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
Haining Tian , Uppsala University, Sweden

Dr. Haining Tian is a full professor in Physical Chemistry at Uppsala University, leading a research group of Molecular Devices for Artificial Photosynthesis. He received his PhD in Applied Chemistry at Dalian University of Technology in 2009 and then moved to Royal Institute of Technology as Postdoc and senior researcher. In 2014 he joined the faculty at Uppsala University as an assistant professor becoming a full professor in 2024. He has been awarded Göran Gustafsson Prize for young researchers, Young Investigator from European Photochemistry Association and Wallenberg Academy Fellow. His research interests focus on development and investigation of sustainable soft materials including molecules and polymers for solar energy conversion and storage.


Junwang (John) Tang , Tsinghua University, China

Prof. Junwang (John) Tang is a Member of the Academy of Europe, a Royal Society Leverhulme Trust Senior Research Fellow, Fellow of the European Academy of Sciences, Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry, Fellow of IMM and Honorary fellow of CCS. He is the Founding Director of Industrial Catalysis Center in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Chair Professor of Materials Chemistry and Catalysis at Tsinghua University, China and a Visiting Professor at University College London, UK.
 
Tang concentrates on Renewable Energy-to-Chemicals by coupling photons with phonons, involving small molecule activation to produce zero-carbon fuels (eg. H2O to H2, N2 to NH3) and valuable chemicals (CO2 to alcohols and CH4 to C2+ hydrocarbons) as well as microwave-catalysed plastic recycling, together with the investigation of the underlying charge dynamics and kinetics by state-of-the-art spectroscopies, resulting in ~250 papers published in Nature Catalysis, Nature Energy, Nature Materials, Nature Reviews Materials, Chemical Reviews, Chem. Soc. Rev., Nature Commu., JACS, Angew Chemie etc. with ~31,000 citations. Prof. Tang has received many awards, the latest of which is the 2022 IChemE Oil and Gas Global Awards, 2021 IChemE Andrew Medal, 2021 the RSC Corday-Morgan Prize and 2021 Royal Society-Leverhulme Trust Senior Research Fellowship etc. He also sits on the Editorial Board of 6 international journals, eg. the Editor of Applied Catalysis B and Associate Editor of EES Solar, Chin. Journal of Catalysis and Carbon Future etc.


Raffaella Buonsanti, EPFL, Switzerland

Professor Raffaella Buonsanti is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at EPFL. She leads a multidisciplinary research program which spans from nanoscience to materials chemistry and electrocatalysis.  She has received an ERC Starting Grant in 2016 and an ERC Consolidator Grant in 2022 in addition to numerous awards, including the Swiss Chemical Society Werner Price in 2021, the European Chemical Society Lecture Award and the Royal Chemical Society ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship in 2019, the ACS Inorganic Nanoscience Award in 2024. She is also an Associate Editor of ACS Catalysis.


Fatwa F. Abdi, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Fatwa F. Abdi is an Associate Professor in the School of Energy and Environment, City University of Hong Kong (CityU HK). He obtained his PhD (cum laude) in Chemical Engineering from TU Delft, the Netherlands, in 2013, and he was the recipient of the Martinus van Marum prize from the Royal Dutch Society of Sciences and Humanities. Prior to joining CityU HK in 2023, he was a group leader and the deputy head of Institute for Solar Fuels, Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin, Germany. His research group is interested in the development of materials and engineering of devices for solar-to-chemical conversion applications. His group focuses on complex metal oxides with activities spanning from investigating their fundamental material properties to implementing bulk and surface modification strategies to overcome their limitations. At the same time, his group utilizes the combination of multiphysics modeling and validation experiments to identify challenges associated with device engineering.


Jillian Dempsey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States

Jillian L. Dempsey is a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and currently holds the Bowman and Gordon Gray Distinguished Term Professorship. She is the Deputy Director of the Center for Hybrid Approaches in Solar Energy to Liquid Fuels (CHASE). Her research group explores charge transfer processes associated with solar fuel production, including proton-coupled electron transfer reactions and electron transfer across interfaces. Her research bridges molecular and materials chemistry and relies heavily on methods of physical inorganic chemistry, including transient absorption spectroscopy and electrochemistry. She also dedicates time to advancing electrochemistry education for all chemists.


