麻豆视频

Milner wins Scialog award to advance methane mitigation

, assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频, is on a project team that won a grant for their research related to methane capture.

Research Corporation for Science Advancement (RCSA), the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and ClimateWorks Foundation made awards to seven cross-disciplinary teams of early career scientists in the .

The initiative aims to catalyze advances in basic science that will enable technologies for removal of C02 and other greenhouse gases to become more efficient, affordable and scalable. Individual awards of $50,000 each will go to 19 researchers from institutions in the U.S. and Canada.

Working with two other researchers, Milner will tackle a project on 鈥淓lectro-swing Modulation of Lipophilic Environments for Direct Air Capture of Methane,鈥 funded by RCSA.

鈥淢ethane is the second-most abundant greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide. However, methods for mitigating its emission from point sources such as landfills and removing it from air are essentially non-existent,鈥 Milner said. 鈥淥ur project aims to use renewable electricity to achieve low-cost capture of methane from various streams. We will use electricity to switch on and off the methane-affinity of materials.鈥

Milner鈥檚 project teammates are Yuanyue Liu, mechanical engineering at the University of Texas at Austin, and Marcel Schreier, chemical and biological engineering, University of Wisconsin鈥揗adison.

RCSA created the Scialog (鈥渟cience + dialog鈥) format in 2010 to stimulate interdisciplinary conversation and community building around a scientific theme of global importance. Meetings on the theme Negative Emissions Science began in 2020.

鈥淕lobal acceptance of climate change and strong efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions may not be enough to prevent further warming of the planet,鈥 said RCSA president and CEO Daniel Linzer. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to need fundamental new science that leads to much more efficient technologies to remove C02 from Earth鈥檚 atmosphere and oceans to help bring things back into balance.鈥

Created in 2010 by RCSA, the Scialog format supports research by stimulating intensive interdisciplinary conversation and community building around a scientific theme of global importance. Negative Emissions Science held its first meeting in 2020.

The 2022 meeting, held in Tucson, Arizona in November, engaged participants in a series of conversations to discuss challenges and gaps in current knowledge, build deeper ties and promote the sharing of knowledge and expertise, and form teams to write proposals for high-risk, high-reward projects based on the innovative ideas that emerged at the conference.

A fourth meeting of the Negative Emissions Science initiative is scheduled for November 15-18, 2023.

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Smoke rising from a landfill
Collab Media/Unsplash Milner's project aims to use renewable electricity to achieve low-cost capture of methane from various streams, including landfills.