Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry
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Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry
Summary
Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry is a laboratory[1].
Key Facts
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's field of work was catalysis[2].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's field of work was solid-state chemistry[3].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's field of work was chemical engineering[4].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's field of work was pollution[5].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's field of work was hydrogen storage[6].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's field of work was hydrocarbon[7].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry was a member of TEAM2 ecotechnology cluster[8].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry was a member of National Center for Scientific Research[9].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry was a member of École Centrale de Lille[10].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry was a member of University of Lille[11].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry is located in Lille[12].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry is located in Villeneuve-d'Ascq[13].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry is in the country of France[14].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's image is recorded as Ecole centrale de Lille - laboratoire génie des procédés catalyse et environnement - bioréacteur biomasse eco-matériaux- UCCS.jpg[15].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's instance of is recorded as laboratory[16].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's instance of is recorded as French UMR[17].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's headquarters location is recorded as Villeneuve-d'Ascq[18].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's chief executive officer is recorded as Jean-François Lamonier[19].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's ISNI is recorded as 0000000403683038[20].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 295143583[21].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's IdRef ID is recorded as 161608809[22].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's part of is recorded as Lille institute for molecular and condensed matter[23].
- +2006-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry[24].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 50.606111, 'longitude': 3.137222, 'precision': 1e-06}[25].
- Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04d_f64[26].
Body
Founding
+2006-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry[24].
Identity
Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's part of is recorded as Lille institute for molecular and condensed matter[23]. Its short name is recorded as UCCS)[27].
Leadership
Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's chief executive officer is recorded as Jean-François Lamonier[19].
Operations
Laboratory of Catalysis and Solid State Chemistry's headquarters location is recorded as Villeneuve-d'Ascq[18]. Parent organizations include Artois University[28], an Universités nouvelles[29], in France[30], founded in 1992[31], headquartered in Arras[32]; Institut de chimie[33], a French public establishment of a scientific and technological character[34], in France[35]; École nationale supérieure de chimie de Lille[36], a national higher engineering school[37], in France[38], founded in 1894[39], headquartered in Villeneuve-d'Ascq[40]; École Centrale de Lille[41], an engineering school in France[42], in France[43], founded in 1854[44], headquartered in Rue du Lombard[45]; National Center for Scientific Research[46]; and University of Lille[47].
Industry
Fields of work include catalysis[2], a molecular function[48]; solid-state chemistry[3], a branch of chemistry[49]; chemical engineering[4], an applied science[50]; pollution[5], a human impact on the environment[51]; hydrogen storage[6]; and hydrocarbon[7], a structural class of chemical entities[52].