Regina Palkovits (born 1980) is a German chemist who is a Professor of Chemistry at the RWTH Aachen University. Her research considers heterogenous catalysis. She was elected a Fellow of the North Rhine-Westphalian Academy of Sciences, Humanities and the Arts in 2020. In 2023 she was appointed as Director at the Institute for a Sustainable Hydrogen Economy (INW) at Forschungszentrum Jülich.[1]
In 2008, Palkovits returned to the Max Planck Institute as a group leader. She spent two years in Mülheim before joining RWTH Aachen University as a Professor of Chemistry.[4][5] Palkovits has continued to investigate heterogeneous catalysis, looking at how to transform renewable resources into high value products. Palkovits has investigated how biomass, carbon dioxide and plastic waste can be converted into monomers for polymer synthesis and the production of carbon dioxide neutral fuels.[6]
The focus of her research is on catalyst technologies. In the chemical storage of hydrogen, hydrogen molecules form a bond with other molecules during catalysis, which in turn creates a compound that makes it easier to store, store and transport hydrogen.
Since October 2023, she has also headed the Institute for Sustainable Hydrogen Economy at Forschungszentrum Jülich. This institute is part of the Helmholtz Hydrogen Cluster (HC-H2), which deals with the development and demonstration of novel hydrogen technologies on an industrial scale and aims to further develop the Rhenish mining area into a hydrogen model region.
The catalaix project, which she manages together with Jürgen Klankermayer and deals with the recycling of plastic waste, won the €106 million "Project of the Century" ideas competition organized by the Swiss Werner Siemens Foundation in 2023.[7]
Academic service
Palkovits leads the Sustainable Chemistry Division of the German Chemical Society.[8] She was a founding member of AcademiaNet, a network established to address the underrepresentation of women in senior positions in science.[6] In 2011, Palkovits' commitment to increasing diversity in science was recognised when she was selected as one of Germany's 100 Women of Tomorrow.[9]
Regina Palkovits; Katharina Maria Ebeling; Dominik Bongartz; Sonja Dorothea Mürtz; Alexander Mitsos (26 April 2024), "Thermodynamic and Economic Potential of Glycerol Oxidation to Replace Oxygen Evolution in Water Electrolysis", Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, vol. 63, no. 18, pp. 8250–8260, doi:10.1021/acs.iecr.3c03615{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Regina Palkovits; Sonja Dorothea Mürtz; Marcus S. Lehnertz; Justus Kümper; Eike Häger; Alexandra Markus; Tabea Becker; Sonja Herres-Pawlis (21 February 2024), "Electrochemical depolymerisation of polylactic acid", Green chemistry, vol. 26, no. 11, pp. 6423–6428, doi:10.1039/D3GC04234K{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Regina Palkovits; Jha Shwetambara; Priya Jain; Popinand Ingole Pravin (11 September 2023), "Tuning of cationic distribution in "partially inversed" cobalt ferrite spinel nanocubes via a nitrogen-doped graphene oxide support for enhanced bifunctional oxygen electrocatalysis", Journal of Materials Chemistry A, vol. 11, no. 42, pp. 23034–23047, doi:10.1039/D3TA03486K{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)