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EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Case for Support
In-situ NMR-based methodology for screening and optimisation of
heterogenised organocatalytic systems
Previous research track record
Principal Investigator (PI) – Dr Carmine D’Agostino (CDA) is a chemical engineer, with a BEng
(XXXX) and MEng (XXXX) from the XXXXXX, and was awarded his PhD (supervised by Prof.
XXX) from the University of Cambridge (XXXX) for NMR techniques to study sustainable
manufacturing of fine chemicals using heterogeneous catalysis on the project TSB (TP/7/ZEE/6/I/
N0262B). This was followed by postdoctoral positions as research scientist, during which he
delivered on several strategic UK catalysis projects, including the EPSRC CASTECH (EP/
G011397/1) project on sustainable catalytic technologies and Johnson Matthey (JM) industrial
projects on developing heterogeneous catalysts. He then was awarded a prestigious Junior
Research Fellowship (JRF) by Wolfson College, University of Cambridge, and took up a position
as teaching fellow in the same institution, successfully supervising two PhD projects on
spectroscopic studies of heterogeneous catalytic systems. He has also worked in the oil and
refining industry (companies ENI and Technip) both as planner and process engineer, gaining
skills in project management and interfacing with the chemical industry. In February XXXX, CDA
was appointed as Lecturer in the School of Chemical Engineering and Analytical Science at the
University of Manchester within the Catalysis and Porous Materials research group.
CDA’s primary research area is in catalysis and porous materials, with specific focus on key
phenomena that lie at the heart of catalysis, such as diffusion, adsorption and reactivity in porous
catalysts, by developing novel NMR protocols that exploit pulsed-field gradient (PFG) NMR and
NMR relaxation techniques, together with other spectroscopic tools. The PI has published 54 peer-
reviewed papers (h-index = 14, over 890 citations), winning prizes for top quality and highly cited
papers, and a book chapter in Handbook of Green Chemistry (Wiley-VCH), currently in production.
CDA has a proven track record of delivering high-quality scientific work in the areas of
heterogeneous catalysis and physical chemistry of porous materials.1-22 His previous work on
diffusion in porous media highlights the experimental approach to investigate and quantify mass
transport in porous catalysts in order to identify key features of the pore structure that determine
catalyst behaviour. Using diffusion NMR techniques combined with T1 NMR relaxation he was able
to reveal new insights into the unusual behaviour of enhanced diffusion of polyols confined in
porous materials, highlighted in a publication on the Journal of Physical Chemistry C (2012).4 In a
work on the catalytic oxidation of propylene glycol over AuPt/C catalyst, using NMR diffusion
techniques the PI demonstrated the importance of rate of diffusion transport inside the catalyst
porous matrix and how this affects catalyst behaviour, which posits that presence of micropores
causes particular problems in
terms of catalyst deactivation
(Figure 1). This paper conferred
a prize for ‘Highest Quality
Paper’ featuring on the front
cover of Catalysis Science &
Technology (2014).8
Adsorption is also a key
aspect in dictating catalytic
behaviour in catalyst pores. PI
demonstrated for the first time
the ability of T1 and T2 NMR
relaxation to non-invasively
quantify adsorption of liquids in
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1
Ds
low [
m2 s
-1]
x 1
01
1
Pore volume [cm3 g
-1]
Fresh catalyst
1st run catalyst
4th run catalyst
Din
mic
rop
ore
s [
m2
s-1
]
10
-11
Pore volume [cm3 g-1]b-factor
0.001
0.01
0.1
1
0 5 109
1 1010
1.5 1010
2 1010
Micropore diffusion
NM
R s
ign
al
PFG NMR plot
(a) (b)
Figure 1. (a) PFG NMR plot from which it is possible to extract diffusion coefficient in the micropores of the AuPt/C catalyst. (b) Values of micropore
diffusion coefficients plotted as a function of pore volume after each reuse of
the catalyst. Adapted from D’Agostino et al. (2014).8
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 8EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 8Case For SupportCase for Support
EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Case for Support
heterogeneous catalysts. The findings
showed a relationship between NMR
relaxation measurements and
energetics of adsorption of molecules
over catalyst surfaces (Figure 2), and
were highlighted by the European
Journal of Chemistry (2014).7
The snapshots presented above
have then set the basis for the
application of these experimental
protocols in real-working catalysts,
showing the ability to identify key
parameters that determine the catalyst
behaviour including solvent,3, 5, 14 type of
substrate5 and metal particle size.18
Faraday Discussion - Complex Molecular
Surfaces and Interfaces (2017)20 highlighted
PI’s recent work on these NMR protocols and
their ability to quantify molecular dynamics of
molecules confined in porous materials
whose surface was modified by
immobilisation of organic species (Figure 3).
PI’s expertise and proven track record in
reaction and NMR studies of fluids in porous
materials puts him in an advantageous
position to explore and validate new ways of
exploiting NMR methods to design and optimise organocatalyst immobilised on solids.
Coupling traditional catalyst screening with NMR methods (i.e., spectroscopy, diffusion and
relaxation) it will be possible to achieve a comprehensive picture of the physico-chemical
behaviour of chemical reactions occurring over organocatalysts immobilised in porous structures;
this includes reactivity, molecular transport and surface effects, which have so far been largely
unexplored but are thought to play a crucial role in the heterogenisation of homogeneous catalysts
over solid supports.23
PI will collaborate with Prof. Armando Carlone (AC) at the Università de L’Aquila in Italy, an
expert in homogeneous organocatalysis and organic synthesis with high impact work in the area,24-
27 including implementation of such processes at the commercial scale. This collaboration will bring
organic chemistry expertise, which will lead to a powerful synergy with PI’s expertise in physical
chemistry of solid catalysts. The outstanding facilities of PI’s School at the University of
Manchester to study liquid-phase catalysis and the possibility to interact with Prof. Chris Hardacre,
a world-leading catalyst scientist, will provide the optimal environment for catalyst preparation,
characterisation and testing. The state-of-the-art NMR facilities managed by Prof. Gareth Morris in
the School of Chemistry will support the part of the project for the in-situ NMR spectroscopy,
diffusion and relaxation. The industrial relevance of the proposal is highlighted by the support
provided by Johnson Matthey (JM), a world-leading catalyst and chemical company. PI has
previously collaborated with JM to produce novel work14 resulting in the implementation of new
tools for quality control of catalytic materials. JM will provide both materials to be used in the
project as well as industrial facilities and expertise that will enhance significantly the impact of this
proposal in the business sector, hence speeding up commercial and IP exploitation of the research
outcomes in terms of development of new characterisation methodologies and catalysts.
(from TPD)
(fro
mN
MR
)
TiO2 anatase
TiO2 rutile
γ-Al2O3
SiO2
ZrO2
θ-Al2O3ETTe 21Surf
Theory Experiments(a) (b)
Figure 2. (a) Interaction between water and an oxide surface. The ratio of NMR relaxation times, T1/T2, is theoretically related to an activation energy of interaction, ΔE. This relationship was
experimentally verified in a recent set of experiments, whose main
results are shown in (b). Adapted from D’Agostino et al. (2014).7
Hydroxyl groupsAliphatic chains replacing
hydroxyl groups
Changes in T1 NMR relaxation times of adsorbed methanol
Solid support
Figure 3. Replacement of hydroxyl groups of solid surfaces
with alkyl chains affects the molecular dynamics of the probe species, methanol, which can be probed using T1 NMR relaxation times. Adapted from D’Agostino et al. (2017).
