This 4-year PhD scholarship, funded by the Flemish Research Foundation (FWO), offers an exciting opportunity to join KU Leuven and the University of Antwerp (A-PECS group) to develop cutting-edge plasmonic photocatalysts for artificial photosynthesis and CO₂ conversion. The project integrates experimental nanotechnology, spectroscopy, and computational modelling.
🔍 Job Details
| Title | PhD Scholarship – Plasmonic Photocatalysts for CO₂ Conversion |
|---|---|
| Organisation | KU Leuven (with collaboration at University of Antwerp – A-PECS group) |
| Research Fields | Chemistry (Heterogeneous Catalysis, Solar Chemistry, Computational Chemistry), Materials Science, Nanotechnology, Physics (Surface & Solid-State Physics), Chemical Engineering |
| Researcher Profile | First Stage Researcher (R1) |
| Country | Belgium |
| Work Location | Leuven & Antwerp (50 km apart, direct train connection) |
| Application Deadline | 20 October 2025 (23:59 UTC) |
| Start Date | 1 October 2025 (Autumn 2025 preferred) |
| Duration | 4 years (1-year initial bursary, renewable upon progress) |
| Type of Contract | Temporary, Full-time |
| Reference Number | BAP-2025-541 |
| Funding | Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) |
| Salary & Benefits | Generous tax-free bursary (equivalent to research assistant salary), holiday bonus, end-of-year bonus, non-pay benefits package |
Research Context
Artificial photosynthesis is a sustainable solution to climate change, aiming to convert CO₂ into valuable chemicals (CO, methanol, ethanol) using solar energy. Achieving this requires next-generation photocatalysts capable of efficient CO₂ activation.
Project Overview
This collaborative project between KU Leuven (Quantum Solid State Physics group) and University of Antwerp (A-PECS group) focuses on:
-
Designing novel plasmonic photocatalysts based on ultra-small bi- and multi-metallic clusters.
-
Using cluster beam deposition on TiO₂ nanotubes for precise size and composition control.
-
Characterizing catalysts with electron microscopy, XPS, XANES, EXAFS, Raman, and DRIFTS.
-
Employing theoretical modelling & density functional theory (DFT) to understand CO₂ photo-reduction mechanisms.
-
Correlating theoretical insights with experimental performance for rational catalyst design.
Candidate Profile
The ideal candidate should:
-
Hold a Master’s degree in Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Materials Science, Experimental Physics, or related fields.
-
Have excellent academic results (Bachelor & Master).
-
Demonstrate interest or experience in surface science, catalysis, photocatalysis, or electrochemistry.
-
Be fluent in English (written & spoken).
-
Be motivated, hardworking, and willing to work interdisciplinarily across two universities.
Benefits
-
4-year fully funded FWO scholarship.
-
Tax-free stipend, equivalent to research assistant salary.
-
Holiday and end-of-year bonuses.
-
Work across two world-class research universities.
-
Training via the Arenberg Doctoral School.
Application Instructions
Required documents:
-
CV with education and academic achievements.
-
Cover letter with motivation & research interests.
-
Copies of transcripts (Bachelor + Master).
-
Contact details of 2 referees.
Deadline: 20 October 2025 (applications reviewed until filled).
Where to Apply:
➡️ Online: KU Leuven Job Portal
➡️ Contact:
-
Mr. Didier Grandjean (📞 +32 16 32 28 36 | ✉️ [email protected])
-
Prof. Dr. Ewald Janssens (📞 +32 16 32 72 07 | ✉️ [email protected])
🔗 Reference Links
⚠️ Disclaimer
The scholarship is subject to FWO regulations and annual progress reviews. An initial 1-year bursary will be offered, renewable upon satisfactory progress.
Table of Contents
