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Air Liquide announces the 3 winners of the 2018 Scientific Challenge

Paris, France,
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Three winners were rewarded at the end of the 2018 Scientific Challenge organized by Air Liquide, out of more than 132 proposals from 34 different countries. In the context of this second edition, Air Liquide had invited teams of researchers, start-ups and private or public institutes to submit scientific research projects aimed at improving air quality and fighting climate change using the Essential Small Molecules such as oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, etc.

The three winners received the “Air Liquide Scientific Prize” endowed with 50 000 euros. In addition, the winners have signed a partnership agreement with the Group that will enable them to receive 1.5 million euros in funding, shared between the three projects, to develop their scientific proposals and transform them into market-ready technologies. For each topic, the winners are:

  • “Lower-CO2 H2” - How to produce cost competitive hydrogen while reducing greenhouse gas emissions? 

José Manuel Serra Alfaro from the Instituto de Tecnología Química (a joint research center created by the Universitat Politècnica de València and the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas) in Spain. The partnership will focus on the development of a new process using a reactor membrane to produce purified H2 in a single step.

  • “H2 is coming” - How to use hydrogen to avoid greenhouse gas and air pollutant emissions in fossil fuel based industrial processes? 

Christophe Coperet from the ETH Zurich in Switzerland. The partnership will focus on the development of efficient catalysts for the use of H2 and CO2 to produce methanol.

  • “Sustainable Farm to Fork” - Can the dietary needs of 7.6 billion people be met in an affordable, healthy and sustainable manner?

Wenbiao Shen from the Nanjing Agricultural University in China. The partnership will focus on the use of water enriched with H2 in agriculture to reduce the use of fertilizers and pesticides.

François Darchis, Senior Vice-President and member of the Air Liquide Group Executive Committee, supervising Innovation, said:

“This scientific challenge strengthens the Group's cooperation with the international scientific community (universities, institutes of technology, laboratories...). It perfectly illustrates the Group's open innovation approach. This challenge enables us to continue expanding our knowledge related to Essential Small Molecules, with the aim to invent new solutions reducing carbon footprint and addressing the key challenges facing society.”

The three laureates were selected by a jury of 7 members, headed by Air Liquide Vice-President Research & Development, and composed by Professor Jean-Pierre Sauvage, Emeritus Professor at the University of Strasbourg, and winner of the 2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the design and synthesis of molecular machines, Professor Pamela Ronald, Plant pathologist and geneticist at the University of California, Davis, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), and five Air Liquide Fellows, distinguished in the Group's internal recognition program. 

For more information on the #2018AirLiquideScientificChallenge, click here.