20
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EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Case for Support
Description of proposed research
Summary
The goal of this proposal is to develop and validate an in-situ Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)-
based screening and optimisation methodology for heterogenised organocatalytic systems, able to
monitor and evaluate catalyst activity, transport and surface interactions at a pore-scale level in
such functionalised materials. Batch reaction studies combined with in-situ 1H and 13C NMR
spectroscopy, diffusion and relaxation techniques will give new and exclusive insights into these
systems by providing quantitative data on intra-pore kinetics, diffusion and adsorption, which will
be able to direct catalyst formulation and reaction design by evaluating the controlling interactions
and mass transport phenomena of the various reactant/solvent/product species within the pores of
the heterogenised catalytic system, hence aid selection of optimal reaction parameters such as
choice of suitable solvents, solid supports, pore size and type of linker to immobilise the
organocatalyst on support. The validation of this methodology in heterogenised organocatalysis will
be a significant step forward towards effective screening and development of these materials,
which can be expanded to other related technologies using functionalised porous materials.
Background
Homogeneous organocatalysis is a key technology in the manufacturing of many fine chemicals,
including drugs and other high-value specialty chemicals.28 It has the advantage of usually being
highly active and selective under mild conditions and with well-defined reaction mechanisms. The
major drawback of this technology is in the laborious and expensive procedures needed to
separate the catalyst from the reaction products which, in many cases, is unfeasible or may lead to
catalyst degradation with consequent waste of valuable material.29
In the past decades much effort has gone into the immobilisation of organocatalytic
functions onto solid supports, through a process called heterogenisation. The basic idea, shown in
Figure 4, is to immobilise the soluble organocatalyst onto a solid support, usually through covalent
bonding, hence making the catalyst insoluble, with significant benefits in terms of: (i) easier catalyst
handling, separation and work-up; (ii) easier catalyst recovery and reusability; (iii) possibility to run
continuous processes in packed bed reactors, hence more process flexibility. This directly leads to
improvements in process operations and sustainability by reducing waste of materials and energy
consumption, due to laborious distillation procedures, often used in homogeneous catalysis.29
Figure 4. Difference between (a) traditional homogeneous catalysts, whereby the catalytic function (X) enabling a
reaction A+B→C is in homogeneous solution and (b) heterogenised catalysts, whereby the same catalytic function (X) is
immobilised over a solid surface, which makes the catalyst insoluble and hence easy to separate and recycle.
One of the challenges that has slowed down or hindered development and implementation of
this technology is the lack of understanding and ability to measure key physico-chemical aspects of
these systems. In particular, the role of mass transport and adsorption phenomena, which become
crucial factors once the homogeneous catalytic function is immobilised over high surface area
nanoporous supports, onto the catalyst performance remains unclear and unexplored. 23 This is
due to the lack of ability so far to comprehensively investigate and accurately quantify the influence
Solid
X
X
X
X X
A+B C(a) (b)
Soluble homogeneous catalyst(X)
X
X
X
X
A + B C
X
Insoluble heterogenised catalyst (Solid-X)
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EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Case for Support
of such phenomena at a pore scale level. Indeed, most of the work done in the area has focused
on the conventional approach of characterising the bare heterogenised solid catalyst, and then
analysing the bulk fluid surrounding the catalyst particles during reaction to assess the catalytic
performance; a large gap remains on the behaviour of the various reaction species in direct contact
with the catalyst surface inside the pore space, including diffusion transport within the pore
structure and fluid/solid surface interactions of the various reactive species, products and solvents.
In this project, this gap will be closed by combining reaction studies with in-situ 1H/13C NMR
techniques to evaluate kinetics, diffusion and adsorption inside the pores functionalised with the
organocatalytic function. NMR T1/T2 relaxation measurements will provide new quantitative data on
molecular dynamics and adsorption of reactive species, products and solvents confined in the pore
space containing the immobilised organocatalytic function, allowing to quantify solvent and product
inhibition in different catalytic systems and hence direct the selection of important reaction
parameters such as choice of suitable solvents and solid supports. Pulsed-field gradient (PFG)
NMR will be able to quantify diffusion transport and hence elucidate the effect of textural properties
(pore size, tortuosity and surface area) and type of linker (linking the organocatalytic function to the
support) on accessibility of reactants and products to the pore space. The validation of such NMR
techniques, which give accurate and quantitative data with a relatively short acquisition time, will
provide a new toolkit for boosting screening and optimisation of this class of catalytic materials.
National Importance
Catalysis is a key technology for the UK industry, enabling creation of new chemical processes and
addressing many issues related to economy and sustainability. The decision to maintain
investments in this area highlights the long-term commitment of the EPSRC, which has explicitly
stated the “needs to nurture early career researchers and future leaders”. Methodological
advances in the technology of heterogenised organocatalysts will boost and help developing more
rapidly such materials, making the technology more viable, hence improve significantly
manufacturing of fine chemicals, providing more sustainable routes, lower environmental impact
with better use of available resources and less energy intensive processes as well as hazard
reduction; at the same time new screening tools will be validated, which can be extended to similar
classes of materials, i.e., functionalised porous materials. The outcome of this proposal will be very
relevant to the UK chemical industry as it will boost the development of a technology that is still
under-exploited, with potential of improving significantly economic and environmental sustainability.
This project fits well in the current UK activities in catalysis, and aims at developing an area,
heterogenised organocatalysis, that complements some of the major established activities in
catalysis funded by the EPSRC, such as “The UK Catalysis Hub”. The topic of this proposal lies
also in the area of sustainable manufacturing of fine chemicals through innovating technologies
and aligns well with the EPSRC research theme of “Manufacturing the Future”; the collaboration
with Johnson Matthey will enable a direct interaction with the industry, making the proposal directly
relevant to the chemical business and further developing its outcomes at a commercial scale.
Academic Impact
The academic impact will be broad and significant. The primary impact of this proposal will be in
developing a methodology for a rapid and effective screening of heterogenised organocatalysts,
which will lead to a significant advance in knowledge and way of developing this class of catalysts,
complementing very well the current UK landscape of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis;
indeed it will be able to bridge further the gap between these two different sub-disciplines. There
will be however, a much broader reach as in addition to catalysis, this proposal will bring together
aspects of organic chemistry, porous materials, surface science and spectroscopy, leading to new
knowledge in these areas, which will be promoted and made available to the scientific community
in the UK and internationally by conferences, seminars and publications in high-quality academic
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EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Case for Support
journals as well as magazines such as the The Chemical Engineer and The Catalyst Review,
which provide key global information to business strategy development in the catalytic process
industry. In addition, PI intends to exploit his IChemE membership and affiliation to the Catalysis
Special Interest Group (SIG) in order to promote the research outcomes in events and workshops.
Research ideas and objectives
The central idea of this proposal is in coupling batch reaction studies with in-situ multi-technique 1H/13C NMR to quantify for the first time transport, adsorption and kinetics in heterogenised
organocatalytic systems at a pore-scale level, hence validate and use these data to direct a
rational catalyst and process design. An overview is shown in Figure 5, highlighting the approach
and objective, which can be summarised as:
OBJECTIVE: Validate the use of an in-situ NMR methodology as a new toolkit to speed up and
optimise heterogenised organocatalytic reaction systems.
HOW: Determine the structure/activity/stability relationship of these materials; evaluate quantitative
data on intra-pore kinetics, diffusion and adsorption using in-situ NMR spectroscopy, diffusion and
relaxation techniques, respectively; unravel the key links diffusion/adsorption/catalyst performance.
Figure 5. Schematic of the approach and objective of the proposed research project.
Batch reaction studies and 1H/13C NMR spectroscopy will enable to achieve in-situ
reaction monitoring directly inside the pore space, allowing quantification of kinetics, conversion
and selectivity for different catalyst formulations. The effect of homogeneous catalyst loading to
immobilise over the support, which remains unexplored, will also be investigated; whilst low loading
may lead to a lower reaction rate, a high loading may lead to self-aggregation of the immobilised
species with loss of activity. Hence, an important outcome of these studies will be the identification
of an optimal load that maximises product yield, and how the choice of support, linker and pore
size influence such loading. In addition, it will be possible to detect reaction products/by-products
trapped inside catalyst pores, which cannot be detected by conventional analysis of bulk fluid.