James Durrant, Imperial College London, United Kingdom

James Durrant is Professor of Photochemistry in the Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London and Sêr Cymru Solar Professor, College of Engineering, University of Swansea. His research focuses on the use of transient spectroscopies to investigate the function of new materials for sustainable energy conversion, including materials for artificial photosynthesis, solar cells and electrolysis. More widely, as part of the SPECIFIC IKC, he leads the EPSRC programme grant ATIP, and at Imperial leads its Centre for Processable Electronics (the CPE). He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2017 and appointed a Commander of the British Empire (CBE) for services to photochemistry and solar energy research in 2022.


Yannis Ieropoulos, University of Southampton, United Kingdom

Yannis is Head of Water and Environmental Engineering Group (WEEG). 

Yannis has >20 years’ experience in research, teaching and training. His focus is on waste utilisation and energy autonomy and produced the EcoBot family of robots powered by microbial fuel cells (MFCs) fed with organic waste, with the latest achievement being Row-bot. He was an EPSRC Career Acceleration Fellow (2010-2015) and is currently a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation PI on the "Urine-tricity/PEE POWER®" project, which is advancing the MFC technology for sanitation improvement in Developing World Countries. Yannis is Vice-Chair of the EU COST Action, PHOENIX, looking at environmental remediation using bioelectrochemical systems – a line of work he also led for the EU FET OPEN “Living Architecture” project and its follow-on Innovation Action ALICE, now part of the European Innovation Council. His research income in the past 12 years is >£6M and has published >150 peer reviewed journal articles.


Marcella Bonchio, University of Padova, Italy

Marcella Bonchio started her scientific career as a research associate of the National Council of Research (CNR), and then in Princeton University (NJ, USA) collaborating with John T. Groves on bio-inspired catalysis. She was promoted to Full-Professor of Organic Chemistry in 2013 at the University of Padova, where she served as Vice-Rector for Research in 2015-2021. Research awards include the 2021 “Lombardia è Ricerca” 1ME prize for breakthrough strategies in Artificial Photosynthesis applied to renewable energy. She is elected Fellow of the European Academy of Sciences (EurASc) since 2020


  • Peter Lindblad Uppsala University, Sweden

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
When registering you will have the opportunity to indicate which programme you are interested in. You may register for one or both programmes.

In-person registration for the Early career or Main programme includes:
  • Attendance at all applicable scientific sessions for your chosen programme
  • Attendance at the poster sessions on Monday 1 Sept for the ECR and Wednesday 3 Sept and Thursday 4 September for the main programme.
  • Access to recordings of all scientific sessions post-event for your chosen programme
  • In-person networking opportunities for your chosen programme
  • Refreshments throughout the meeting and lunch for your chosen programme
  • Conference dinner at St James Park, the home of Newcastle United, on the 4 September for the main programme only
Please note accommodation is not included in the registration fee.

All prices quoted do not include VAT, which is added during registration at the prevailing rate in the UK
 
Early Career programme Early bird Sandard
Non-member £75 £85
Member £50 £60
 
Main programme Early bird Standard
Non-Member £595 £645
Member £495 £545
Student Non-Member £345 £395
Student Member £295 £345

Virtual registration for the Early career or Main programme includes includes:
  • Live access to all plenary sessions for your chosen programme
  • Access to recordings of all scientific sessions post-event for your chosen programme
All prices quoted do not include VAT, which is added during registration at the prevailing rate in the UK

 
Early career programme Online
Non-member £25
Member £15
 
Main programme online
Non-member £160
Member £130
Student non-member £90
Student member £75
 

RSC members and student RSC members

If you are a Royal Society of Chemistry member and wish to register for this meeting, please select the member option on the online registration page. You will need to enter your membership number.

Non-member and student non-members

For non-member registrants, affiliate membership of the Royal Society of Chemistry until the end of 2025 is available. The affiliate membership application will be processed and commence once the registrant has attended the event. 

Student delegates

In order to encourage undergraduate or postgraduate students to attend the conference, a reduced in-person conference fee is available for students. This fee applies to those undertaking a full-time course for a recognised degree or a diploma at a university or equivalent institution.

Conference banquet

The conference banquet will be held on Thursday 4 September 2025 at St James Park, the home of Liverpool United football club.  The dinner is for delegates of the main programme only and the venue is within a short walking distance of the main venue.

Accessibility

The Royal Society of Chemistry is keen to encourage and enable as many people as possible to attend our events, to benefit from the networking opportunities and the chance to hear talks from leaders in the field. If you would like to discuss accessibility, or have childcare, caring responsibilities or other care needs, please contact us to discuss your requirements so that we can enable your attendance.

Terms and Conditions for Events run by the Royal Society of Chemistry

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

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