Friedrich Schiller University Jena and the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (Helmholtz Centre for Materials and Energy, HZB) will jointly establish the "Helmholtz Institute for Polymers in Energy Applications" (HIPOLE) on 1 July 2023. The aim of HIPOLE is to develop sustainable polymer materials for energy technologies that can be rapidly brought into application, in particular polymer-based batteries and perovskite solar cells with polymer additives. HIPOLE will be funded with up to 5.5 million euros per year by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, 90%) and the Free State of Thuringia (10%). In the start-up phase until 2028, the Free State of Thuringia will additionally fund the new institute with more than ten million euros and take over the financing of the construction costs for the laboratories and offices.
In order to achieve the climate goals, innovations and low-cost solutions for energy supply are necessary. Polymer materials, i.e. special plastics, offer great opportunities for this: they can be easily processed and specifically "functionalised" to enable innovative, sustainable, marketable and reliable technologies. Friedrich Schiller University Jena and the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (Helmholtz Centre for Materials and Energy, HZB) are now joining forces to build up a critical mass of expertise and develop innovative technologies for energy storage, hydrogen generation and photovoltaics based on polymer chemistry and materials science. To this end, sustainable polymers in particular are to be designed to enable rapid material development, also using high-throughput methods and artificial intelligence.