Chemical Engineering students win Electe competition
A team of Chemical Engineering students recently won the Electe scenario competition. The team wrote a plan to make the steel production of Tata in IJmuiden more sustainable with solid oxide electrolysis cells (SOEC). In 2023, the three students will join the Electro Trail Europe (Electe).
At the final at the Brightlands Chemelot Campus in Geleen, during the European Industry and Energy Summit 2022, the three final teams presented their white paper. Organizers knowledge platform Voltachem and journalistic media company Industrielinqs had given a clear assignment. The student teams had to write an investment proposal for a technology based on electrification and / or electrochemistry, with which an important step can be taken in industrial transformation around 2035.
The teams were judged by a jury and by the public. The team from Groningen emerged as the winner. Students Alessia De Gregorio, Alexandru Trofin and Cosmina Mighiu will therefore get the chance to, together with Voltachem, Industrielinqs and partners, visit various electrification and electrochemical projects in Europe during the so-called Electe in the summer of 2023.
The other two teams in the final were a team from the University of Maastricht/Brightsite and TNO.

Last modified: | 15 December 2022 12.27 p.m. |
More news
-
03 April 2025
IMChip and MimeCure in top 10 of the national Academic Startup Competition
Prof. Tamalika Banerjee’s startup IMChip and Prof. Erik Frijlink and Dr. Luke van der Koog’s startup MimeCure have made it into the top 10 of the national Academic Startup Competition.
-
01 April 2025
NSC’s electoral reform plan may have unwanted consequences
The new voting system, proposed by minister Uitermark, could jeopardize the fundamental principle of proportional representation, says Davide Grossi, Professor of Collective Decision Making and Computation at the University of Groningen
-
01 April 2025
'Diversity leads to better science'
In addition to her biological research on ageing, Hannah Dugdale also studies disparities relating to diversity in science. Thanks to the latter, she is one of the two 2024 laureates of the Athena Award, an NWO prize for successful and inspiring...