Green transition

Collaboration at the core of green chemical innovation

Motivated by the challenge of replacing fossil-based chemistry, Professor María Escudero Escribano works across scientific disciplines to develop pathways for sustainable chemical production.

Professor María Escudero Escribano leads research on sustainable electrochemical processes and catalyst materials at CAPeX – Pioneer Center, where collaboration across disciplines and nationalities characterizes the research environment. Photo: DTU

FActs

 CAPeX is short for 'Pioneer Center for Accelerating P2X Materials Discovery' and the center is run in a partnership between DTU and Aalborg University (AAU) and is located in a new interdisciplinary "Climate Challenge Laboratory" at DTU. 

Here, researcher from DTU, Aalborg University, the University of Copenhagen, Aarhus University og the University of Southern Denmark are creating a ground-breaking interdisciplinary environment for Power-to-X technology in collaboration with international partners from Stanford University, Utrecht University, University of Toronto and Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology.

Five Danish foundations; The Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science, Danmarks Grundforskningsfond, The Carlsberg Foundation, the Lundbeck Foundation, the Novo Nordisk Foundation and VILLUM FONDEN have granted a total of DKK 300 million to the establishment of CAPeX.

Designing catalysts for renewable chemical production

Today, most chemicals are produced in large, energy-intensive plants based on fossil resources. Escudero Escribano's research focuses on replacing these systems with electrochemical processes powered by renewable energy. This is also known as Power-to-X technologies.

One example from Maria's research team is the development of a new catalyst to produce dimethyl carbonate, an important chemical currently produced via fossil-based and energy-intensive processes. It is widely used as a green solvent, fuel additive, and building block in the chemical industry.

"We aim to produce chemicals such as fertilizers, fuels, pharmaceuticals, and materials in a decentralized, efficient, sustainable, clean, and safe way, which is essential for the decarbonization of the chemical industry and for building a more sustainable society," says María Escudero Escribano.

Key components in this transition are catalyst materials, which drive and accelerate chemical reactions. Because reactions occur at their surface, even small changes can strongly influence performance.

Her research focuses on understanding what happens at this surface during reactions, the so-called electrochemical interface. This interface is highly dynamic and changes continuously when in use, making it challenging to study.

By combining electrochemical methods with advanced techniques her team can observe reactions in real time at the atomic level to better understand the mechanisms behind the reactions. This knowledge is essential for designing catalysts that are more active, stable, and scalable for industrial use. 

María Escudero Escribano giving a CAPeX Pioneer Lecture at the Climate Challenge Laboratory at DTU, home of CAPeX, in April 2026. Photo: DTU

Collaborations lead to impact

For María Escudero Escribano, collaboration is essential to developing new catalyst materials for globally demanded chemicals such as dimethyl carbonate.

"The green transition is a global challenge that requires global solutions. These collaborations across research fields and institutions allow us to tackle problems that no single group can do alone and to accelerate scientific discoveries," she says before continuing:

"You really approach problems with multiple perspectives, which is very important. So, this combination of expertise allows us to ask better questions and find more creative solutions. This leads to more innovative and impactful science, which is what we need for sustainable technologies and processes to become a reality."

María Escudero Escribano also highlights the strong feedback loop between disciplines as a key feature of the collaborative research environment that CAPeX has built: Researchers design new catalyst materials, test their performance, and study their behaviour during reactions using advanced characterisation techniques. These insights are then fed back into the design process, helping to refine the materials and guide further development.

Looking ahead, she sees full control over electrochemical reactions as a key breakthrough in sustainable chemical production.

"This will only be possible through a strong international collaboration combining materials discovery, electrochemistry, modelling, and advanced characterisation," she underlines.

Facts

María Escudero Escribano is an ICREA (The Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies) Professor at the Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, where she leads the NanoElectrocatalysis and Sustainable Chemistry (NanoESC) Lab. 

Within Pioneer Centre CAPeX she leads research on sustainable electrochemical processes and catalyst materials as lead of X3 trail. 

She obtained her PhD in Chemistry from the Autonomous University of Madrid (2011) and carried out postdoctoral research at DTU and Stanford University, before holding faculty positions at the University of Copenhagen and joining ICN2 in 2022.

Her research focuses on electrochemical interface engineering and electrocatalysis for renewable energy conversion, developing atomic-scale design principles through electrochemistry and materials engineering, supported by in situ studies, that is, investigations of how materials behave under real operating conditions. She is the recipient of an ERC Consolidator Grant (2023–2028) on atomic-scale tailored materials for electrochemical methane conversion (ATOMISTIC).

She has received numerous national and international awards: including:

  • the 2026 RSEQ Research Excellence Award from the Spanish Royal Society of Chemistry
  • the 2024 Spanish National Research Award in Chemical Science and Technology
  • the 2018 Princess of Girona Scientific Research Award
  • the 2018 ECS Energy Technology Division Young Investigator Award from the Electrochemical Society.

Contact

Tejs Vegge

Tejs Vegge Professor Department of Energy Conversion and Storage