Fall ’24 Department Seminars with Dr. Mustafa Karatok
Speaker: Dr. Mustafa Karatok
Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey
Date: November 26, 2024, Tuesday
Time: 12.30 (UTC +3)
Place: Departmental Seminar Room (SB-Z14)
Abstract:
The chemical industry is the largest energy consumer among industrial sectors, accounting for 25% of global energy consumption, a figure projected to rise to 45% by 2040 with population growth and increasing prosperity. The production of everday materials, such as textiles, plastics and cosmetics is inherently tied to catalytic processes that currently depend heavily on fossil sources, driving substantial greenhouse gas emissions. Heterogeneous catalysts are central to these processes, accelerating reactions while lowering the temperature and/or pressure requirements, and thus energy, for desired product formation. However today’s catalysts face several limitations, including suboptimal selectivity to desired products, which leads to excessive raw material and energy consumption. Additionally, they often lack durability, losing activity over time due to surface poisoning from the strong binding of side products. Designing more efficient catalysts requires moving beyond trial-and-error approaches toward a fundamental understanding of catalyst mechanisms. This talk will highlight experimental approaches to exploring atomic-level surface structures of catalysts, using both model systems and nanoparticles. The relationship between surface structure of bimetallic systems and catalytic reactivity will be demonstrated through specific reactions, illustrating how next-generation catalytic materials can be tailored to meet future sustainability needs.
Short Biography of the Speaker:
Dr. Mustafa Karatok is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Nanotechnology and Nanomedicine at Hacettepe University. He earned his B.Sc. (2010) and M.Sc. (2012) in Chemistry from Ankara University, followed by a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Bilkent University under the supervision of Prof. Emrah Özensoy in 2017. Following his Ph.D., he joined the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Harvard University, working with Profs. Cynthia Friend and Robert Madix as a postdoctoral fellow, later promoted to a senior scientist position in 2021. He was awarded a TUBITAK 2232 research grant designed for early-stage researchers from top international institutions to conduct their research in Türk]ye, and subsequently joined Hacettepe University as a faculty member in 2023. He is the founder and principle investigator of the Fundamental Catalysis Research Laboratory. Dr. Karatok’s research centers on exploiting nanomaterials to enhance energy efficiency in chemical production, develop sustainable fuels, and mitigate environmental pollution. His work is specifically directed toward achieving an atomic and molecular level understanding of nanomaterials and chemical reactions to design tailored catalysts for challenging chemical transformations.