7 results match your criteria: "University of Oxford Department of Chemistry[Affiliation]"

From Polymers to Rings and Back Again: Chemical Recycling of Polyesters to Macrolactones.

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl

March 2025

University of Oxford, Chemistry, 12 Mansfield Road, OX1 3TA, Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND.

Cyclic anhydride and epoxide ring-opening copolymerization is a versatile and controlled route to make polyesters, gaining attention in different application sectors but so far the chemical recycling of these polyesters to cyclic monomers is under-explored. Here, the catalytic chemical recycling of aliphatic polyesters to selectively form 16- and 18-membered lactones is presented. The recycling reactions are catalysed using commercial tin octoate and conducted in the polymer melt (230 °C) resulting in high conversions to the macro-lactones (>90%).

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The Sustainable Potential of Single-ion Conducting Polymers.

ChemSusChem

March 2025

University of Oxford Department of Chemistry, Chemistry, Chemistry Research Lab, 12 Mansfield Road, OX1 3TA, Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND.

Energy storage technologies are critical for sustainable development, with electrolyte materials playing a decisive role in performance and safety. Single-ion conducting polymers (SICPs) represent a distinct materials class characterized by selective ion transport through immobilized ionic groups. While their potential for battery applications is recognized, an analysis of their sustainability implications and pathways to practical implementation has been lacking.

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Recent advances and perspectives on intercalation layered compounds part 1: design and applications in the field of energy.

Dalton Trans

September 2024

Institut de Chimie de Clermont-Ferrand, Université Clermont Auvergne, UMR CNRS 6296, Clermont Auvergne INP, 24 av Blaise Pascal, BP 80026, 63171 Aubière cedex, France.

Herein, initially, we present a general overview of the global financial support for chemistry devoted to materials science, specifically intercalation layered compounds (ILCs). Subsequently, the strategies to synthesise these host structures and the corresponding guest-host hybrid assemblies are exemplified on the basis of some families of materials, including pillared clays (PILCs), porous clay heterostructures (PCHs), zirconium phosphate (ZrP), layered double hydroxides (LDHs), graphite intercalation compounds (GICs), graphene-based materials, and MXenes. Additionally, a non-exhaustive survey on their possible application in the field of energy through electrochemical storage, mostly as electrode materials but also as electrolyte additives, is presented, including lithium technologies based on lithium ion batteries (LIBs), and beyond LiBs with a focus on possible alternatives such XIBs (X = Na (NIB), K (KIB), Al (AIB), Zn (ZIB), and Cl (CIB)), reversible Mg batteries (RMBs), dual-ion batteries (DIBs), Zn-air and Zn-sulphur batteries and supercapacitors as well as their relevance in other fields related to (opto)electronics.

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Recent advances and perspectives for intercalation layered compounds. Part 2: applications in the field of catalysis, environment and health.

Dalton Trans

September 2024

Institut de Chimie de Clermont-Ferrand, Université Clermont Auvergne, UMR CNRS 6296, Clermont Auvergne INP, 24 av Blaise Pascal, BP 80026, 63171 Aubière cedex, France.

Intercalation compounds represent a unique class of materials that can be anisotropic (1D and 2D-based topology) or isotropic (3D) through their guest/host superlattice repetitive organisation. Intercalation refers to the reversible introduction of guest species with variable natures into a crystalline host lattice. Different host lattice structures have been used for the preparation of intercalation compounds, and many examples are produced by exploiting the flexibility and the ability of 2D-based hosts to accommodate different guest species, ranging from ions to complex molecules.

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