Electrifying society
Chemical engineering research at Aalto University works to solve bottlenecks in electrification
The EU and Finland aim to sharply increase the production of emission-free electricity and to electrify everything that can be electrified: most transport, industry, and heating. Indeed, electrification is seen as one of the most important ways to mitigate climate change.
Electrification alone is no miracle cure for climate change. Availability of the required metals will soon become an obstacle without more versatile and innovative ways to use materials and to produce energy. More mines will certainly be needed. However, the need can be reduced through circular economy, by saving energy, and by setting priorities for the uses of the critical raw materials involved.
Shortages, especially of minerals required by wind energy and electric cars, threaten to emerge in the near future, because supply cannot keep up with demand. The situation is further exacerbated by the fact that the same minerals are used in consumer electronics and modern arms technology, for example. Digitalisation and, for example, the Internet of Things are also boosting overall demand for energy. Aalto University produces information aimed at solving the sustainability crisis.
Related news
Strong results from the Research Council’s winter call
A total of 54 Aalto researchers received Academy Research Fellow or Academy Project funding from the Research Council of Finland. The total funding awarded to Aalto University amounts to 33.2 million euros.
Aalto University’s solutions at the New European Bauhaus Festival support the EU’s ambition to become world leader in circular economy
Aalto University presented several different circular economy solutions at The European Commission’s New European Bauhaus Festival in Brussels. The event brought together leading names in EU policymaking, researchers, designers and grassroots actors from across Europe to shape a more sustainable future.
Aalto University involved in four research projects selected for funding in Business Finland’s major call
The Rise to Challenge projects will develop AI-powered decision-making in healthcare, signal technology to scale up quantum information processing, higher-precision imaging technology and quantum computing applied to bio and DNA data.
Four physicists receive significant funding from the Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation
The grants are used to study things like overheating quantum computers and early-stage water condensation on surfacesVideos
Our researchers