Using NMR relaxation it will be possible for the first time to investigate liquid/solid surface
interactions in these catalysts. For example, the role of the support and how this affects the activity
of the immobilised organocatalyst remains puzzling; using this technique it will be possible to
understand how the support affects molecular dynamics and surface interactions of reactive
species, products and solvents, hence understand key phenomena such as solvent and product
inhibition, which impact significantly the performance of these catalysts. The outcome of these
measurements will help identify the key links between catalyst performance and surface
interactions as probed by NMR relaxation, hence develop a method for optimising solvent and
support selection.
Diffusion is another issue arising when organocatalysts are immobilised over nanoporous
structures and its effect has not yet been elucidate. Diffusion studies by pulsed-field gradient
NMR spectroscopy(reactivity)
NMR relaxation(surface interactions)
PFG NMR(mass transport)
Batch reactionstudies
Immobilisation of organocatalystover solid supports
Reactor-scale studies
Pore-scale studies
Catalyst synthesis and structural characterisation
Solid
X
X
X
X X
A+B C
Applications forcatalyst screening and optimisation
OBJECTIVE: In-situ NMR protocol validation
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EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Case for Support
(PFG) NMR will enable to identify diffusion limitations, quantify the effect of various linkers on
accessibility of reactant molecules to the pore space, quantify the ability of reaction products to
diffuse out of the catalyst and hence find the optimal textural properties of the porous matrix.
Studies in fresh and reused catalysts will aim at understanding the deactivation process
and its effect catalyst reusability, molecular transport and adsorption, hence identify the key
parameters for a more robust catalyst formulation. Altogether, it will be ultimately possible to
identify and quantify the key factors that determine catalyst behaviour and validate a new
methodology for a comprehensive, robust and rational catalyst and process design.
Novelty and relevance
Immobilisation of organocatalysts onto porous supports has previously been achieved but so far
the lack of understanding of key phenomena such as diffusion limitations inside the pore space,
self-aggregation and changes in surface interactions of reactive species and solvents with the pore
surface have hindered significantly the development in terms of catalyst formulation and process
optimisation.23 With the proposed approach, unlike most of the previous studies, which have
focused on obtaining kinetic data on the analysis of the bulk fluid, it will be possible for the first
time to have a much closer look at the reaction as it happens directly in the catalyst pores,
providing new and exclusive insights by accessing novel and quantitative information on intra-pore
kinetics, molecular dynamics, mass transport as well as interactions of molecules with the catalyst
surface (Figure 6), leading to an accurate evaluation of solvent and product inhibition and how the
support affects these properties. The validation of these methods for heterogenised catalytic
systems will therefore lead to new applications of NMR techniques that go beyond purely
homogeneous or heterogeneous systems, enabling to gain new fundamental insights on aspects of
crucial importance for improving the design of efficient heterogenised catalysts, hence improve
sustainability in the manufacturing of fine chemicals. This is very relevant to the current efforts at a
global level in enabling new, more sustainable catalytic technologies for chemical manufacturing.
Programme and methodology
To achieve the objective of the project, the model
reactive system under investigation will be the
asymmetric aldol condensation reaction between
aldehydes with different substituent groups (R) and
hydroxyacetone over proline-immobilised catalysts, a
versatile organic synthesis for the formation of C-C
bond (Figure 6). This is a benchmark organic reaction
with wide applications in the fine chemical and drug
synthesis and proline is one of the “privileged
scaffolds” for catalysing organic synthesis; hence the
system is ideal to test and validate the proposed
methodology and extend its applications to a broad
range of reactive systems. The proposal is structured
in the following Work Packages (WP).
WP1. Synthesis and characterisation of proline-immobilised catalysts
Description: This part of the project involves the synthesis of proline-immobilised catalysts using
different mesoporous supports, SiO2, TiO2, Al2O3 and ZrO2, which are low-cost, readily available
and offer large surface areas and high mechanical stability; in addition, they can be easily extruded
to form pellets, which are the privileged catalyst form used in industry. The synthesis is described
in Figure 7. The heterogenisation involves a first step (Step 1) whereby different linkers (specified
in the figure) are attached to the 4-OH-proline organocatalyst. In a subsequent step (Step 2) the
modified organocatalyst is then anchored via the linker to the solid support by covalent bonding.
Figure 6. Reactive system to investigate.
adsorption
diffusion
kinetics
Lin
ker
Heterogenizedorganocatalyst
Heterogenizedorganocatalyst
Porous support
solvent
?
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EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Case for Support
Figure 7. Immobilisation scheme of the organocatalyst onto the support via the linker.
DELIVERABLES: DLV1.1. Successful preparation of organocatalysts confirmed by NMR and
mass spectrometry (MS). DLV1.2. Successful immobilisation of the organocatalysts on support
and characterisation by solid-state NMR, IR, Raman, XPS, N2 adsorption, SEM, TEM, PXRD.
MILESTONES: MS1.1. Successful synthesis of the soluble organocatalyst for homogeneous
phase reaction tests in WP2. MS1.2. Successful synthesis of immobilised organocatalysts for
heterogenised catalyst reaction tests in WP2.
WP2. Catalytic reaction studies using batch reactors and in-situ 1H/13C NMR monitoring
Description: The heterogenised catalysts synthesized in WP1 will be tested in batch reactors,
using established bulk analysis, such as GC and HPLC, and using in-situ 1H and 13C NMR
spectroscopy. The in-situ NMR approach has never been used to study such reactive systems and
will allow for the first time to monitor reaction kinetics and product distribution directly inside the
catalyst pores. By exploiting the inherent wide chemical shift range of 13C NMR it will be possible to
overcome issues arising from 1H NMR peak overlap, where this occurs, that may be present when
fluids are confined in porous materials. NMR studies will be able to reveal also the presence of
species trapped inside the pores, hence not easily detectable with conventional analysis of the bulk
fluid. These studies will be conducted in glass NMR tubes at ambient pressure and mild
temperatures. A wide range of parameters is going to be explored, aiming at representing a variety
of fine chemical and pharmaceutical synthetic routes and reaction conditions, which include: (a)
aldehyde substituent group (from purely aliphatic to groups containing nitrogen or oxygen); (b)
support (SiO2, TiO2, Al2O3 and ZrO2) and linker (different length and chemical structure); (c) solvent
(apolar, polar aprotic polar and polar protic); (d) pore size of the support (from few to hundreds of
nm); (e) loading of homogeneous catalyst to be immobilised.
Reusability tests will be carried out to identify the most stable formulation (support/linker/pore
size/loading). Catalyst activity will be benchmarked against the same reactions carried out in a
homogeneous phase using the non-supported organocatalyst. Deactivation will also be assessed.
DELIVERABLES: DLV2.1. Batch and in-situ 1H/13C NMR catalytic tests of soluble organocatalysts
(before immobilisation). DLV2.2. Batch and in-situ 1H/13C NMR catalytic tests of different
heterogenised catalyst formulations in different solvents; benchmarking against the non-supported
organocatalyst. DLV2.3. Assessment and characterisation of catalyst deactivation pattern.
MILESTONES: MS2.1. Relationship between catalyst structure with reactivity and stability
determined. MS2.2. Catalyst deactivation and reusability pattern determined.
