NSF requires disclosure of AI tool usage in proposal preparation. Ensure you disclose the use of FindGrants' AI drafting in your application.
NSF
With the support of the Chemical Catalysis Program in the Division of Chemistry, Professor Elizabeth Papish of the University of Alabama is studying the development of nickel catalysts for the conversion of carbon dioxide to fuel precursors and organic building blocks for pharmaceutical products. Carbon dioxide is readily available from fossil fuel combustion, but it is challenging to use in chemical reactions. New nickel complexes have been discovered with record-setting, long-lived excited states, which serve to capture solar energy and enable new catalytic transformations with carbon dioxide. Current work ongoing in the Papish group includes 1) systematically modifying new nickel and cobalt catalysts to improve their activity for reactions with carbon dioxide, 2) studying the reactivity of these molecules using spectroscopy, crystallography and other methods to understand and visualize how the molecules interact to lead to a lower energy pathway, and 3) testing new types of reactivity to insert carbon dioxide into organic molecules and thereby form valuable products which can lead to fuels, pharmaceutical products, and other high value chemicals. This project is being used to train graduate and undergraduate students at the University of Alabama. There is an urgent need to develop better catalysts to use abundant carbon dioxide sources for commodity chemical synthesis. Specifically, Prof. Papish and her research team are determining how ligand structure-function relationships of nickel metal-organic complexes influence the lifetime of their excited state to improve their reactivity. Mechanistic studies are further being used to elucidate how the lifetime of the nickel catalyst excited state influences reactivity between carbon dioxide and organic substrates. These results of these activities are then being used to guide the design of new organometallic photochemical catalysts for carbon dioxide reduction and organophotoredox chemistry. The results of this work are being publicized by presentations at conferences and are reported in scientific journal articles. Prof. Papish and her group also use catalysis research to provide lessons in science ethics to undergraduate and graduate students. This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
Up to $600K
2028-06-30
Detailed requirements not yet analyzed
Have the NOFO? Paste it below for AI-powered requirement analysis.
One-time $749 fee · Includes AI drafting + templates + PDF export
Center: The Micro Nano Technology Education Center (MNT-EC)
NSF — up to $7.5M
MIP: Biomaterials, Polymers, and Advanced Constructs from Integrated Chemistry Materials Innovation Platform (BioPACIFIC MIP)
NSF — up to $5.8M
A Shallow Drilling Campaign to Assess the Pleistocene Hydrogeology, Geomicrobiology, Nutrient Fluxes, and Fresh Water Resources of the Atlantic Continental Shelf, New England
NSF — up to $5.0M
STEM STARs: A Partnership to Build Persistence to Math-Intensive Degrees in Low-Income Students
NSF — up to $5.0M
Collaborative Research: Overturning in the Subpolar North Atlantic Program
NSF — up to $4.9M
Collaborative Research: Frameworks: TURBO: Towards Ultra-high Resolution Community Earth System Model (CESM) with MOM6 and Ocean Biogeochemistry
NSF — up to $4.5M