Copernic Catalysts Announces Achievement of Ammonia Catalyst Milestone in Research Collaboration with Schrödinger
Partnership Delivers a Novel, Highly Efficient Ammonia Synthesis Catalyst
Companies Begin Work on Improved Ethylene Oxide Catalyst
    
Ammonia is one of the most critical industrial chemicals due to its use in nitrogen-based fertilizers that support the global food system. However, ammonia production is energy-intensive and is currently responsible for nearly one percent of global CO₂ emissions. By achieving commercial yields at significantly milder conditions, Copernic’s Neptune catalyst has the potential to increase the capacity of industrial-scale ammonia manufacturing plants by up to 47 percent, translating to up to 
“We believe we have developed the best-performing base-metal ammonia catalyst since the first ammonia catalyst was introduced over 100 years ago,” said Jacob Grose, Ph.D., chief executive officer and co-founder of Copernic. “By coupling Copernic’s expertise in catalyst design and high-throughput experimentation with Schrödinger’s advanced simulation methods, we’ve enabled our customers to make most efficient use of their ammonia plants, resulting in significant cost savings and a smaller carbon footprint.”
Copernic is currently scaling up the production of its Neptune catalyst with its toll manufacturing partners. It is planning one or more pilot-scale demonstrations in 2026/27 with input from its prospective customers, including some of the largest names in the ammonia industry. Upon successful completion of the pilot, Copernic will be ready for the first commercial sales of Neptune to ammonia plants around the world.
Building on the success of the Neptune catalyst, Copernic and Schrödinger have initiated work on their next joint project, designing a selective ethylene oxide (EO) catalyst. Large-scale production of EO is a critical building block for plastics, textiles, detergents, and other essential chemicals. Designing an EO catalyst with optimized selectivity would maximize EO yield while minimizing feedstock losses and carbon emissions, driving higher efficiency, lower costs, and reduced environmental impact in large-scale chemical production.
“Reducing the carbon footprint of ammonia and EO production is a critical step toward decarbonizing the industrial chemical industry,” said Mat Halls, Ph.D., senior vice president of materials science at Schrödinger. “This milestone demonstrates what’s possible when computation and experiment are leveraged in tandem to enable a rational approach to materials design. We’re thrilled to have collaborated with Copernic on this achievement, and we look forward to building on this success with EO going forward.”
About Copernic Catalysts
Copernic Catalysts is a startup leveraging computation/AI and high-throughput experimentation to develop and commercialize chemical catalysts that make bulk chemical production both cheaper and more sustainable. Copernic has raised 
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251030699215/en/
Media Contact
Jacob Grose
info@coperniccatalysts.com
Source: Copernic Catalysts, Inc.
 
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
         
         
         
        