WP3. NMR diffusion and relaxation studies
Description: In order to understand the catalyst behaviour determined in WP2, T1,T2 and PFG
NMR relaxation will be used to quantify surface interactions and diffusion of chemical species in
supports and heterogenised catalysts. PI’s previous work demonstrated the ability to study
adsorption in catalyst pores by using the T1/T2 ratio, a robust, non-invasive indicator of
adsorbate/adsorbent interactions.7 The PI’s previous work showed the ability of this indicator to
Support
Lin
ker
Step 1 Step 2
Support
Organocatalytic function
Linker a Linker b Linker c
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EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Case for Support
quantify solvent inhibition and use this knowledge to optimise solvent and material selection in
purely heterogeneous catalytic systems. 3,5,14 The validation of the technique in the area of
heterogenised organocatalysts will be invaluable as by quantifying for the first time surface
interactions of the various reactants, products and solvents in these materials, it will be possible to
study competitive adsorption, quantify the degree of solvent and product inhibition, evaluate the
currently unknown effect of the support on molecular adsorption and hence determine the optimal
selection of solvent and support that enhance the chemical reaction at the surface. In addition, it
will also be possible to study the effect of the support material on adsorption of reaction products
and hence understand which support reduces product inhibition. Diffusion NMR techniques will be
used to understand the effect of pore size on mass transport of substrates and products,
estimating the effect of pore diffusion on reaction rate by using methods such as the Weisz–Prater
criterion, which will be possible by combining reaction kinetic data with the diffusion coefficients
determined by NMR measurements. In addition, it will also be possible to assess the effect of
linkers on accessibility to pore space. Such data will lead to an optimal choice of suitable linkers
and pore structures that ensure a high surface-to-volume ratio but at the same time with pore sizes
large enough to avoid diffusion limitations of reactants and products.
DELIVERABLES: DLV3.1. Quantification of liquid/surface interactions of reactive species,
products and solvents in supports and catalysts byT1/T2 NMR relaxation. DLV3.2. Quantification of
molecular diffusion for reactive species, products and solvents as a function of catalyst pore size
and linker dimensions using PFG NMR. DLV3.3. Quantification of transport limitations by combing
kinetics and diffusion data. DLV3.4. T1/T2 and PFG NMR measurements in recycled catalysts.
MILESTONES: MS3.1. Relationship adsorption/transport/reactivity determined - Validation of NMR
spectroscopy, relaxation and PFG NMR techniques achieved. MS3.2. Evolution of surface and
pore structure after catalyst reuse determined.
Project management activities
PI (15% of time) will oversee the whole range of activities, from catalyst synthesis to reaction and
NMR studies supported by a PDRA (100% of time). Most of the work will take place at the
University of Manchester at the PI’s School and the School of Chemistry, liaising with Prof. Gareth
Morrison for the use of the NMR facilities. PI will manage project activities. The PDRA will visit
Prof. Armando Carlone in Italy, where they will carry out further research activities on organic
synthesis. Visits to Johnson Matthey (JM) will also be arranged for the PDRA to use their
characterisation facilities, including a bench-top NMR spectrometer, and interact with industrialists
working on catalyst development. The PDRA progress will be monitored with quarterly reports and
updates, ensuring project tasks are delivered and milestone achieved.
References 1. Mantle, M. D., et al., J. Phys. Chem. C 2011, 115 (C), 1073-1079; 2. Akpa, B. S., et al., Journal of Catalysis 2012, 289,30-41; 3. D'Agostino, C., et al., Chemistry-a European Journal 2012, 18 (45), 14426-14433; 4. D'Agostino, C., et al., The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 2012, 116 (16), 8975-8982; 5. D'Agostino, C., et al., Chemistry - A European Journal 2013, 19 (35), 11725-11732. 6. Al-Khattaf, S., et al., Catal. Sci. Technol. 2014, 4, 1017-1027; 7. D'Agostino, C., et al., Chemistry - A European Journal 2014, 20, 13009-13015; 8. D'Agostino, C., et al., Catalysis Science & Technology 2014, 4 (5), 1313-1322; 9. Haider, M. H., et al., Chemistry – A European Journal 2014, 20 (6), 1743-1752; 10. Ralphs, K., et al., Catalysis Science & Technology 2014, 4 (2), 531-539; 11. McManus, I., et al., Journal of Catalysis 2015, 330, 344-353; 12. Wilkinson, S. K., et al., Journal of Catalysis 2015, 330, 362-373; 13. D'Agostino, C., et al., Catalysis Science &Technology 2016, 6, 1661-1666; 14. D'Agostino, C., et al., Catalysis Science & Technology 2016, 6 (21), 7896-7901; 15. Zhu, Q. Y., et al., Chem. Eng. J. 2016, 306, 67-76; 16. Zhu, Q. Y., et al., Chem. Eng. J. 2016, 306, 1223-1233; 17. D'Agostino, C., et al., RSC Advances 2017, 7 (57), 36163-36167; 18. D'Agostino, C., et al., ACS Catal. 2017, 7 (7), 4235-4241; 19. D'Agostino, C., et al., Microporous and Mesoporous Materials 2017; 20. Robinson, N., et al., Faraday Discuss. 2017, 204, 439-452; 21. Bräuer, P., et al., RSC Advances 2017, 7 (83), 52604-52613; 22. Brauer, P., et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 2018, 20, 4250-4262; 23. Hübner, S., et al., Adv. Synth. Catal. 2016, 358 (1), 3-25; 24. Carlone, A., et al., Chemical Communications 2006, (47), 4928-4930; 25. Carlone, A., et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2007, 46 (24), 4504-4506; 26. Carlone, A., et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2007, 46 (7), 1101-1104; 27. Wilson, M. R., et al., Nature 2016, 534, 235; 28. Beller, M., New Avenues to Efficient Chemical Synthesis: Emerging Technologies, Springer, 2007; 29. Cole-Hamilton, D. J.; Tooze, R. P., Catalyst Separation, Recovery and Recycling: Chemistry and Process Design, Springer, 2006.
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 8 of 8EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 8 of 8Case For SupportCase for Support
EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Pathways to Impact
In-situ NMR-based methodology for screening and optimisation of
heterogenised organocatalytic systems
Impact Summary
The stakeholders benefiting from this proposal include: (i) Industry and the commercial sector, in
particular companies involved in the catalyst business as well as fine chemicals, including the
pharmaceutical sector; (ii) Outreach and engagement of scientific community; (iii) Environmental
policy and the wider public; (iv) Scientists and engineers building up skills and knowledge.
The objectives of the impact and the pathway activities to reach them are detailed below; some of
the timeline implementations of such activities, including industrial visits, are also outlined in the
Work Plan.
(i) Industry and the commercial sector
Objective: Actively involve the commercial sector in developing and exploiting the outcome of the
proposal in terms of methodological approach and exploitation of key research findings to address
current challenges in the area of heterogenised organocatalysis; assess the feasibility of follow-up
studies to boost industrial exploitation.
What will be done: The support and close interaction with Johnson Matthey (JM) is a key part that
will enable such objective to be achieved. The PI has a well-established collaboration with the JM
Technology Centre in Reading, which will continue during the project. The company is enthusiastic
about the potential outcomes of the research and as such fully supports the project by providing
industrially relevant raw materials, expertise, equipment, industrially-driven guidance and directions
as well as being involved in the industrial exploitation of the outcomes of this proposal. The JM
centre has also got in-house bench-top low-field NMR facilities, which will be used during the
PDRA visit for a proof-of-concept validation of the NMR results obtained from the academic high-
field NMR facilities, which will in turn enable development and transfer of technology and know-
how from academia to industry, with benefits for the commercial sector. Review meetings involving
the company will be arranged to make sure the objectives of the collaboration are achieved and at
the same time remain within the domain of interest of the industrial sector as well.
The project will also exploit the link with the pharmaceutical sector by reaching out to companies
such as AstroZeneca, GSK, Pfizer, which regularly visit the School during industrial advisory board
meetings, which will be a great opportunity to further increase the industrial impact of the proposal
by inviting company representatives to the workshop that is part of this project. The project will also
use the network and links of Prof. Armando Carlone with the fine chemical business sector in order
to broaden the outreach of the proposal to companies within and outside the UK. The support of
the IChemE through the Catalysis Special Interest Group (SIG) will provide further links to industry
and enable technology transfer.
Costs: The budget to enable such impact is estimated to be £1.2k, mostly to cover the visits of PI
and PDRA to the JM Technology Centre in Reading.
