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5th International solar fuels conference

1 - 5 September 2025, Newcastle, United Kingdom


Introduction
You are warmly invited to join us in Newcastle, UK, in September 2025 for the 5th International solar fuels (ISF) conference. The first meeting of this internationally renowned conference was held in Uppsala, Sweden in 2015 and since then the meetings have been a highlight for the global solar fuels community. We are delighted to be organising this fifth iteration of the conference together with the Royal Society of Chemistry and members of the organising committees.
 
The 5th ISF conference includes:
  • a programme for early-career researchers on 1-2 September
  • a full programme with three parallel sessions for all solar fuels researchers 2-5 September
  • invited and contributed oral presentations
  • networking, poster sessions, social programmes
  • panel sessions on careers in chemistry, journals publishing, and more! 
1-2 September for early-career researchers (ECRs)
The programme aims to give as many ECRs as possible the opportunity to present through oral and poster presentations. We invite students, post-docs and early-career researchers from around the world, working in all areas of solar fuels research, to submit an abstract, join-in and meet your peers.

2-5 September for all solar fuels researchers
Oral and poster presentation opportunities are available to researchers of all career stages in all areas of solar fuels research from across the world. We invite you to submit an abstract to make your contribution alongside our Plenary and Keynote speakers.
 
Abstract submission and registration are separate for both parts of the programme. When submitting/registering you will have the opportunity to indicate which programme you are interested in. You may submit to/register for one or both programmes.

We look forward to welcoming you to Newcastle in September 2025. 
 
Alex Cowan, University of Liverpool
Jenny Zhang, University of Cambridge
Organising committee co-chairs
 

Themes

Solar fuels production is the use of sunlight to drive the formation of high energy molecules (e.g. H2, CH3OH, NH3) from abundant feedstocks (e.g. H2O, N2, CO2). The field of solar fuels has the potential to deliver carbon free fuels and chemicals with applications ranging from energy storage, heating, transportation and manufacturing.
 
Inorganic photocatalysts and photoelectrodes
The discovery and study of inorganic materials and molecules for light driven solar fuels and chemicals production
 
Organic photocatalysts and photoelectrodes
Devices and catalysts based on polymers and organic molecules
 
Electrocatalysis for sustainable fuels and chemicals
Advances in experimental and theoretical studies of electrocatalysis in integrated solar to X or power to X pathways. Including but not limited to water splitting, CO2 and N2 conversion
 
Biological and bioinspired solar fuels approaches
Biological systems, biohybrid systems and bioinspired systems
 
Advanced methods for the study and discovery of Solar to X materials
Approaches to discovery and mechanistic analysis, fundamental studies of existing materials to high throughput and digitally enabled discovery approaches
 
Devices to deployment
The science and engineering challenges around developing deployable devices and how they are measured/assessed
Speakers
Abstract Submission

Abstract submission is separate for both parts of the programme. When submitting you will have the opportunity to indicate which programme you are interested in. You may submit to one or both programmes.

Oral abstracts

Submit your oral abstract before 24 March 2025 for the International solar fuels programme or the 7 April 2025 for the Early Careers programme under one of the six themes:
  • Inorganic photocatalysts and photoelectrodes
  • Organic photocatalysts and photoelectrodes
  • Electrocatalysis for sustainable fuels and chemicals
  • Biological and bioinspired solar fuels approaches
  • Advanced methods for the study and discovery of Solar to X materials
  • Devices to deployment
While the 5th International solar fuels conference is organised into these six broad themes, we acknowledge that solar fuels is a multidisciplinary field and some topics may fall into more than one theme. Abstracts are welcomed in all areas of research – when submitting your abstract please choose the theme most relevant to you.

Poster abstracts

Submit your poster abstract by 23 June 2025 for the International solar fuels programme or the 7 July 2025 for the Early Careers programme. Posters are displayed throughout the meeting. A poster prize will be awarded to the best poster presented at each programme.

Additional information

Authors will be notified of the outcome of the review process within about 10 weeks of the oral submission deadline, and 4 weeks of the poster submission deadline. Please ensure you provide the details of the presenting author.
Registration
Sponsorship & supporting organisations
A selection of sponsorship opportunities is available for companies who would like to promote their activities at the 5th International solar fuels conference.
 
If you would like more information about sponsoring the 5th International solar fuels conference, please contact the Commercial Sales Department at the Royal Society of Chemistry on advertising@rsc.org Sponsorship Menu
Venue
Frederick Douglass Centre

Frederick Douglass Centre, Newcastle University, Newcastle, NE4 5TG, United Kingdom

Committee
Chen Han (Chair), University of Cambridge, United Kingdom

Dr. Chen Han is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Prof. Erwin Reisner's group at the University of Cambridge. She received her Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the University of New South Wales, Australia, under the supervision of Prof. Rose Amal in 2024. She is currently working on solar fuels research, focusing on catalytic processes and advanced characterizations for synthesizing sustainable fuels and chemicals from water, CO2 emissions, and chemical wastes.


Cathal Burns, Northumbria University, United Kingdom

Cathal Burns is a PhD student at the Northumbria University working on semi-artificial photosynthetic biohybrids for solar chemical production. He received his MChem in Chemistry at the Newcastle University.  During his MChem, Cathal competed a master’s thesis studying the effect of plasmonic coupling between gold nanoparticles and dyes to enhance luminescence within mesoporous silica host-guest systems.  Currently, Cathal is focusing on integrating electrotrophic microbes with semiconductor materials for photoelectrocatalytic conversion of CO2 to C2+ chemicals.    His research also focusses on studying the fundamental mechanisms occurring at the biointerface with ultrafast time-resolved spectroscopy. 


Nathaniel Hill, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom

Nathaniel Hill is a PhD student specialising in the non-linear spectroscopy of electrochemical systems as part of the Department of Chemistry at the University of Liverpool and the Central Laser Facility (CLF) at the STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL). He received his MChem from the University of Warwick (2022) after completing a computational study of catalytic Hydrogen Evolution Reaction on Transition Metal Dichalcogenide monolayers. During this time, he also studied Upconversion photochemical solutions in conjunction with photocatalysis at the Chalmers University of Technology (CUoT) (2021). His current research focuses on using non-linear spectroscopy to understand the operando physical properties of membrane-based water electrolysers.


Ewan McQueen, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom

Ewan McQueen is a PhD student at the University of Strathclyde working in solar fuels research. He received his MSci in Chemistry at the University of Glasgow involving a master's project studying water soluble supramolecular cage complexes for host-guest capture. His MSci also involved a European placement at Humboldt University of Berlin working on molecular catalysts for photocatalytic carbon dioxide reduction. His current research focuses on conjugated polymers as photocatalysts for use in photocatalytic hydrogen production, as well as hybrid systems of conjugated polymers and molecular catalysts for photocatalytic carbon dioxide conversion. 



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