Shape-selective catalysis is a pivotal concept in catalysis, merging the principles of catalytic reactions with materials engineering. This technique involves the use of catalysts with specifically tailored pore structures that allow only molecules of certain shapes and sizes to enter and react within the catalytic sites. By controlling the access of reactant molecules to the active sites, shape-selective catalysts enhance reaction selectivity and efficiency. This approach finds applications across various industries, including petrochemicals, environmental remediation, and fine chemical synthesis. Zeolites, a class of crystalline aluminosilicate materials, are widely utilized as shape-selective catalysts due to their well-defined pore structures. Advances in nanotechnology and materials science have further expanded the scope of shape-selective catalysis, enabling the design of catalysts with enhanced performance and specificity, thus driving innovations in chemical engineering and technology.
Title : Basic lattice reactions in memory behavior of shape memory alloys
Osman Adiguzel, Firat University, Turkey
Title : Application of metal single-site zeolite catalysts in heterogeneous catalysis
Stanislaw Dzwigaj, Sorbonne University, France
Title : Bioelectrocatalytic materials based on buckypapers and biosourced glyconanoparticles
Serge Cosnier, Universie Grenoble Alpes, France
Title : Human nanomedicine: Catalysts for improving health in the clinic
Thomas J Webster, Interstellar Therapeutics, United States
Title : Solution of the millennium problem concerning the Navier-Stokes equations
Alexander G Ramm, Kansas State University, United States
Title : Distal functionalization via transition metal catalysis
Haibo Ge, Texas Tech University, United States
Title : Plastic Trash to Monomers and Intermediates – PTMI
Anne M Gaffney, University of South Carolina, United States
Title : Role of supplemented nutrients and intermediate temperature on bio-methane generation from anaerobic digestion of agricultural waste: Feasibility & Fertilizer recovery
Md Nurul Islam Siddique, University Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia
Title : CO2 hydrogenation to methanol over Cu/TiO2 catalysts: The role of oxygen vacancies in CO2 activation
Ziyi Zhong, Guangdong Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, China
Title : Highly rotationally excited N2 of N2O dissociation on Pd(110) surface
Zibo Zhao, Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences, China