member and wish to register for this meeting, please select the member option on the online registration page. You will need to enter your membership number.

Non-member and student non-members

For non-member registrants, affiliate membership of the 91AV until July 2025 is available, the affiliate membership application will be processed and commence once the registrant has attended the event. 

Student delegates

In order to encourage undergraduate or postgraduate students to attend the Discussion, a reduced conference fee is available for students. This fee applies to those undertaking a full-time course for a recognised degree or a diploma at a university or equivalent institution

Accompanying person

If you would like to bring a guest to the conference, this can be done during the registration process. There will be an additional charge, which will include all lunches, refreshments and the conference dinner. The fee does not include attendance at any scientific sessions, journal paper pre-prints or the journal volume.

Accessibility

The 91AV is keen to encourage and enable as many people as possible to attend our events, to benefit from the networking opportunities and the chance to hear talks from leaders in the field. If you would like to discuss accessibility, or have childcare, caring responsibilities or other care needs, please contact us to discuss your requirements so that we can enable your attendance. Please refer also to our Grants for carers fund; for more information please see the ‘bursaries’ section on this page.

Terms and Conditions for Events run by the 91AV

Bursaries

Grants for carers

With our Grants for carers, you can apply for up to £1,200 per year to help you attend a chemistry-related meeting, conference or workshop or a professional development event. This money would be used to cover any additional costs you incur, paying for care that you usually provide.  Please visit the website for further information and eligibility criteria.

Accessibility grants

With our Accessibility grants, you can apply for up to £1,200 per year to help with the cost of specific support to attend a chemistry-related meeting, conference, workshop or professional development event. This support might be any form of equipment, service, or other personal expense associated with meeting your access needs.

Researcher development grant

If you are an RSC member and you are one of the following:a PhD student actively undertaking a PhD course in the chemical sciences;
a researcher in the chemical sciences (including post docs, research technicians and research assistants), working in academia, industry or any sector, within 10 years of leaving full time education (at the time of the application deadline).You can apply for up to £500 to support your participation in this event.

Please note it is not necessary to have confirmation of abstract acceptance before applying for a Researcher Development and Travel Grant and we encourage you to apply as early as possible.
 
Please see the website for up-to-date information on eligibility, how to apply and submission deadlines.
 
Researcher Development and Travel Grants can be applied for in addition to Grants for Carers and Assistance Grants.
Sponsorship & supporting organisations
A selection of sponsorship opportunities are available for companies who would like to promote their activities at the 2024 Chemical Science symposium.

A sponsorship menu document is available to download from this page with more details and prices.

Please note that exhibition spaces are limited, spaces will be allocated on a first come first served basis.

If you would like more information about sponsoring the 2024 Chemical Science symposium, please contact the Commercial Sales Department at the 91AV on advertising@rsc.org Sponsorship Menu
Venue
The 91AV

The 91AV, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, W1J 0BA, United Kingdom


The Burlington House (Royal Academy) courtyard is located on the north side of Piccadilly, directly across the street from Fortnum and Mason. The 91AV is located on the right hand side of the Burlington House courtyard.

Travel

By underground: The nearest stations are Green Park or Piccadilly Circus; both are a 5-minute walk to the venue. If you use Green Park please leave via Piccadilly Northside and look for the Royal Academy entrance, turn left out of the station, you will see the red flags of Burlington House ahead of you.

By train: London Kings Cross, London Liverpool Street or London Victoria train stations are the most accessible and then require a short tube journey to the venue You can take either the Piccadilly or Victoria line to Green Park or Piccadilly tube stations and only the Victoria line to Green Park from Victoria station

By coach: National Express operates a comprehensive coach service to most parts of the country from Victoria Coach Station, 164 Buckingham Palace Road, Sw1W 9TP
National Express coaches: www.nationalexpress.com
Megabus low-cost coach tickets: http://uk.megabus.com

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