Borealis awards innovative polymer prizes to Austrian and Italian scholars
For his doctoral degree on norbornene-based polyolefins by postmetallocene catalysts, Italian student Dr. Andrea Ravasio will receive 5,000 euros, while a masters degree thesis on scavengers and chemical bonding for defined volatile components in polyolefins yields Austrian student Andreas Fuchs 3,000 euros.
“The Borealis Student Innovation Award recognises the two most innovative research papers at masters and doctorate level on polyolefins, olefins or melamine sciences,” says Dr. Christian Paulik, Manager for External Research and Funding at Borealis. “Our aim is to engage young people in our vision of Shaping the Future with Plastics. These two important research projects symbolize exactly the spirit that we are trying to capture.”
Ravasio's doctoral dissertation was carried out at the University of Pavia, under Professor Maurizio Licchelli and Incoronata Tritto.
“What singled out Andrea was his comprehensive knowledge of catalysis for olefin and cyclo-olefin copolymerization,” says Christian Paulik in explaining the decision to give the doctorate award to Dr. Ravasio.
Andreas Fuchs studied for his Masters degree at the Johannes Kepler University, Linz, under the tutelage of Professor Oliver Brüggemann, who describes him as “one of the best co-workers I have worked with in my career”.
Fuchs' thesis shows new ways to reduce emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from polyolefins. “This work is set in the real world,” says Christian Paulik. “Andreas's findings might well help in the development of future polymers.”
Other news from the department science
These products might interest you
Spinsolve Benchtop NMR by Magritek
Spinsolve Benchtop NMR
Spinsolve is a revolutionary multinuclear NMR spectrometer that provides the best performance
Eclipse by Wyatt Technology
FFF-MALS system for separation and characterization of macromolecules and nanoparticles
The latest and most innovative FFF system designed for highest usability, robustness and data quality
HYPERION II by Bruker
FT-IR and IR laser imaging (QCL) microscope for research and development
Analyze macroscopic samples with microscopic resolution (5 µm) in seconds
Get the chemical industry in your inbox
From now on, don't miss a thing: Our newsletter for the chemical industry, analytics, lab technology and process engineering brings you up to date every Tuesday and Thursday. The latest industry news, product highlights and innovations - compact and easy to understand in your inbox. Researched by us so you don't have to.