(ii) Outreach and engagement
Objective: Maximise the visibility and achievements of the project to the scientific community in
various areas of science and technology.
What will be done: The project is highly multidisciplinary in nature and will cover various areas,
from organic to physical chemistry, from catalysis to spectroscopy. Knowledge and findings of the
project will be disseminated though peer-reviewed publications on prestigious journals as well as
UK and international conferences, including: (i) the EUROMAR, which is the major NMR
conference in Europe; (ii) the UKCC, which is the main UK catalysis event; (iii) the UK
ChemEngDay, which is a major event in the area of Chemical Engineering across the UK and
beyond; (iv) the ICC, which is a major international event in the area of catalysis. Seminars across
the University as well as in Italy, exploiting the network of Prof. Armando Carlone, will also be
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 2EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 2Pathways to ImpactPathways to Impact
EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Pathways to Impact
organised with a particular emphasis on introducing the new methodology being developed to the
organic and synthetic chemistry community. A workshop on the project will be organised with the
support of the IChemE Catalysis Special Interest Group (SIG) through advertising and promoting
the event via email, website and social media, advice on organisation and management, logistic
support and contacts with the scientific community.
Costs: The cost for such activities is estimated to £9.5k, which covers the attendance of the UK
and international conferences and events as well as the organisation of the workshop.
(iii) Environmental policy, public engagement and the wider society
Objective: Make the public aware of technological developments in this area of catalysis that will
decrease waste of energy and materials as well as improve health and safety in working
environments.
What will be done: The PI will leverage the strong network within the School in the areas of
sustainability, corporate responsibility and circular economy, which are closely related to the
objective of the proposal. Among the various activities, we propose final year research projects for
Masters students within the School on life cycle analysis on the topic covered by the proposal,
which will be able to give a further insights onto the environmental impact of the work as well as
make young engineers aware of the potential of this technology to improve process sustainability
and innovate manufacturing in the chemical industry.
In order to reach the wider public, the project will engage with University of Manchester’s outreach
and public engagement activities, including the delivery of presentations at the Science,
Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM) events within the University of Manchester as well as
use of social media of both the School and the University for promoting research and innovation
carried out by academics within the School. The outreach of the project outcomes will also be
strengthened by using IChemE channels, including promotion through the IChemE Catalysis
Special Interest Group (SIG), which the PI is part of.
Costs: The cost for such activities is estimated to £7.7k, which accounts for approximately 5% of
the PI and PDRA time to be dedicated to such activities.
(iv) Training and skill development
Objective: Building individuals with outstanding scientific vision and R&D industrial knowledge
and skills.
What will be done: The PDRA working on this project will closely interact during the project with a
broad range of disciplines and leading scientists in such discipline. The PDRA will visit the external
collaborator in Italy (Month 5) to carry out organocatalysis reaction studies under his guidance.
The PDRA will have day-to-day interaction with leading catalyst researchers in the School; he/she
will use routinely the NMR facilities in the School of Chemistry and attend their weekly group
seminars. In addition, the collaboration with JM will give fundamental research insights from and
industrial perspective and visits to the JM Technology Centre will certainly help in achieving this.
The PDRA and PI will visit JM facilities several times during the project (Months 7-8 and12).
A set of skills, (experimental, analytical, project and interface management skills) and knowledge
(spectroscopy, organic and physical chemistry, engineering and materials science) will be
transferred to the other people involved in this project, including Masters and PhD students, who
will be able to interact with the PDRA during the project. This will be possible by the arrangement
of suitable student research projects aiming at supporting the work of the PDRA.
Costs: The budget to enable such impact is estimated to be £4.5k, which include visits to JM and
to the external collaborator in Italy as well as consumables for Masters student’s projects
supporting the PDRA activities.
Total cost of impact activities: £22.9k, which accounts for 10% of the total project budget.
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 2 of 2EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 2 of 2Pathways to ImpactPathways to Impact
EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Justification of Resources
In-situ NMR-based methodology for screening and optimisation of heterogenised
organocatalytic systems
Justification of Resources
Staff - directly incurred posts
A post-doc research associate (PDRA) with previous research experience in physical chemistry
and catalysis will be hired to work with the PI for the whole duration of the project. The PDRA,
supported by the PI and the external collaborator, Prof. Armando Carlone, will dedicate 100% of
his/her time to carry out all the experimental work required for the success of the 18-month
research project, from catalyst synthesis and testing to the NMR studies. The total cost of
the PDRA is £XXk.
TOTAL COST: £XXk
Staff - directly allocated posts
The PI will dedicate 15% of his time for the whole 18-month duration of the project, which is going
to be split into 10% (0.5 day per week) for research supervision and 5% (overall 1 day per
month) for impact and networking activities, for a cost of £XXk.
TOTAL COST: £XXk
Travel and subsistence
The project will involve travel activities that will enable exchange of scientific knowledge,
dissemination of the work as well as increasing its impact.
Funding is requested for attending the following conferences:
(i) The PI to attend the European Magnetic Resonance Meeting (EMAR), which will be held in
Berlin (Germany) in August 2019 (approximately, registration fee £600, accommodation £600,
flight £200, extra £100, total £1.5k);
(ii) The PI to attend the UK Catalysis Conference (UKCC) in January 2020, which will be held
within the UK (approximately, registration fee £400, accommodation £200, transport £100, extra
£50, total of £0.75k);
(iii) The PDRA to attend the UK ChemEngDay (UKCED) in March 2020, which will be held within
the UK (approximately, registration fee £400, accommodation £200, transport £100, extra £50,
total of £0.75k);
(iv) The PDRA to attend the International Congress on Catalysis (ICC), which will be held in San
Diego (USA) from the 14th to the 19th of June 2020 (approximately, registration fee £700,
accommodation £800, flight £800, extra £200, total of £2.5k).
Funding for the following project trips is also requested:
(i) The external collaborator, Prof. Armando Carlone, to visit the University of Manchester in April
2019 and June 2020 to supervise and carry out work on initial and final project activities,
respectively, with a two-week period for each visit (approximately, flight £2×200, accommodation
£2×1400, extra £2×400, total of £4k );
(ii) The PDRA to visit Prof. Armando Carlone at the Università degli Studi dell'Aquila in Italy in July
2019 for a period between two to four weeks to carry out part of the project activities
(approximately, flight £200, accommodation £1400, extra £400, total of £2k);
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 2EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 2Justification for ResourcesJustification of Resources
EPSRC New Investigator Award – Carmine D’Agostino Justification of Resources
(iii) The PI and PDRA to visit the Johnson Matthey Technology centre in Sonning Common,
Reading, UK, during October/November 2019 for a couple of days for project management and
review activities (approximately, transport £2×100, accommodation £2×100, extra £2×50, total of
£0.5k) and the PDRA to visit again in March 2010 for a week to carry out experimental work,
including catalyst characterisation activities (approximately, transport £100, accommodation £500,
extra £100, total of £0.7k).
TOTAL COST: £12.7k
Other directly incurred costs
A consumables budget is requested for:
(i) General lab consumables and chemicals, including reagents, solid supports, catalysts and
catalyst precursors, fittings and parts for reaction set-up, estimated to £12k,
(ii) Access and use of SEM, TEM and XPS characterisation, estimated to £8.7k;
(iii) Organisation of the workshop at the University of Manchester which includes £0.6k
refreshments, £0.6k for flight and accommodation of external collaborator from Italy, £0.5k for JM
partner from the UK, £3×0.6 k to cover travel and accommodation of external speakers from
UK/EU, extra £0.5, for a total cost of £4k.
TOTAL COST: £24.7k
Other directly allocated costs
The project requires 2 out of 18 months dedicated to NMR measurements, 12% of the total time,
and an NMR technician is requested for specialised support, including cryogenic refills and
maintenance of the two spectrometers (one for the solid-state NMR characterisation of the catalyst
and another for the in-situ NMR studies of the reactive systems). The total cost of the technician is
£XXk. Estates-laboratory and other indirect costs for a total of £XXk.
