Catalysis course draws industry's best

08 April 2011 | Story by Newsroom

The Department of Science and Technology's (DST) National Hydrogen Catalysis Competence Centre at UCT, aka HySA/Catalysis, has hosted its first short course.

Prof Claude Lamy Launch of the HySA/Catalysis's first short course
Pointing ahead: Prof Claude Lamy of the University of Poitiers, France, was one of the presenters at the course. Moral support: Helping launch HySA/Catalysis's first short course were (from left) Prof Frano Barbir of the University of Split, Croatia; Dr Siyabonga Mange of the DST; Prof Francis Petersen, dean of the Faculty of Engineering & the Built Environment at UCT; Prof Jack Fletcher, head of UCT's Department of Chemical Engineering; and Dr Olaf Conrad, new director of HySA/Catalysis.

Titled PEM Fuel Cell Catalyst and MEA preparation and characterization, the course featured a host of international speakers and set the tone for things to come, promised the centre's new director, Dr Olaf Conrad.

"We have great scientists here and state-of-the-art laboratories," he said. "This course will encourage the transfer of cutting-edge knowledge."

HySA/Catalysis, which is co-managed by Mintek, South Africa's national mineral research organisation, is one of three competence centres that sprang from the DST's National Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Flagship Project, better known as Hydrogen South Africa or HySA.

HySA's aim is to create knowledge and human-resource capacity that would develop high-value commercial activities in hydrogen and fuel-cell technologies using local resources and existing know-how.

"South Africa has more than 75% of the world's platinum group metal reserves," said Conrad. "HySA's objective to achieve a 25% share of the global hydrogen and fuel cell catalysts market is ambitious, but doable."

Dr Siyabonga Mange, deputy director of HySA, highlighted further goals and market spin-offs. "Our strategy is to address the global energy challenge, increase sustainability, security of supply and competitiveness, and curb unemployment."

HySA/Catalysis received its first project funding in 2009, and kicked off work at UCT, Mintek and affiliated institutions. The centre already has 18 projects underway, of which 12 are based at UCT.

"And this is but the start," added Conrad.


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