Skip to content

News & Events

Stay informed about research breakthroughs, university announcements, and opportunities to engage with Nagoya University's dynamic global community.

Admissions

Study in Japan's fourth largest city, and home to some of its most well-known companies—all without the Tokyo prices and Kyoto crowds.

Academics

Pursue your interests through one of our English or Japanese language programs, selecting from a wide variety of specialized fields.

Campus life

Find out about our facilities, comprehensive support, extracurricular activities, and the safe and welcoming community that fosters lifelong connections and growth.

About

Meet our leadership and discover the inclusive values and academic heritage that drive Nagoya University's contributions to knowledge and society.

Announcement of Joint Study to Design Nanoporous Materials to Carry Small Molecules

Materials acting like sponge to safely capture, store, and release essential small molecules.

press released on November 28, 2016

Caption: The schematic image of molecular structure shows trapped gas (shown in green) in the nanospace of MOF/PCP. The materials acting like sponge capture, store, and release gas molecules. (C)Ryotaro MATSUDA

Nagoya, Japan ­– Prof. Ryotaro Matsuda, the Graduate School of Engineering at Nagoya University, and Prof. Susumu Kitagawa, the Department of Synthetic Chemistry & Biological Chemistry and the Director of the Institute for Integrated Cell-Material Sciences at Kyoto University, won the contest "Air Liquide Essential Molecules Challenge." For the first edition of the challenge, their research project was selected as one in three from a total of 130 scientific proposals submitted by academic teams, R&D departments, and start-ups from 25 countries.

Essential molecules, such as O2, N2, C2H2, CO, CO2, NO, NO2, and/or noble gases, are fundamental resources for our cultural lives. However, as a gas storage and carrier requires a huge energy which may cause even an unexpected risk, innovative new materials are in high demand to handle the gases under a lower pressure and a room temperature. In particular, if pocketable materials are invented to safely carry the gases, for instance in the situation of medical use, this will make our life at home more convenient.

Prof. Kitagawa of the research team was the first to discover and to demonstrate "porosity" for metal complexes with gas sorption experiments in 1997, whose materials are called porous coordination polymers (PCPs) or metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). Since then working with Prof. Kitagawa, Prof. Matsuda has driven the expansion of the concept to "function integrated nanospace," to develop further practical materials with the functions of molecular adsorption and separation. Their achievements have blazed a trail to a new era for porous materials, vital to addressing energy and environmental issues and contributing to human welfare.

In this starting new collaborative project, Nagoya University, Kyoto University, and Air Liquide will reinforce the innovative nanoporous materials, or "sponge materials," to be identified for highly efficient abilities in separation, storage, and release of gas molecules. "Encouraged by this opportunity, we will open up a new research field in gas science and technology," Prof. Matsuda expects.

For each subject, the winners will receive a scientific award of 50,000 euros in recognition of the originality of the projects, which offer innovative solutions promoting the energy and environmental transition. Air Liquide will also further fund up to 1.5 million euros in collaborations with the winners to mature their scientific proposals and transform them into innovative market technologies.

Announcement of the winners of the "Essential Small Molecules Challenge", Air Liquide

https://www.airliquide.com/media/air-liquide-announces-winners-essential-small-molecules-challenge

Press Released Sites

・EurekAlert!

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2016-11/nu-aoj112816.php

・AlphaGalileo

http://www.alphagalileo.org/ViewItem.aspx?ItemId=170374&CultureCode=en

・ResearchSEA

http://www.researchsea.com/html/article.php/aid/10230/cid/1/research/science/nagoya_university/sponge-like_materials_capturestoreand_release_essential_small_molecules.html

We use cookies
By clicking "Accept Cookies," you agree to the use of cookies to improve your user experience, optimize the site, produce statistics, and interact with social networks.
Our Site Policy