TOTAL COST: £XXk
TOTAL COST OF THE PROJECT: £232.3k (RC contribution is 80%, equal to £185.8k)
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 2 of 2EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 2 of 2Justification for ResourcesJustification of Resources
M1 M2 M3 M4 M5 M6 M7 M8 M9 M10 M11 M12 M13 M14 M15 M16 M17 M18
WP1. Catalyst synthesis/characterisation
▪ Literature review on organocatalyst preparation and immobilisation
proceduresPDRA
/PI
▪ DLV1.1. Preparation/characterisation of the organocatalyst in the
soluble form (NMR and mass spectrometry)▪ DLV1.2. Immobilisation/characterisation of organocatalyst on supports
(SS NMR, IR, Raman, XPS, N2 ads, SEM/TEM, XRD)PDRA/PI
WP2. Batch and in-situ1H/
13C NMR reaction studies
▪ Literature review on heterogenised organocatalysis and in-situ NMR
spectroscopy in catalysisPDRA/PI
▪ DLV2.1. Batch and 1H/
13C in-situ NMR homogeneous catalytic tests of
soluble organocatalyst before immobilisation
▪ DLV 2.2. Batch and 1H/
13C in-situ NMR catalytic tests of different
heterogenised catalyst formulations▪ DLV2.3. Assessment and characterisation of deactivation pattern for
different immobilised organocatalyst formulationsPDRA/PI
WP3. NMR diffusion and relaxation studies
▪ Literature review on NMR relaxation and diffusion in porous materials
and functionalised surfacesPDRA/PI
▪ DLV3.1. T 1/T 2 NMR relaxation measurements of reactants, products
and solvents in pure supports and different catalyst formulationsPDRA/PI
▪ DLV3.2. PFG NMR measurements: Effect of pore size and type of
linker on molecular diffusion and accessibility to the pore spacePDRA/PI
▪ DLV3.3. Quantification of diffusion limitations by combining kinetics
and diffusion dataPDRA/PI
▪ DLV3.4. T 1/T 2 and PFG NMR relaxation measurements in collected
reused and recycled catalyst samplesPDRA/PI
Project management activitiesVisits▪ Visits of external collaborator to the University of Manchester, UK AC AC
▪ Visits to the Università degli Studi dell'Aquila, Italy PDRA
▪ Visits to Johnson Matthey (JM) Technology Centre, UK PI/PDRA PDRA
Journal submissions (JS) JS1 JS2 JS3
Conferences PI PI PDRA PDRA
IChemE workshop (WS) WS
MS1.1 : Successful synthesis of organocatalysts for tests in WP2
Review: Review meeting with JM/external collaborator
Work Packages (WP)Months (Starting date 1
st March 2019)
PI: Principal Investigator PDRA: Post Doc Research Associate AC: External collaborator, Prof. Armando Carlone
PDRA/PI
/AC
PDRA/PI
/AC
PDRA/PI
/AC
MS1.2 : Successful synthesis of immobilised organocatalysts for tests in WP2
DLV : Deliverable MS : Milestone
MS3.1 : Link adsorption/transport/activity determined - NMR methods validation MS3.2 : Surface/structure evolution in recycled catalysts determined
Journal submissions (JS): JS1 to ACS Catalysis JS2 to Microporous and Mesoporous Materials JS3 to Angewandte Chemie International Edition
Conferences: EMAR: European meeting on NMR UKCC: UK Catalysis Conference UKCED: UK ChemEngDay ICC: International Congress on Catalysis
MS2.1 : Relationship between catalyst structure, reactivity and stability determined MS2.2 : Catalyst deactivation/reusability pattern determined
Report: PDRA project report WS: IChemE workshop
MS1.1
MS1.2
MS2.1
MS2.2
MS3.1
MS3.2
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 1WorkplanWorkplan
Organisation where the Grant would be held
Project Title [up to 150 chars]
Start Date and Duration
Applicants
Objectives
List the main objectives of the proposed research in order of priority [up to 4000 chars]
EPSRC
Polaris House, North Star Avenue, Swindon, Wiltshire,
United Kingdom SN2 1ET
Telephone +44 (0) 1793 444000
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may be held on computerised database and/or manual files. Further details may be found in the guidance notes
New Investigator AwardPROPOSAL
Document Status: With Council EPSRC Reference:
New Investigator Award
Organisation The University of ManchesterResearch Organisation
Reference:NMR-MESOHOS
Division or DepartmentChem Eng and Analytical
Science
In-situ NMR-based methodology for screening and optimisation of heterogenised organocatalytic systems
a. Proposed start
date01 March 2019
b. Duration of the grant
(months)18
Role Name Organisation Division or Department How many hours a
week will the
investigator work
on the project?
Principal Investigator Dr Carmine D'AgostinoThe University of
Manchester
Chem Eng and Analytical
Science5.64
Heterogenised organocatalysis represents a viable technology for the production of many fine chemicals and
pharmaceuticals, which could be used as an alternative route to more established processes exploiting homogeneous-
phase catalysis. The advantages of this technology are in: (i) easier catalyst handling, separation and work-up; (ii) easier
catalyst recovery and reusability; (iii) possibility to run continuous processes in packed bed reactors, hence more process
flexibility. This would improve significantly process sustainability by reducing energy consumption and waste of material.
Despite such benefits, this technology has remained under-exploited due to a series of challenges that are related to the
poor understanding of the hetero-homogeneous behaviour of these materials. In particular, the role of mass transport and
adsorption, which become crucial factors once the homogeneous organocatalytic function is being immobilised over high
surface area nanoporous solid supports, onto the catalyst performance remains unclear and unexplored and this is due to
the lack of ability so far to comprehensively investigate and accurately quantify such phenomena occurring at a pore scale
level.
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Summary
Describe the proposed research in simple terms in a way that could be publicised to a general audience [up to 4000 chars].
Note that this summary will be automatically published on EPSRC’s website in the event that a grant is awarded.
Academic Beneficiaries
Describe who will benefit from the research [up to 4000 chars].
The objective of this project is to develop and validate the use of an in-situ NMR methodology as a new toolkit able to
monitor kinetics, diffusion and adsorption in heterogenised organocatalytic systems. This will provide new quantitative data
and exclusive insights into the physico-chemical behaviour of these reactive systems, which will enable to evaluate the
controlling interactions and mass transport phenomena of the various reactant/solvent/product species within the pores of
the heterogenised catalytic system, hence aid selection of optimal reaction parameters such as choice of suitable solvents,
solid supports, pore size and type of linker to immobilise the organocatalyst onto the support.
The validation of these methods for heterogenised catalytic systems will also lead to new applications of NMR techniques
that go beyond purely homogeneous or heterogeneous systems, enabling to gain new fundamental insights on aspects of
crucial importance for improving the design of efficient heterogenised catalysts, hence improve sustainability in the
manufacturing of fine chemicals, as well as in the more general area of functionalised solid materials.
The goal of this proposal is to develop and validate an in-situ Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)-based screening and
optimisation methodology for heterogenised organocatalytic systems, able to monitor and evaluate catalyst activity,
transport and surface interactions at a pore-scale level in such functionalised materials. Batch reaction studies combined
with in-situ 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy, diffusion and relaxation techniques will give new and exclusive insights into
these systems by providing quantitative data on intra-pore kinetics, diffusion and adsorption, which will be able to direct
catalyst formulation and reaction design by evaluating the controlling interactions and mass transport phenomena of the
various reactant/solvent/product species within the pores of the heterogenised catalytic system, hence aid selection of
optimal reaction parameters such as choice of suitable solvents, solid supports, pore size and type of linker to immobilise
the organocatalyst on support. The validation of this methodology in heterogenised organocatalysis will be a significant
step forward towards effective screening and development of these materials, which can be expanded to other related
technologies using functionalised porous materials.
