Ir para o conteúdo principal

Infelizmente, não oferecemos suporte total ao seu navegador. Se for possível, atualize para uma versão mais recente ou use o Mozilla Firefox, o Microsoft Edge, o Google Chrome ou o Safari 14 ou mais recente. Se não conseguir e precisar de suporte, envie seu feedback.

Gostaríamos de receber seu feedback sobre essa nova experiência.Diga-nos sua opinião abre em uma nova guia/janela

Elsevier
Publique conosco

Profile

Nicolas Brun

NB

Nicolas Brun

Charles Gerhardt Institute Montpellier, France

Nicolas Brun received his PhD in chemistry from the University of Bordeaux (France) in 2010. Then, he spent two years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces (Germany). In 2013, he was awarded a one-year postdoctoral fellowship at Kyoto University by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. Since 2014, he has been a CNRS researcher at the Institute Charles Gerhardt Montpellier (France). His research focuses on the eco-design, shaping and textural control of porous and hybrid materials using soft matter, sol-gel chemistry and/or solvothermal carbonization. In particular, he studies the use of unconventional solvents (e.g.,ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents) for the solvothermal carbonization of molecules from biological feedstocks and raw lignocellulosic agro-wastes. Besides the design of materials, Nicolas is also interested in the evaluation of their properties, whether in heterogeneous catalysis, electrochemistry or adsorption. He has acquired a solid expertise in the field of supported enzyme catalysis, with the bioconversion of carbon dioxide being a focus of his research activities. Beyond that, he is interested in bioinspired and biomimetic approaches and believes in low-tech chemistry at the service of a more sustainable society.

Since 2007, Nicolas Brun has been the co-author of more than 70 peer-reviewed scientific articles leading to c.a. 5000 citations, 6 book chapters and 8 patents. In 2017, he co-edited a book entitled “Functional electrodes for enzymatic and microbial electrochemical systems”.

Picture: © Audrey Viste 2021