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Max Planck Institute for Coal Research

Max Planck Institute for Coal Research
Minerva kofo.jpg
Official logo
Abbreviation MPI KoFo
Predecessor Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Coal Research
Formation 1912; 105 years ago (1912)
Type Scientific institute
Purpose Research on coal, organic and organometallic chemistry, catalysis and theoretical chemistry
Headquarters Mülheim an der Ruhr, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Key people
Walter Thiel, managing director
Parent organization
Max Planck Society
Website (English) www.kofo.mpg.de/en

The Max Planck Institute for Coal Research (German: Max-Planck-Institut für Kohlenforschung) is an institute located in Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany specializing in chemical research on catalysis. It is one of the 80 institutes in the Max Planck Society (Max-Planck-Gesellschaft). Founded in 1912 as the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Coal Research (Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Kohlenforschung) in Mülheim an der Ruhr to study the chemistry and uses of coal, it became an independent Max Planck Institute in 1949.

The Institute carries out basic research in organic and organometallic chemistry, in homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis as well as in theoretical chemistry. The principal aim is to develop new methods for the selective and environmentally benign preparation of new compounds and materials.

The MPI KoFo has been at the forefront of research in chemistry since its formation. One of these is the development of the Fischer–Tropsch process through the efforts of Franz Fischer and Hans Tropsch in 1925 when the institute was still organized as the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Kohlenforschung. Nobel Prize laureate Karl Ziegler also worked at the institute alongside Hans-Georg Gellert, one of his former students, to discover aufbau reaction (Aufbaureaktion) or growth reaction among aluminum alkyl compounds.


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