The outcome of this project will contribute to maintain and further enhance the UK leading position in the field of catalysis.
Indeed, the validation of new methodologies to screen and optimise the design of poorly understood systems such as
heterogenised catalysts is crucial to boost this challenging but much sought-after technology that, if implemented on a
larger scale, could potentially improve significantly chemical manufacturing by reducing energy consumption and waste,
hence improve the sustainability of processes. Sitting across homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis, this discipline will
be of interest to researchers working in both these areas and will actually contribute to bridge the gap between them. The
interaction with Prof Chris Hardacre, with his large research group, and the large pool of academics in the School working
in the area of catalysis and porous materials, will certainly be an outstanding platform for mutual exchange of knowledge
and generation of new ideas in this area of catalysis, which, together with the major involvement of the School in the UK
Catalysis Hub, will contribute to ensure that the benefits of this proposal will be delivered to a broad audience both
nationally and internationally. The networking with other leading catalyst scientists, including Prof. Graham Hutchings, who
has a long-standing collaboration with the PI, will also further enhance the spread of the new knowledge generated in this
project. The final outcome will also be relevant in the biotechnology area, whereby enzyme immobilisation over solids for
bio-catalysis applications is a very active area of research, which will benefit from the methodology validation proposed in
this project.
This project will look at development and validation of new spectroscopic protocols for in-situ catalyst screening and
characterisation under working conditions, hence it will also appeal those working in reaction engineering and
spectroscopy. The interaction with the group of Prof. Gareth Morris, a leading NMR scientist in the School of Chemistry, will
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Impact Summary
Impact Summary (please refer to the help for guidance on what to consider when completing this section) [up to 4000 chars]
allow the project to deliver benefits in terms of expanding and developing new NMR tools in the area of heterogenised
catalysis, hence advancing the exploitation of NMR techniques to study materials with a new approach. The participation to
the weekly NMR Seminars and the central role of Prof. Morris group in the UK NMR Discussion Group will be a great
opportunity to present new results and directions of the research project to the NMR community.
The project contains a strong organic chemistry component, hence it will be able to reach those working in organic
synthesis and fine chemicals and provide them with new tools to use and exploit in such disciplines, thus enabling
methodological advances in the area. The collaboration with Prof. Armando Carlone from the Università degli Studi
dell'Aquila in Italy, with extensive academic and industrial expertise in organic chemistry, will ensure that such benefits are
delivered to the organic/fine chemistry communities at an international level.
Besides active collaborations, a further way to make sure that the research, together with the data, materials and
developed protocols, reaches a broader audience, will be by dissemination of the work in peer-reviewed publications in
areas covered by the research project, attendance of important international conferences such as the EUROMAR and the
ICC, and important UK events in the area of chemical engineering and catalysis such as the ChemEngDay, the UKCC and
the UK NMR Discussion Group as well as the support and involvement of the Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE)
with the Catalysis Special Interest Group (SIG) for organising a workshop towards the end of the project.
The project will benefit stakeholders with impact in the following areas: (i) Industry and commercial sector; (ii) Outreach and
engagement of scientific community; (iii) Environmental policy and the wider society; (iv) Training and skill development.
(i) Industry and commercial sector
Heterogenised organocatalysts, if properly implemented on an industrial scale, will contribute to reduce current costs to
industry associated with the use of homogeneous catalysts, by reducing material and energy costs associated to expensive
separation procedures and catalyst loss/disposal. In addition heterogenised organocatalysts can be used in packed-bed
reactors for continuous operation, increasing productivity, allowing easier process control and decreasing maintenance
level. The industrial exploitation will be maximised by a close collaboration with Johnson Matthey (JM), a leading catalyst
and chemical company, which is fully supporting the proposal and will provide industrially relevant raw materials, technical
expertise and guidance for industrial exploitation. Using the strong links of the PI's School with important pharmaceutical
companies, such as AstroZeneca, GSK and Pfizer, with a high interest in fine chemicals, it will be possible to involve the
wider industrial community.
(ii) Outreach and engagement of scientific community
The project covers various scientific areas, which will benefit several communities from organic to physical chemistry, from
catalysis to spectroscopy; hence it represents a great opportunity for cross-disciplinary exchange of knowledge, which will
be enabled by attending various UK and international conferences; visits and seminars across the UK and internationally
through the network of external collaborator Prof Armando Carlone; organising a dedicated workshop supported by the
IChemE Catalysis Special Interest Group (SIG).
(iii) Environmental policy and the wider society
This project will have a positive impact on both environment and the wider society. Developments in the area of
heterogenised organocatalysts will be able to address many societal issues related to the chemical industry, such as
reduction of waste and energy consumption, efficient use of resources as well as a decrease in the environmental footprint
of chemical processes. The strong expertise of the PI's School in sustainability and corporate responsibility will provide an
ideal platform for enhancing such impact. The project will reach people beyond those directly involved in it, including
undergraduate students, through organisation of satellite research projects on sustainability and life cycle analysis of these
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Summary of Resources Required for Project
Other Support
Details of support sought or received from any other source for this or other research in the same field.
processes; the wider public will be reached using the links and social media of the University for public engagement. The
IChemE channels will be used to further promote project outcomes.
(iv) Training and skill development
The inter-disciplinary nature of the project will develop highly skilled scientists, who will gain a broad range of skills and
knowledge. The people involved on this project will deal with a variety of disciplines, including materials science, catalysis,
organic chemistry and spectroscopy, hence will acquire a broad set of skills as well as a multi-perspectives approach to
scientific problems. The interaction with leading academics from different areas, most notably catalysis, NMR and organic
synthesis, will contribute in developing important interface management and communication skills, which is paramount in
the current scientific and technological landscape, whereby projects are often highly multi-disciplinary. The collaboration
with JM will also benefit by providing the possibility to interact with the commercial sector, carry out research work in
industrial facilities as well as developing important skills required by the industry. Hence, the project will develop highly
skilled scientists with a broad range of knowledge, which will benefit the whole UK economy and R&D sector.
Financial resourcesSummary
fund headingFund heading
Full economic
Cost
EPSRC
contribution
% EPSRC
contributionDirectly
IncurredStaff 80
Travel &
Subsistence80
Other Costs 80Sub-total
Directly
AllocatedInvestigators 80
Estates Costs 80Other Directly
Allocated80
Sub-total
Indirect Costs Indirect Costs 80
Exceptions Other Costs 0.00 0.00 100Sub-total 0.00 0.00
Total 232285.27 185828.22
Summary of staff effort requestedMonths
Investigator 2.75Researcher 18Technician 0Other 0Visiting Researcher 0Student 0Total 20.75
Other support is not relevant to this application.
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Staff
Directly Incurred Posts
Applicants
EFFORT ON
PROJECT
Role Name /Post Identifier Start Date
Period
on
Project
(months)
% of Full
TimeScale
Increment
Date
Basic
Starting
Salary
London
Allowan
ce (£)
Super-
annuation
and NI (£)
Total cost on
grant (£)
Researcher PDRA 01/03/2019 18 100 N/A 01/08/2020 0Total
Role Name
Post will
outlast
project
(Y/N)
Contracted
working week as a
% of full time work
Total number of hours to be
charged to the grant over
the duration of the grant
Average number of
hours per week
charged to the
grant
Rate of
Salary
pool/banding
Cost estimate
Principal
InvestigatorDr Carmine D'Agostino Y 100 372 5.6
Total
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Travel and Subsistence
Other Directly Incurred Costs
Other Directly Allocated Costs
Research Facilities/Existing Equipment
Research Council Facilities
details of any proposed usage of national facilities
Human Participation
Animal Research
Destination and purpose Total £
Within UKtravel, accommodation and living expenses for two visits of 1-2 weeks
each4000
Outside UK One international conference each for PDRA and PI 4000Within UK One UK conferences each for PDRA and PI 1500Outside UK Visit of PDRA to external collaborator in Italy 2000Within UK Visits of PI and PDRA to company (UK) 1200
Total £ 12700
Description Total £General chemicals and consumables 12000Organisation of workshop 4000
Total £ 16000
Description Total £Pool staff costs 6606Infrastructure Technicians
Total £ 9258
Description Total £MCF-XPS - Near Ambient Pressure - 40 hours 6954MCF/EM-IN HOURS-SEM 2 - Sigma - 20 hours 616MCF/EM-IN HOURS-TEM 1-Talos F200X - 20 hours 1131
Total £ 8701
Research Council Facilities are not relevant to this application.
