Aarhus University Seal

Jørgen Skibsted


Keywords

  • Solid-State NMR
  • Portland Cement
  • CO2 Emission
  • Heterogeneous Catalysis
  • Materials Research

Head of Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy Group

Professor Jørgen Skibsted
PhD in Chemistry

From order to disorder

A principal goal of our research is to explore structure and reactivity of cementitious materials, mainly by solid-state nucleic magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques, and to utilize this information in the development of the next generation of sustainable cement-based materials. The reactivity can often be significantly increased by introducing structural disorder in the materials.

Our research focuses on the application of solid-state NMR spectroscopy in inorganic materials research. The main areas are cement-based materials, heterogeneous catalysts, inorganic framework structures, glasses, and new materials for hydrogen storage. Our principal field is cement-based materials. In this field, academia and industry face the global challenge of developing more sustainable cement production, since today’s production is responsible for roughly 5% of the total anthropogenic CO2 emissions. We contribute to this task by the development of new cement binders based on alkali-activated systems and new supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) which can partly replace the CO2-intensive Portland clinkers in cement blends. A main advantage of solid-state NMR is the equal detection of crystalline and amorphous materials. This is utilized to study disorder in the SCMs introduced either by guest-ion incorporation or thermal treatment procedures.

Our current research in both cementitious materials and heterogeneous catalysts involve collaborations with national and international industrial and academic partners.

Recent publications

Sort by: Date | Author | Title

Giavani, T., Bildsøe, H., Skibsted, J. & Jakobsen, H. J. (2002). 14N MAS NMR spectroscopy and quadrupole coupling data in characterization of the IV <-> III phase transition in ammonium nitrate. Journal of Physical Chemistry Part B: Condensed Matter, Materials, Surfaces, Interfaces & Biophysical, 106, 3026-3032.
Nielsen, U. G., Jakobsen, H. J., Skibsted, J., Fraissard, J. (Ed.) & Lapina, O. (Ed.) (2002). 51V MAS NMR Studies of Inorganic Vanadates with Very Small and Large Chemical Shift Anisotropies. In Magnetic Resonance in Colloid and Interface Science (pp. 597-602). Kluwer Academic Publishers.
Nielsen, U. G., Boisen, A., Brorson, M., Jacobsen, C. J. H., Jakobsen, H. J. & Skibsted, J. (2002). Aluminum Orthovanadate (AlVO4): Synthesis and Characterization by 27Al and 51V MAS and MQMAS NMR Spectroscopy. Inorganic Chemistry, 41, 6432-6439.
Andersen, M. D., Jakobsen, H. J. & Skibsted, J. (2002). Characterization of the alpha->beta phase transition in Friedels salt (Ca2Al(OH)6Cl.2H2O) by variable-temperature 27Al MAS NMR spectroscopy. Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory, 106, 6676-6682.