CRC 1615: SMART Reactors

Reactors for Future Process Engineering

Welcome to the DFG Collaborative Research Center CRC 1615 SMART Reactors

We are facing the societal challenges of transforming economic and production chains from fossil raw materials to sustainable and renewable raw materials. However, these can fluctuate seasonally and geologically in their availability and quality. Society therefore urgently needs processes and reactors that can respond flexibly to fluctuating raw material properties. To enable such adaptation, a very high level of process control is required: pressures, temperatures, concentrations and dispersed phases must be monitored continuously and in situ in the reactors using suitable sensors.

As part of the Collaborative Research Center, we aim to address this issue and enable SMART reactors through basic research. In the future, the SMART reactors will convert sustainable renewable resources into different products (multi-purpose) in a more sustainable way and operate autonomously (self-adapting), which will lead to more resilient processes that are more transferable between scales and locations.

To achieve our vision, interdisciplinary collaboration between process engineering, materials science and electrical engineering with physicists, chemists, mathematicians and data scientists from Hamburg University of Technology and five research institutions enables the focusing of expertise and unique experimental facilities.

Within the framework of this website, we would like to give you an insight into the individual subprojects, publications related to the CRC, upcoming events and career opportunities within the Collaborative Research Center.

07.12.2023

Prof. Michael Schlüter introduces the CRC "SMART Reactors" to high school students

The spokesperson of the CRC speaks at the Match Day Clean Tech of Hamburg´s Initiative Naturwissenschaft & Technik.

Imagine being part of a research project that could make a difference in the world. That’s what Prof. Michael Schlüter offered to high school students who participated online in the Match Day Clean Tech of Hamburg´s Initiative Naturwissenschaft & Technik (NAT). He introduced them to the collaborative research center "SMART Reactors" and explained how students could get involved in research as part of their degree programme at the TU Hamburg.

A summary of the Match Day Clean Tech as well as as video of the presentation of Prof. Schlüter are online (both in German).

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