Would the project involve the use of human subjects? Yes No✔
If yes, would equal numbers of males and females be used? Yes No✔
Would the project involve the use of human tissue? Yes No✔
Would the project involve the use of biological samples? Yes No✔Would the project involve the administration of drugs, chemical agents or vaccines
to humans?Yes No✔
Will personal information be used? Yes No✔
If yes, will the information be anonymised and unlinked? Yes No✔
Or will it be anonymised and linked? Yes No✔
Will the research participants be identifiable? Yes No✔Please provide details of any areas of substantial or moderate severity:
Would the project involve the use of vertebrate animals or other organisms
covered by the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act?Yes No✔
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Animal Species
Please select any other species of animals that are to be used in the proposed research.
Genetic and Biological Risk
Approvals
If yes, what would be the maximum severity of the procedures?Mild or non-
recoveryModerate
Severe
Please provide details of any areas which are Moderate or Severe:
Does the proposed research involve the use of non-human primates? Yes ✔No
Does the proposed research involve the use of dogs? Yes ✔No
Does the proposed research involve the use of cats? Yes ✔No
Does the proposed research involve the use of equidae? Yes ✔No
Fish Sheep
Rabbit Rat
Amphibian Poultry
Cow Mouse
Reptile Guinea Pig
Pig Other Rodent
Bird Other Animal
Would the project involve the production and/or use of genetically modified animals? Yes ✔ No
If yes, will the genetic modification be used as an experimental tool, e.g., to study the function of
a gene in a genetically modified organism?Yes ✔ No
And will the research involve the release of genetically modified organisms? Yes ✔ No
And will the research be aimed at the ultimate development of commercial or industrial
genetically modified products or processes?Yes ✔ No
Would the project involve the production and/or use of genetically modified plants? Yes ✔ No
If yes, will the genetic modification be used as an experimental tool, e.g., to study the function of
a gene in a genetically modified organism?Yes ✔ No
And will the research involve the release of genetically modified organisms? Yes ✔ No
And will the research be aimed at the ultimate development of commercial or industrial
genetically modified products or processes?Yes ✔ No
Would the project involve the production and/or use of genetically modified microbes? Yes ✔ No
If yes, will the genetic modification be used as an experimental tool, e.g., to study the function of
a gene in a genetically modified organism?Yes ✔ No
And will the research involve the release of genetically modified organisms? Yes ✔ No
And will the research be aimed at the ultimate development of commercial or industrial
genetically modified products or processes?Yes ✔ No
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Other Issues
OTHER INFORMATION
Reviewers
Reviewers
Reviewers
Have the following necessary approvals been given by:The Regional Multicentre Research Ethics Committee
(MREC) or Local Research Ethics Committee (LREC)?Yes No
Not
required✔
The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority? Yes NoNot
required✔The Home Office (in relation to personal and project
licences, and certificates of designation)?Yes No
Not
required✔
The Gene Therapy Advisory Committee? Yes NoNot
required✔
The UK Xenotransplantation Interim Regulatory Authority? Yes NoNot
required✔Administration of Radioactive Substances Advisory
Committee (ARSAC)?Yes No
Not
required✔
Other bodies as appropriate? Please specify.
Are there any other issues of which the
Council should be aware?No
Provide details of what they are and how they would be addressed [up to 1000 characters]
1 Name Division or Department Email AddressOrganisation
2 Name Division or Department Email AddressOrganisation
3 Name Organisation Division or Department Email Address
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The University of Manchester School of Chemical Engineering and Analytical Science Oxford Road Manchester M13 9PL, UK
18th June 2018
Dear Sir/Madam,
My name is Carmine D’Agostino and I am a new Lecturer in the School of Chemical
Engineering and Analytical Science at the University of Manchester within the Catalysis and
Porous Materials research group, which I joined in February 2018. I have a background in
chemical engineering at the interface with chemical and materials science. My primary
research area is in catalysis and porous materials, with specific focus on key phenomena
that lie at the heart of catalysis, such as diffusion, adsorption and reactivity in porous
catalysts, by developing novel NMR protocols that exploit pulsed-field gradient (PFG) NMR
and NMR relaxation techniques, together with other spectroscopic tools. I have a rich
scientific track record with 54 peer-reviewed papers (h-index = 14, over 890 citations),
included invited contributions, awards of prizes, including a Young Scientist Award and a
Junior Research Fellowship (JRF) from Wolfson College, University of Cambridge, and
several other recognitions, including prizes for top quality and highly cited papers, as well as
a book chapter in the Handbook of Green Chemistry (Wiley-VCH), currently in production. I
have also experience in project management of research projects having previously
supervised several PhD projects to successful completion.
I would like to respectfully submit the following project proposal for the EPSRC New
Investigator Award scheme on:
In-situ NMR-based methodology for screening and optimisation of heterogenised
organocatalytic systems
Heterogenised organocatalytic systems, whereby a homogeneous organocatalyst is being
immobilised over a solid surface, hold a great potential to innovate manufacturing in the
chemical industry as they can potentially combine the benefits of both homogeneous
catalysis, such as high activity and selectivity, with those of heterogeneous catalysis, such as
ease of catalyst separation, recycle and possibility to operate in fixed-bed reactors and
simplify process operations. However, implementation of such processes on a larger scale
has so far been hindered by a series of challenges related to these materials, such as lower
activity and selectivity compared to their homogeneous counterpart as well as catalyst
stability and other issues related to heterogenisation, such as introduction of mass transport
and adsorption related issues once the homogeneous catalyst is immobilised over a solid
surface.
The first step in order to address these challenges is in a critical evaluation of the key
physico-chemical phenomena related to these materials and their influence of their
performances. In this context, research progress in this area has been scarce and most of
the studies have focused on characterisation of the bare catalytic materials and reaction
tests by analysis of bulk fluids surrounding the solid catalysts. A large part of the picture is
missing, which is related to how these systems behave during reaction inside the pore
space, hence the interplay between kinetics, diffusion and adsorption inside the porous
matrix.
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 2EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 1 of 2Proposal Cover Letter
Cover letter
In this proposal, this challenge will be addressed by developing and validating an in-situ 1H/13C NMR-based methodology able to monitor these reactive systems inside the pore
space during reaction with a very comprehensive approach. NMR spectroscopy will be used
to monitor reaction kinetics as well as product distribution while these are being formed
inside the pore of the catalyst. Pulsed-field gradient (PFG) NMR will be used to quantify
diffusion of reactants and products and will allow evaluating the influence of mass transport
on the reaction and how this is affected by different catalyst formulations. NMR relaxation will
be used to quantify the controlling surface interactions inside these materials and hence
assess the effect of catalyst formulation of important aspects such as solvent and product
inhibition. By relating these measurements with catalyst performance it will be possible to
validate the use of this NMR toolkit as a new methodology to screen, develop and optimise
such systems, which will find application on process optimisation both in academia and
industry.
The idea of this proposal is original, novel and addresses important scientific questions of
academic and industrial relevance. I believe that I have the right background and a proven
rich track record that will allow me to successfully deliver on this project, hence I am asking
for the support of the EPSRC for funding my research proposal.
Yours sincerely,
Dr Carmine D’Agostino
EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 2 of 2EPSRC Reference: EP/S019138/1 Page 2 of 2Proposal Cover Letter
Cover letter