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4.38 Åbo Akademi University, Inorganic Chemistry
Overview
The Laboratory of Inorganic Chemistry in the Department
of Chemical Engineering
is one of the four units that constitute the Process Chemistry Centre of ÅA, a Centre
of Excellence of the Academy of Finland in 2000–2005 and 2006–2011 (in the second
period within the framework of “Sustainable Chemistry in Production of Pulp and
Paper,
Fuels and Energy, and Functional Materials”).
In the evaluation period, the unit had an average staff of one professor, about four
senior researchers and
eight postdoctoral researchers, as well as 17 PhD students. The
unit is supported by three administrative staff members and seven technicians.
Of the annual budget, less than 15 per cent comes from core funding. The
majority of the external funding comes from Tekes, followed very closely by
industrial funding. The Academy of Finland and the
graduate school programme
account for some 15 per cent of the total budget of the unit.
Research
Inorganic chemistry includes two main activities: combustion and materials
chemistry. Finland is well known in the design of large-scale biomass combustion
units and has some of the leading companies in the field. The classical combustion
reactors are fluidised beds. Beside the
quite complex fluid mechanics, chemical
kinetics is also quite complex, especially due to the mineral compounds included in
the different biomaterials to be burned: salts and oxides produced
may form a eutectic
liquid under the prevalent temperature, which may induce severe fouling and
corrosion. This team aims at including relatively detailed chemical kinetics in the
CFD codes used to model industrial furnaces. Another
part of the work concerns
biocompatible materials, especially the chemistry and engineering of special kinds of
glass useful in the regrowth of bone tissue.
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